List of Alternate Presidents and PMs II

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My main problem is Kennedy. He was considered too young and, as @Bolt451 says, there doesn't seem to be any explanation for why he's not President after 1963. I suppose he could have died earlier than OTL or even resigned over his health worries, but there's still the hurdle of him not being seen as a great Democratic statesman until '72 and the abortive primary run that finally killed him.
Regardless he has Lyndon B. Johnson, the famous secessionist in office instead of Barry Goldwater.
 
Don't mind me.
1993-2001: Bill Clinton
It would be something to see a disgraced Governor of Arkansas become a two-term president. I'm not the time of person to say that any list that doesn't have enough footnotes to fill a short novel is worthless, but this really could've been improved with some sort of explanation. And his wife (who apparently came out of the scandals rather well IOTL) also runs for president? Like I said, would have been great with some description.
 
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Bolt451 - Hypothetical PMs
It would be something to see a disgraced Governor of Arkansas become a two-term president. I'm not the time of person to say that any list that doesn't have enough footnotes to fill a short novel is worthless, but this really could've been improved with some sort of explanation. And his wife (who apparently came out of the sandals rather well IOTL) also runs for president? Like I said, would have been great with some description.

Going out of character for a sec. It makes me wonder how a list of OTL Prime Ministers would go down. Then I thought, even from ten years ago it'd seem weird. "No really, Jeremy Corbyn, the backbench rebel is leader of HM Opposition and there's a decent chance he'll be the next Prime Minister" Let alone further back.

So PMs from a hypothetical 10 years ago, in my eyes woud be

2007-2010: Gordon Brown (Labour)

2010-2015: David Cameron (Conservatives)

def 2010: Gordon Brown (Labour), Nick Clegg (Lib Dems) Caroline Lucas (Greens) Alex Salmond (SNP) Ieuan Wyn Jones (Plaid Cymru)
2015-20**: David Milliband (Labour-Lib Dem Coalition)
Def 2015 David Cameron (Conservatives) Nick Clegg (Lib Dems) Caroline Lucas (Greens) Alex Salmond (SNP) Ieuan Wyn Jones (Plaid Cymru)

Basically I predicted the Tories would secure a majority over Brown. (Possibly the Lib Dems took more votes from Labour) and then The Tories narrowly miss winning a majority in 2015 and although they get more seats. The Lib Dems do even better in 2015 then 2010 (because i was biased) so a Lab-Lib Coalition would be formed. Probably leading to voting reform and all that good stuff

and 20 years ago.... I was 8 at the time of the GE. So here how i WOULD have predicted things going probably.


1997-2007: Tony Blair (Labour)

def 1997: John Major (Conservatives) Paddy Ashdown (Liberal Democrats)
Def 2001: Michael Portillo (Conservatives) Charles Kennedy (Liberal Democrats)
Def 2005: William Hague (Conservatives) Simon Hughes (Liberal Democrats
2007-2008: Gordon Brown (Labour)
2008-2015 William Hague (Conservatives)

def 2008: Gordon Brown) Labour) Simon Hughes (Liberal Democrats)
def 2013: Jack Straw (Labour) Simon Hughes (Liberal Democrats)
2015-20**: Peter Lilley (Conservatives)

The idea is more or less OTL except there's no Portillo moment. Later Gordon Brown calls a snap election in early 2008 and does a Theresa May (only moreso) giving William Hague a slim Majority, which he increases in 2013. He then stands down a year before the next election. I thought I'd try and grab as many people who were key figures in the Cabinet and Shadow Cabinet in 1997. Oh and Simon Hughes survives.
 
MichaelWest - Taft and Roosevelt
This is one of my pre-Great War points of departure musings:

1913-1917: William H. Taft / Franklin Murphy (Republican)
Defeated: Woodrow Wilson / Thomas R. Marshall (Democrat) in 1912 election.

1901-1913: Theodore Roosevelt Jr. (Republican)
VP: None (1901-1904), Charles W. Fairbanks (1905-1909), William H. Taft (1909-1913).
Defeated William Jennings Bryan (Democrat) in 1904 and 1908 elections.

Notes: In 1908, Charles E. Hughes was offered the vice-presidential nomination by Theodore Roosevelt Jr., but he declined it to run again for Governor of New York. On April 25, 1910, President Theodore Roosevelt Jr. nominated Charles E. Hughes for Associate Justice to fill the vacancy left by the death of Justice David J. Brewer.
 
Comisario - The Old Boys' Club
The Old Boys' Club

1997-2005: Jack Straw (Labour majority)
2005-2009: Howard Flight (Conservative majority)
2009-2010: Andrew Lansley (Conservative majority)
2010-2015: Fabian Hamilton (Labour-Liberal Democrat coalition)
2015-2016: Guy Black (Conservative minority with UUP confidence and supply)
2016-: Guy Black (Conservative majority)
 
theev - Reagan = Stalin

Deleted member 87099

A Re-write of that list of Reagan as some sort of Stalin-esque figure


1933-1937: John Nance Garner/Vacant (Democratic)
1937-1938: Huey Long/Henry A. Wallace ("New" Democratic)

1936: Hamilton Fish III/Arthur Vandenberg (Republican) , John Nance Garner/Millard Tydings ("Rebel" Democratic)
1938-1939: Douglas MacArthur (Independent)
1939-1942: Charles Lindbergh/Theodore Roosevelt Jr. (National Union)

1940: None
1942-1943: Smedley Butler (Independent)
1943-1951: Upton Sinclair/Daniel Hoan (Socialist)

1942: William H. Murray/Olin D. Johnston (New Democratic) , Burton K. Wheeler/Fiorello La Guardia (Progressive) , William Z. Foster/Vito Marcantonio (Communist)
1946: William H. Murray/Lyndon B. Johnson (New Democratic) , William Z. Foster/Vito Marcantonio (Communist) ,
Vincent Hallinan/Elliot Roosevelt (Progressive)
1951-1959: Lyndon B. Johnson/James F. Byrnes (New Democratic)
1950: Vito Marcantonio/Joseph McCarthy (Communist) , Wayne Morse/Hubert Humphrey (Progressive) , Whittaker Chambers/Darlington Hoopes (Socialist)
1954: Joseph McCarthy/Ronald Reagan (Communist) , Darlington Hoopes/Richard Nixon (Socialist) , Adlai Stevenson/Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. (Progressive)

1959-1967: Ronald Reagan/Joseph Curran (Communist)
1958: Richard Nixon/Walter Reuther (Socialist) , Estes Kefauver/John Connally (New Democratic) , Joseph P. Kennedy Jr./Margaret Chase Smith (Progressive) , James O. Eastland/George Smathers (States' Rights)
1962: John Connally/George Wallace (New Democratic) , Walter Reuther/Frank Zeidler (Socialist) , Hubert Humphrey/Robert M. LaFollette Jr. (Progressive)

1967-1976: Ronald Reagan/Gus Hall (Communist)
1966: Lyndon B. Johnson/Robert Byrd (New Democratic) , Richard Nixon/George McGovern (Socialist)
1970: George Wallace/Al Gore Sr. (New Democratic) , Walter Reuther/Gore Vidal (Socialist)
1974: George McGovern/Terry Sanford (Coalition - Socialist/New Democratic)

1976-1976: Ronald Reagan/Vacant (Communist)
1976-1979: Ronald Reagan/Henry Winston (Communist)

1978: None
1979-1979: Ronald Reagan/Vacant (Communist)
1979-1984: Ronald Reagan/Dorothy Ray Healey (Communist)

1982: None
1984-1984: Ronald Reagan/Vacant (Communist)
1984-1991: Ronald Reagan/Lee Harvey Oswald (Communist)
1991-1991: Lee Harvey Oswald/Vacant (Communist)
1991-1999: Lee Harvey Oswald/Angela Davis (Communist)
1999-2001: Colin Powell (Communist)
2001-2005: Sam Webb/Dennis Banks (People's)

2000: Al Gore Jr./Mary Landrieu (Democratic) , Kinky Friedman/Kent Hovind (Minuteman) , W. Jefferson Clinton/Al Sharpton (Spirit of '76) , Bernie Sanders/Russ Feingold (Liberation)
2005-2009: Mary Landrieu/Tim Kaine (Democratic)
2004: James Janos/Walter B. Jones Jr. (Minuteman) , Cornel West/John Bachtell (People's) , Jefferson Sessions/Andrew Schlafly (Spirit of '76)
2009-2013: James Janos/Alex Jones (Minuteman)
2008: Tim Kaine/John Edwards (Democratic) , John Bachtell/Hillary Rodham (People's) , Andrew Schlafly/James Hedges (Spirit of '76)
2013-2017: Jim Webb/Joe Manchin (Democratic)
2012: Chuck Norris/Cordozar Calvin Broadus Jr. (Minuteman) , Monica Moorhead/Jerry White (People's) , Andrew Schalfly/Various (Spirit of '76)
2017-0000: Joe Scarborough/Matt Shea (Minuteman)
2016: Joe Manchin/Martin O'Malley (Democratic) , Jello Biafra/Keith Judd (People's)


In bad need of footnotes. Footnotes that may or may not happen.
 
BrotherSideways - UK PM List from an FH written in 2005

Sideways

Donor
Going out of character for a sec. It makes me wonder how a list of OTL Prime Ministers would go down. Then I thought, even from ten years ago it'd seem weird. "No really, Jeremy Corbyn, the backbench rebel is leader of HM Opposition and there's a decent chance he'll be the next Prime Minister" Let alone further back.

So PMs from a hypothetical 10 years ago, in my eyes woud be
I've been thinking recently about a FH TL I tried to write in... 2005. It went something like this:

1997-2009: Tony Blair (Labour)
2009-2013: Gordon Brown (Labour)

David Davis (Conservative) Charles Kennedy (Lib Dem) Damian Hockney (UKIP-Veritas Alliance)
2013-2017: Liam Fox (Conservative) Coalition with Damian Hockney (UKIP-Veritas Alliance)
Gordon Brown (Labour) Charles Kennedy (Lib Dem)
2017- : David Blunkett (Labour)
Liam Fox (Right Tory-UKIP-Veritas Alliance) Jo Swinson (Lib Dem) Some Guy (Moderate Tory)

 
If it's only OTL presidents and nominees then sure, but I'm also not a fan of lists where I have to be constantly tabbing between it and wikipedia to know what the hell I'm looking at.
I actually made a list consisting solely of that:
An Original List:

1953-1961: William Knowland/ Bourke Hickenlooper
1952 def. Dan Edward Garvey/ Richard Russell, Jr.
1956 def. Dan Edward Garvey/ Paul Douglas


1961-1963: Stuart Symington/Clinton P. Anderson

1960 def. George D. Aiken/James Jeremiah Wadsworth

1963: Clinton P. Anderson/VACANT

1963-1969: Clinton P. Anderson/ John L. McCellan

1964 def. William Langer/ Robert S. Hale

1969-1977: George D. Aiken/ Claude R. Kirk, Jr.

1968 def. John L. McCellan/ Phillip A. Hart
1972 def. Frank Lausche/ Charles E. Bohlen

1977-1981: Dale Bumpers/ Ernest Hollings

1976 def. Claude R. Kirk, Jr./Henry Bellmon

1981-1988: Jack R. Williams/ Garry E. Brown
1980 def. Dale Bumpers/ Ernest Hollings
1984 def. Ernest Hollings/Marilyn Lloyd

1989-1993: Garry E. Brown/ Frank Murkowski

1988 def. Robert W. Straub/Mike Mansfield

1993-2001 John W. Carlin/David L. Boren

1992 def. Garry E. Brown/ Frank Murkowski
1996 def. Henry Bellmon/John Paul Hammerschmidt


2001-2009: Frank Keating/Chuck Grassley

2001 def. David L. Boren/Herb Kohl
2004 def. Max Baucus/ Blanche Lincoln

2009-2017: Patty Murray/Sam Nunn

2008 def. Kit Bond/Linda Lingle
2012 def. Craig Benson/ Jim Sensenbrenner

------------------------

So, the basic process of this list: find what year a President or a Presidential nominee was first elected (or, if they never held an elected position, what position they did hold, with the exception of William Knowland at the beginning), go to the House/Senate/Gubernational elections for that year, and pick a random person who also won an election that year (whether they were first elected or re-elected that), and was still alive when the Presidential election occur, and who wasn't a future President or nominee.




 
gap80 - DESTINY FALLS ONE GENERATION EARLY
DESTINY FALLS ONE GENERATION EARLY​

Because tomorrow (June 18) is Father’s Day…

Short version:
1869-1877: 18) Rev. Richard F. Cleveland (R-OH) – retired due to unpopularity
1877-1878: 19) Theodore “Thee” Roosevelt, Sr. (R-NY) – died, tumor
1878: 20) John Scott Harrison (R-OH) – died, pneumonia
1878-1881: 21) William McKinley Sr. (R-OH) – retired due to old age
1881-1885: 22) Alphonso Taft (R-OH) – retired
1885-1893: 23) James Roosevelt I (D-NY) – retired
1893-1897: 24) Rev. J. R. Wilson (D-NC, I-NC after 1896 DNC) – lost re-nomination; lost re-election as third-party candidate
1897-1900: 25) James Roosevelt I (D-NY) – died, heart failure
1900-1901: 26) Jesse Hoover (D-IA) – was outgoing VP
1901-1905: 27) Dr. George T. Harding Sr. (D-OH) – was incoming VP-Elect; retired
1905-1913: 28) John C. Coolidge Sr. (R-VT) – retired
1913-1914: 29) John A. Truman (D-MO) – assassinated, Mexican nationalist bombers
1914-1921: 30) David J. Eisenhower (D-PA) – retired
1921-1926: 31) Francis A. “Frank” Nixon (R-CA) – resigned, scandal
1926-1929: 32) Leslie L. King (R-NE) – lost nomination and retired
1929-1935: 33) Samuel E. Johnson Jr. (D-TX) – died, heart attack
1935-1945: 34) Joseph P. “Joe” Kennedy Sr. (D-MA) – retired due to death threats
1945-1953: 35) Gen. Gerald R. Ford (R-MI) – term-limited
1953-1957: 36) John E. “Jack” Reagan (D-CA) – lost election
1957-1961: 37) Prescott S. Bush (R-CN) – term-limited
1961-1965: 38) James E. Carter Sr. (D-GA) – assassinated, ultra-conservative sniper
1965-1973: 39) Roger Clinton (D-AR) – term-limited
1973-1981: 40) Frederick C. “Fred” Trump (R-NY) – term-limited
1981-1987: 41) Lolo “Louie” Soetoro (D-CU) – died from sudden liver failure
1987-1989: 42) William J. “Bill” Blythe, Jr. (D-NV) – lost election
1989-1997: 43) George H. W. Bush (R-CN) – term-limited
1997-present (mid-2001): 44) Barack H. Obama, Sr. (D-NY) – Incumbent

Longer version:

1869-1877: 18) Rev. Richard Falley Cleveland (1804-1884)

On March 4, 1869, President Andrew Johnson was succeeded by President Richard Cleveland. Born in Connecticut on June 19, 1804, Cleveland started out as a Presbyterian minister before joining the US military to fight in the First Mexican-American War. He continued his military career into the American Civil War, rising in rank and becoming a Union Army General more famous than Meade, McClellan and Grant. In 1868, he was elected President, and left office eight years later at the age of 72, making him America’s oldest President at the time. He died in 1884, age 80. During his time in office, the Presidential Succession Act of 1872 was passed, making his cabinet members be next in line before the Congressional leaders, citing the recent deaths of both the House Speaker and Senate leader in two separate instances. Cleveland’s son, Stephen Grover Cleveland, became Mayor of New York City in the late 1880s, dying in office from cancer in 1894.

1877-1878: 19) Theodore “Thee” Roosevelt Sr. (1831-1878)
Roosevelt spent most of his life in business. Based in New York City, the philanthropist and son of a wealthy businessman used his wealth to co-found the NYC Children’s Aid Society, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the American Museum of Natural History, and the New York Children’s Orthopedic Hospital. By 1876, he was a well-known popular figure, especially among Republicans for his donations to their causes. With certain Republicans outraged by the scandalous Cleveland administration, a political outsider was called for to be their 1876 nominee. Roosevelt accepted that call, and narrowly won in November at the young age of 45 after an autumn campaign in which the party’s nominee was much more active than in Presidential campaigns past. However, just under a year into office, Roosevelt died from a gastrointestinal tumor, age 46. His son Thee Roosevelt Jr. ended up becoming a rancher and explorer, co-discovering the ruins of Machu Picchu in 1902 before dying in a plane crash in 1909, age 50.

1878: 20) John Scott Harrison (1804-1878)
To counteract Thee Roosevelt’s political inexperience, the Republicans picked “establishment” politician John Harrison to be his running mate. The son of President William Henry Harrison, John Scott Harrison served in the United States House of Representatives from 1853 to 1857. After serving in the Cleveland administration from 1869 to 1873, he successfully campaigned for the Governorship of Ohio. As President, however, Harrison followed in his father’s footsteps: after entering office in February upon the death of President Roosevelt, Harrison himself died three months later, in May, age 73.

1878-1881: 21) William McKinley Sr. (1807-1892)
McKinley came from a background similar to that of Roosevelt; a pioneer in the iron industry, the businessman was an early supporter of Roosevelt’s candidacy and was awarded with the position of Secretary of State. Upon becoming President himself at the age of 70, he strived to continue on Roosevelt’s policies. He declined to run for a full term and left office at the age of 73.

1881-1885: 22) Alphonso Taft (1810-1891)
Taft was McKinley’s chosen successor, having been an exemplary member of the Cleveland, Roosevelt, Harrison and McKinley cabinets. He was elected Governor of Ohio in 1879, proving his electability. Despite entering office at the age of 70, Taft showed much energy in getting his policies passed. However, the economic decline caused by the Great Panic of 1881, coupled with rising discontent among Southerners living in the northern states and border states, ensured his failure in obtaining re-election.

1885-1893: 23) James Roosevelt I (1828-1900)
A distant nephew of Thee Roosevelt, James Roosevelt became the first Democrat elected President since 1856, 24 years earlier. He had been inspired by his uncle’s run for President to enter politics himself, becoming Governor of New York before being elected President at the age of 56. His campaign and Presidency were more liberal than past Democratic Presidents due to Roosevelt’s support among the middle class and Catholics. Despite ending Reconstruction in 1885, he pulled the nation out of its economic slump by 1888, and was easily re-elected in that year on an even larger coalition of certain minorities (mainly, ethnic whites) and dissatisfied traditionally-Republican voters. Always interested in coal and transportation (especially the railroads), he also was an expansionist, and managed to purchase Cuba from Spain in 1891 and lower unemployment.

1893-1897: 24) Rev. Joseph Ruggles Wilson Sr. (1822-1903)
James Roosevelt’s Vice-President was more than just a wee bit controversial. The elderly statesman had supported the Confederacy during the 1860s and had once owned slaves. The prominent Presbyterian theologian had moved to Wilmington, North Carolina in 1874, and was ultimately elected to the US House and then the US Senate from the area. Entering office at the age of 71 after losing the popular vote but not the electoral vote, Wilson was repeatedly attacked by the Republicans for being too sympathetic to the South in the name of States’ Rights.

1897-1900: 25) James Roosevelt I (1828-1900)
Roosevelt saw the country coming apart at the seams over Wilson’s negative policies, and decided to stop it. He challenged his former VP for the 1896 Democratic nomination and narrowly won it on the 30th ballot. However, Wilson opted to run as a third-party candidate in the autumn, which threatened to prevent Roosevelt from obtaining an unprecedented third term. However, enough voters in key Northern states fondly remembered the economic prosperity the country enjoyed under Roosevelt’s administration for Roosevelt to achieve victory, winning in the Electoral College by just three votes; the GOP candidate being bogged down by scandals helped too. After a slightly contentious Electoral College, the Chief Justice swore Roosevelt into office once more. However, Roosevelt was not the healthy man he once was. Recurring heart problems began to limit his mental and physical abilities in late 1899, but nevertheless he still ran for a fourth term. However, shortly after winning a fourth term in November (due to the economic prosperity at the time), Roosevelt died in office in December 1900 at the age of 72.

1900-1901: 26) Jesse Hoover (1849-1939)
Vice-President Hoover, a blacksmith-turned-US Senator from Iowa, would later regret declining to serve for a second term. The 51-year-old President Hoover, blocked from serving past March 4, 1901, presided over a hot Electoral College battle, as the President-elect had died before they had convened. After weeks of arguing whom should be sworn in on Inauguration Day 1901, the Democratic-controlled House chose the Vice-President-Elect to succeed the retiring incumbent VP-turned-President. Hoover would return to Iowa politics, becoming a US Senator once more and running for the Presidency himself in 1908 and 1912 before retiring from politics in the late 1920s.

1901-1905: 27) Dr. George Tryon Harding Sr. (1844-1928)
Harding began his career as a doctor and then a newspaper owner before being elected to the state senate, then governorship; he was the sixth US President to be from the state of Ohio (after Harrison, Cleveland, Harrison, McKinley and Taft). His administration set up isolationist policies after War broke out in Europe in 1904. Historians have criticized his do-nothing attitude towards numerous issues. Harding is usually ranked as a “poor” President.

1905-1913: 28) John Calvin Coolidge Sr. (1845-1926)
Coolidge was a career politician from the liberal state of Vermont, first elected to the Vermont House of Representatives in 1872 before becoming Governor, then US Representative, then US Senator. He easily defeated incumbent Harding in a landslide, making him the first Republican President in 20 years, since Alphonso Taft left office in 1885. Coolidge immediately sent troops overseas, leading to a decisive victory on the Alliance side in late 1907, which ensured Coolidge’s re-election victory. As a liberal, he promoted small businesses and open trade policies. Women were also granted the right to vote in 1912. Coolidge left office with high approval ratings. His son, John C. Coolidge Jr., would try to follow in his father’s footsteps, and while he was elected a Governor and a Senator, but failed to become President despite his numerous runs.

1913-1914: 29) John Anderson Truman (1851-1912)
John Truman was born on December 5, 1851. A life-long Democrat born and raised in Missouri, he was a farmer and livestock dealer before he was elected Governor in 1908. He was elected President in an upset as a response to public concerns over how the violence of the Mexican Civil War (1905-1916) seemed to be spilling over the border into the states of Texas, California and Arizuma. The issue came to a head in late 1913, when a skirmish at the border left 18 American soldiers dead. After negotiations broke down as border clashes increased even further, Truman declared War on Mexico. The Second Mexican-American War (1913-1918) saw the US invade most of Northern Mexico. In late November 1914, when Truman was visiting soldier barracks in Texas, the nearly-63-year-old Commander-in-Chief was assassinated via a large bomb. He was the first US President to be killed since Lincoln.

1914-1921: 30) David Jacob Eisenhower (1863-1942)
Eisenhower, born in September 1863, was the first member of his family to graduate from college, despite his father Jacob’s urging to stay on the family farm. While operating a general store in eastern Pennsylvania, Eisenhower became interested in politics due to the conversations his politician customers would have in his establishment. He ultimately was elected to city council, then Mayor of Philadelphia, before being elected the US Senate, then the US Vice-Presidency at age. Entering the Presidency at the age of 51, Eisenhower was younger and more energetic than his predecessor, but heavily relied on the advice of military experts during the Second Mexican-American War. A string of battle victories in the fall and the memory of President Truman ensured Eisenhower’s re-election in 1916. In early 1918, surrounded Mexican forces finally surrendered and a peace treaty was signed, much to the relief of the US’s pacifist First Lady. From this treaty eventually came the US states of Sonora, South California, Yucatan and Roosevelt, leaving Mexico a territorially truncated state. Despite leaving Mexico in a virtually unresolved mess, Eisenhower left office with high approval ratings, retired from politics, and died in May 1942, age 78. His son was US Air Force Colonel Dwight Eisenhower (1890-1952).

1921-1926: 31) Francis Anthony “Frank” Nixon (1878-1958)
Republican Congressman from California Francis Nixon, often called Frank by friends, was known as the “Fiery Quaker” due to his famous, anger-fueled speeches on the House floor. It was these kinds of speeches that had helped propel him from being a grocery store owner to the House, and it was a persuasive oratory masterpiece reminiscent of William Jennings Bryan that convinced the Republicans to nominate him for President. President Frank Nixon was America’s youngest President, having been elected into office in November 1920 at the age of 41, turning 42 in December 1920, and being sworn into office in March 1921. Under his administration, the US military sent “peacekeeping” troops to Panama (a US territory since 1899), supported the Pedro Ospina regime in New Gran Colombia, and placed tariffs on foreign trade to “keep American jobs and American products in America.” However, in 1926, a mounting scandal connecting to apparent unlawful sabotage of political opponents in 1924 and 1925 led to Nixon resigning under the threat of impeachment, leaving office at the age of 48. “Fiery Frank” was then cautiously quiet for the next several years, finally releasing his memoirs in 1938.

1926-1929: 32) Leslie Lynch King (1884-1941)
Leslie King was a very angry man. He was angry that the only reason he won a US Senate seat was because his opponent died just days before the election. He was less angry when he became the US Attorney General at the age of 36 in 1921, then US Vice-President at the age of 40 in 1925. But he was very angry when he received criticism for pardoning Nixon in 1926. He was absolutely steamed when the economy collapsed in 1927, and he was the one blamed for it. And he was positively outraged when he lost the 1928 election in a landslide over his do-nothing form of governing. If still alive by the 1960s instead of having put himself into an early grave via the drink, he would most definitely be very, very angry at the fact that he has since then been perennially ranked as one of America’s worst Presidents, if not the worst.

1929-1938: 32) Samuel Ealy Johnson, Jr. (1877-1938)
Johnson had a rags-to-riches background that was positive, uplifting and inspirational to those feeling the effects of the economy. Born into a struggling farming family, he painstakingly worked his way towards a better education and becoming a teacher before being elected to the Texas State Assembly, then the Governorship, and then the US Senate, as a Populist Democrat. Having dealt with economy issues his entire life, he easily won election in 1928 at the age of 51, becoming the first ever President from Texas. Following in the footsteps of James Roosevelt, Johnson ran for a third term. However, similar to James Roosevelt, Johnson died during his third term. While travelling on a train from Texas to Washington DC, he suffered both a brain hemorrhage and a heart attack, both brought on by the stress of the office and his weakness for the bottle, and died within hours. He is remembered fondly by historians and American citizens alike for his response to the Great Recession (1927-1937/39). He was portrayed by Tom Hanks in a 2003 biopic.

1938-1945: 33) Joseph Patrick “Joe” Kennedy Sr. (1888-1971)
Despite never being elected to anything before, Johnson chose Kennedy, the US Ambassador to Great Britain from 1931 to 1933 and US Attorney General from 1933 to 1937, to be his running mate, as Kennedy was a close ally and advisor to him. However, the ascension of the 49-year-old Kennedy to the Presidency in 1938 was met with fierce opposition, especially in the South. Large protests were held in over 100 cities across the country over fears that Kennedy, a Catholic, would take orders from the Vatican. To quell fears, Kennedy never even made contact with the Pope during his time in office. He instead focused on maintaining the economy and monitoring the situation in Mexico. America’s southern neighbor had never fully recovered from the Second Mexican-American War, and a revolutionary by the name of Lazaro Cardenas (1895-1943) had taken hold of the country’s government in 1932. In late 1938, Mexico invaded the neighboring nations of Guatemala, Belize and Honduras. Upon realizing that Cardenas was looking to conquer Nicaragua (and possibly the US territory of Panama) fairly soon, but not wanting to put the US through another war with Mexico, the Kennedy Administration began quietly sending weapons and supplies to Nicaragua, along with American “supervision forces” after a brief scuffle (allegedly) broke out on the Nicaragua-Panama border. In 1940, Mexico did invade Nicaragua, but were successfully repelled within a few weeks. Regardless, Cardenas’ anti-American rhetoric needed to be addressed. After Kennedy narrowly won election to a full term in November 1940, he agreed to lift certain sanctions against Mexico, stating “we’re not being weak; we’re helping our neighbors make their gardens beautiful so when we look out to them from our own we can enjoy what we see.” In 1943, Kennedy’s “Irish Mafia” men helped topple the Cardenas regime, and sanctions were lifted even further. Due to the large amount of death threats he received while in office for numerous reasons ranging from his religion to his “soft” foreign policy choices, President Kennedy declined to run for another term. His oldest son, Joe Kennedy Jr, later became Governor of Massachusetts and ran for President in 1952, 1960, 1964, 1968, 1972, 1980, 1984, and 1988, before dying from colorectal cancer in 1991.

1945-1953: 34) Gen. Gerald Rudolff Ford (1890-1963)
Gerald Ford, born in December 1890, developed an interest in the military due to coming of age at the time when images of the Great European War (1904-1907) were spread across the newspapers. He joined the military in 1912, and rose in rank during the Second Mexican-American War. After serving as the head of a conservative University, General Ford became an open critic of President Kennedy’s policies, but declined to run for President. However, in 1944, key Republican leaders convinced him to give it a go. Ford ended up winning by a surprisingly large margin over the incumbent Secretary of State, and went on to serve for eight highly successful years. Two noteworthy laws passed under his administration were a 1946 Amendment prohibited him from running for a third term, and a 1952 Amendment that finally allowed foreign-born citizens to be eligible for the Presidency. Ford’s two sons, Richard and James, later went on to become US Army Generals.

1953-1957: 36) John Edward “Jack” Reagan (1883-1981)
America’s first “celebrity” President came in the form of Jack Reagan, a major star of radio dramas and early silent picture dramas. After serving as Governor of California (1939-1947), he ran for the Democratic nomination in 1948, lost, ran for it again in 1952, won it, and then won the Presidency at age 69. His administration focused on improving African-American conditions, which was unusual for a Democratic President. Unfortunately, Reagan responded poorly to a foreign policy crisis in 1956, and he lost re-election to Senator Prescott Bush later in the year.

1957-1961: 37) Prescott Sheldon Bush (1895-1982)
Businessmen have always supported and voted for the GOP. Prescott Bush was no exception. Born to considerably wealthy parents, Bush made even more money as a weapons manufacturer during the 1920s and 1930s before becoming a US Senator in the 1940s. He was a darling in the eyes of the GOP establishment, and he managed to outspend and out-trick the incumbent Democratic President in the states where it mattered most. American astromen landing on the Moon (as part of the First Space Race (1945-1977)) in late 1957 was the high point of his administration, however, as his approach to economic issues and foreign policy with a total disregard for social needs lead to him losing support among his own party by early 1960. Despite initial reservations, he ran for a second term, but lost by a very comfortable margin. Bush subsequently returned to his millions, indulging himself with his wealth until death ended his fun when he was 87 years old, in October 1982.

1961-1965: 39) J. Earl Carter (1894-1965)
The “old southern Gentleman” was Vice-President under Reagan, and before that had served as Governor of Georgia, a state senator, and a peanut farmer. Defying expectations, he was elected President at the age of 66, and supported equal rights for non-whites and females even more so than Reagan. He could have done more great things for the United States had it not been for an assassin from his own home state with exceptionally good aim in April 1965. He was killed at the age of 71.

1965-1973: 38) Roger Clinton (1908-1974)
The “handsome hell-raiser from Hot Springs, Arkansas” became interested in politics at an early age, and following that passion soon led him to the US Senate shortly after entering his 30s. He famously questioned a corrupt senator during hearings in the late 1940s. He got along well with President Carter despite being on opposite ends of the Democratic Party. Under his administration, the economy began to suffer but he won the 1968 election due to his challenger’s numerous scandals. Starting off as a violently temperamental Senate leader, he mellowed considerably after a cancer scare led to him also staying off the 1964 ticket. Luckily for him, the cancer stayed in remission until 1972; during his time in office he increased funding for cancer research to unprecedented levels. Clinton died from cancer shortly after leaving office. Clinton’s Presidency has since maintained an “average” rating.

1973-1981: 40) Frederick Christ “Fred” Trump (1905-1989)
Fred Trump modeled himself after Thee Roosevelt, and, at the urging of his son Donald Trump, became a successful businessman in Manhattan before being elected the city’s mayor in 1965 and again in 1969. He narrowly won in 1972 over 49-year-old incumbent Vice-President George Jefferson “Jeff” Dwire of Illinois. Trump’s Presidency would prove to be a poisoned chalice; he would oversee the completion of America’s first moon base in early 1976, but he also was shaken to his core over the deaths of his sons Donald and Fred Jr. in a 1979 hostage situation connected to the Norwegian Conflict (1971-1983). After eight years of repairing America’s economy, infrastructure, and military standing both across the globe and in outer space, Trump left the White House an emotionally broken man. He died at the age of 84, during his daughter Elizabeth’s third term in the US Senate.

1981-1987: 41) Lolo “Louie” Soetoro (1935-1987)
Soetoro fled to the United States in 1945 at the age of 10 with his mother and surviving siblings to escape the bloody atrocities of the Indonesian Civil War (1941-1956). They settled in California, where Soetoro strived to learn English despite initial difficulty. He became interested in politics during California Governor Howard Hughes’s 1954 re-election bid. He converted to Christianity in 1960. After receiving formal education at Harvard he went right to work as a lawyer in Havana, Cuba (by 1980, a state rich in electoral votes), working his way up to Congressman, then Senator. However, many were surprised when he announced his bid for the Presidency in 1979, believing he did not stand a chance. However, his grassroots campaign proved very effective in the early primary states of South Dakota and Maine, and secured the nomination just before the DNC, becoming both the first non-white and the foreign-born citizen to be nominated by a major party for the Presidency. The epitome of the American Dream to his supporters, Soetoro's “shocking” upset win over the incumbent Vice-President was seen as a realignment election. President Soetoro oversaw massive reform, and narrowly won re-election in 1984. Unfortunately, his second term was cut short by a sudden case of liver failure, and he died in office at the age of 52. Democrats still remember him in a very positive light.

1987-1989: 42) William Jefferson “Bill” Blythe, Jr. (b. 1918)
Nobody believed that Slick Billy Blythe would ever become President. After seven short marriages (two of which were briefly bigamist in nature) and numerous offspring born both in and out of wedlock to both wives and mistresses, the Texas-born struggling appliance salesman finally decided to put his life in order after winning a lawsuit against the state of Arkansas for unsafe road safety conditions in 1953. Blythe relocated and settled down in Nevada, where he opened up his own business. He decided to try his hand at politics in 1962, running for Governor and losing. He tried again in 1966 and won, but lost re-election in 1970. He tried again for a second term in 1974, won, and won re-election in 1978. In 1985, the incumbent US VP died from natural causes; the announcement that Soetoro had chosen Blythe to be his new VP was seen as shocking. After months of Senate reviews, panels, discussions, hearings, and more reviews, Blythe was confirmed by the Senate 57-55. He became President seven months later. He just barely won the 1988 nomination, and lost in November by a more than comfortable margin.

1989-1997: 43) George Herbert Walker Bush (b. 1924)
The son of President Prescott Bush made millions in the oil business before entering politics himself in 1962, losing election for an open congressional seat in Connecticut despite outspending his opponent 5-to-1. He tried again in 1966 and won, serving in the house from 1967 to 1971. He retired from the House in order to unsuccessfully run for a US Senate seat in 1970. Bush then became a diplomat, working as an ambassador and later other positions in the Trump administration from 1973 to 1981. In 1982, he was barely elected to the US Senate, and forewent a re-election bid to run for President. His administration focused more on foreign policy than domestic issues, privately celebrating the fall of Le Pen and the Fourth French Empire in early 1992. However, Bush received backlash in his second term for poorly handling the Great Recession (1993-1999, though some experts believe the US is still in it). Regardless, Bush would later state that his proudest moment as President was when Thee Roosevelt Medical University announced they had discovered a cure for torso-based cancers in late 1991 (after discovering a commonality between them in early 1989). The effects of his administration have yet to be determined.

1997-present (mid-2001): 44) Barack Hussein Obama, Sr. (b. 1936)
Similar to Seotoro, Obama immigrated to the United States in 1953, age 17, to avoid the carnage of the bloody Kenya-Tanganyika War (1952-1967). After receiving formal education in New York City, he was inspired by President Carter and his social/racial policies to enter politics himself. He was elected to the US Senate from New York in 1976, and then served in the Seotoro and Blythe administrations from 1981 to 1989 before being elected Governor of New York in 1990. As President, he has so far kept American soldiers out of the growing Congo Civil Conflict. Domestically, the Supreme Court federally legalized gay marriage in an early 1999 ruling, and the solar-powered hovercar is expected to become cheap enough for the average American to afford within a few years. Furthermore, with plans for a landing on Mars by the end of the 2010s being announced recently, a Second Space Race, now against the UNPC (United Neitchsist Provinces of China) has effectively begun.

Gallery:
nWAaNVM.png


Note: I would have gone back further with the list but there is practically zero information about Chester A. Arthur’s father (not even a “circa” date for when he may have been born), whom was not even born in the US to begin with.

Happy Father's Day!
 
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True Grit - Liberal Democratic-punk Canada
Prime Ministers of Canada
1980-1983: Pierre Trudeau (Liberal/New Democratic coalition) [1]
-1980 (min): Joe Clark (Progressive Conservative), Ed Broadbent (New Democratic)
-1983 (min): Joe Clark (Progressive Conservative), Ed Broadbent (New Democratic)

1983-1986: Jean Chrétien (Liberal/New Democratic coalition) [2]
1986-1995: Peter Lougheed (Progressive Conservative) [3]
-1986:
Jean Chrétien (Liberal), Ed Broadbent (New Democratic)
-1990: Jean Chrétien (Liberal), Ed Broadbent (New Democratic)
-1994 (min): Sheila Copps (Liberal Democratic), Svend Robinson (National Progress) [4]

1995-2004: Sheila Copps (Liberal Democratic) [5]
-1995 (min):
Peter Lougheed (Progressive Conservative), Svend Robinson (National Progress)
-1997: Lucien Bouchard (Progressive Conservative), Svend Robinson (National Progress)
-2001: Perrin Beatty (Progressive Conservative), Jean Lapierre (Voix Québécoise) [6], Svend Robinson (National Progress)

2004-2008: Roy Romanow (Liberal Democratic) [7]
-2004:
Perrin Beatty (Progressive Conservative), Jean Lapierre (Voix Québécoise), Svend Robinson (National Progress)
2008-2009: Mike Harris (Progressive Conservative) [8]
-2008 (min):
Roy Romanow (Liberal Democratic), Jean Lapierre (Voix Québécoise), Libby Davies (National Progress)
-April 2009 (min): Martin Cauchon (Liberal Democratic), Jean Lapierre (Voix Québécoise), Libby Davies (National Progress)

2009-2009: Martin Cauchon (Liberal Democratic/National Progress coalition)
2009-2014: Mike Harris (Progressive Conservative) [9]
-December 2009:
Martin Cauchon (Liberal Democratic), Jean Lapierre (Voix Québécoise), Libby Davies (National Progress)
2014-2016: Rachel Notley (Liberal Democratic) [10]
-14:
Pierre Karl Péladeau (Voix Québécoise), Ryan Meili (National Progress), Mike Harris (Progressive Conservative), Michael Chong (Independent Conservative)
2016-2017: Bob Rae (Liberal Democratic) [11]
2017-present: Bill Blair (Liberal Democratic) [12]


[1] Though he managed to return to office after a brief period in opposition, the 1980 election was not all good news for Pierre Trudeau and his Liberal Party. Not only did they only return to office with a minority government, but they failed to elect any Members of Parliament west of Manitoba. With Trudeau intending to embark upon an ambitious series of constitutional reform, this posed a problem for him: how could he represent Western interests without any Western MPs? His solution, somewhat controversial as it was, was to reach out to Ed Broadbent and the New Democratic Party, with the offer of forming a coalition government. While reluctant at first, Broadbent eventually accepts Trudeau’s offer, knowing that while the NDP’s influence in government may be small, the Liberals’ minority situation would give the NDP a great amount of sway in the coalition. With Broadbent and the NDP now in the government benches, Trudeau’s attempts to patriate the constitution go better than OTL, with Broadbent managing to ensure the support of NDP Premiers Howard Pawley and (until his defeat) Allen Blakeney. Though Quebec still refuses to sign on to the new constitution, patriation as a whole proves to be less controversial than OTL, preventing Trudeau’s approval ratings from dropping to abysmal levels. Riding off this success, and with the coalition agreement with the NDP about to expire anyway, Trudeau calls a snap election in 1983 and, while he initially appears on track for a majority government, the country’s worsening economic position causes attention to drift away from the constitution, and results in Trudeau winning an even thinner minority government, prompting his resignation shortly after the election.

[2] Trudeau is replaced by long-time cabinet minister Jean Chrétien, who, having a good relationship with Broadbent, opts to continue to coalition with the NDP, to the annoyance of some of his more right-wing members of caucus. While his tenure is less controversial than Trudeau’s, and his relationship with Broadbent is certainly better, government-fatigue and a poor economy causes the government to be defeated at the polls when the coalition agreement expires in 1986.

[3] After succeeding Joe Clark as Progressive Conservative leader following his 1985 resignation, former Alberta Premier Peter Lougheed is able to win a majority government in 1986 on the back of a poor economy. While he is relatively popular while in office (and, unlike Brian Mulroney IOTL, stays away from the constitution, knowing from experience the difficulty involved in it and content with leaving well enough alone), an economic downturn and merger of the Liberals and NDP cause him to be reduced to a minority government in 1994 before he is defeated in an election the following year.

[4] Having governed together relatively successfully from 1980-1986, calls grow for the Liberals and the NDP to merge following the PC majority victories in 1986 and 1990, with party activists claiming that the only reason the PCs were able to win was because of the split in the centre/centre-left vote. These calls are answered in 1992 following the election of new NDP leader Bob Rae, a pro-merger candidate, and the election of the similarly pro-merger Sheila Copps as Liberal leader in 1991, resulting in a merger between the two parties in 1993. While by and large most Liberals join the new party (with a handful of right-wingers swapping to the PCs), NDP members are more divided, fearing their voices will not be heard in a party consisting mostly of former Liberals. As a result, a small contingent of left-wing New Democrats form their own party, the “National Progress Party of Canada,” led by veteran left-wing MP Svend Robinson.

[5] After merging the Liberals and the NDP in 1992 into the Liberal Democratic Party, Sheila Copps is able to nearly seize power in 1994. While left-wing former-NDP dissidents in the new National Progress Party prevent her from defeating Lougheed, she is able to win a minority of her own in the subsequent election. When the Progressive Conservatives defeat the government in 1997 the Lib Dems are able to win a majority, with new PC leader Lucien Bouchard having misjudged both Copps’ unpopularity and the willingness of Canadians to go to the polls yet again. Thanks to a growing economy, Copps is able to win re-election in 2001 with another majority government.

[6] Over the course of Copps’ tenure, some of her more nationalist Quebec MPs leave the party to form the Voix Québécoise, frustrated by Copps’ insufficient (in their eyes) attempts at “bringing Quebec back into the [constitutional] fold”. While starting off as a mostly nationalist party, further frustration with the subsequent ministries will result in it shifting into a separatist party, a transformation it generally achieves around 2006.

[7] Copps retires due to middling approval ratings, and is replaced with her Minister of Health, Roy Romanow, who calls (and wins) a snap election in 2004. An economic decline and various Lib Dem scandals cause his popularity to decline, though, as does a failed attempt at initiating constitutional reform following the further rise of Voix Québécoise and increased pressure from worried Lib Dem Quebec MPs. As a result, Romanow’s government is defeated in 2008.

[8] Despite the Lib Dems’ unpopularity, the strongly right-wing positions of new PC leader Mike Harris result in the latter only winning a minority government, despite impressive gains in Quebec from former Lib Dem supporters frustrated with their lack of constitutional success and unwilling to vote for the separatist VQ. Harris’ policies while in government prove controversial, however, and he wins a reduced minority in the spring of 2009, prompting new Lib Dem leader Martin Cauchon to form a coalition with National Progress. Proving very unpopular and having a very thin majority, the coalition is forced to the polls only a few months into their term after losing a confidence vote following a series of floor-crossings and by-election losses.

[9] Due to the unpopularity of the coalition, Harris is able to return to power with a strong majority. However, his tenure quickly proves controversial. A free trade agreement with the United States produces significant opposition, while a severe economic downturn causes his reputation as a strong economic manager to shatter. While his government is eventually able to lessen the effects of the recession, tax increases associated with these measures quickly prove to be unpopular (particularly with right-wing members of his caucus), and causes his approval ratings to further drop. The fatal blow for his government, however, is when Quebec votes to separate in early 2014, after a series of constitutional negotiations Harris had announced when he first took office, designed to bring Quebec onto the constitution and consolidate PC gains in the province, quickly prove unworkable and unsatisfactory to all. In the general election a few months later, despite Harris’ attempts to portray himself as the only person experienced enough to handle this crisis of national unity, he is defeated in a landslide, coming in fourth behind the Lib Dems, VQ, and National Progress, and only slightly ahead of the right-wing splinter “Independent Conservative Party” led by his former cabinet minister Michael Chong.

[10] New Lib Dem leader Rachel Notley is elected in an overwhelming landslide, and is quickly forced to enter into negotiations with Quebec, trying to modify the Canada-Quebec relationship and keep Quebec from separating, while at the same time trying to walk the delicate line between giving Quebec enough so that it won’t separate and not giving it too much so as to not produce outrage in the Rest of Canada. While things initially seem to go well for Notley, tensions among the population soon begin to rise, with violent pro- and anti-separation protests erupting across the country. These tensions reach their peak in late 2016, when Notley is killed during an attack on Parliament Hill by a radical pro-Quebec separation terrorist.

[11] Following her assassination, Notley is replaced on an interim basis by her Minister of Foreign Affairs, and the last leader of the New Democratic Party, Bob Rae. While Rae had considered running for Lib Dem leader before, with lingering resentment from former NDP members preventing him from entering the fray, he declines to run for the position following Notley’s death, despite strong support among both Canadians and members of the Lib Dem caucus.

[12] Ontario Premier Bill Blair is elected Lib Dem leader in the ensuing leadership contest, and quickly begins to crack down on the protests raging across the country and adopting a significantly more hardline stance towards the Quebec government, who quickly finds itself forced to bow to pressure as a result of the anti-sovereignty wave that Notley’s assassination has produced. As 2017 continues on, whether these new developments will change is anyone’s guess.
 
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That's great and really original.

I especially like the choice of "Voix Québécoise" as the name for the BQ-esque party, don't think I've ever seen that before.
 
Exitstencil - Post-War Italian Prime Ministers
Post-War Prime Ministers of Italy

1945-1946: Ferruccio Parri (Action Party)

1946-1948: Ferruccio Parri (Italian Republicans)

1948-1952: Mario Scelba (Christian Democrats)
Def. 1948
Feruccio Parri (Italian Republicans), Giuseppe Di Vittorio (General Labor), Ruggero Greico (Italian Communist), Roberto Lucifero (Liberal)

1952-1958: Augusto De Marsanich (Christian Democrats)
Def. 1953
Randolfo Pacciardi (Italian Republicans), Roberto Lucifero (Liberal), Giuseppe Di Vittorio (General Labor), Giuseppe Bottai (Commoners United), Palmiro Togliatti (Italian Communist)

1958-1963: Francesco De Martino (Popular Front)
Def. 1958
Augusto de Marsanich (Christian Democrats), Giuseppe Bottai (Commoners United), Paolo Taviani (Liberal)

1963-1969: Pino Rauti (Christian Democrats)
Def. 1963

Francesco de Martino (Popular Front), Furio Cicogna (Liberal), Alfredo Covelli (Commoners United)

Def. 1968

Alessandro Pertini (Italian Socialist), Furio Cicogna (Liberal), Italo Viglianesi (United Labor), Mariano Rumor (Italian Republicans)

1969-1971: Bernardo Mattarella (Christian Democrats)

1971-1973: Aldo Moro (Christian Democrats)


1973-1975: Adriano Sofri (Autonomist)
Def. 1973
Aldo Moro (Christian Democrats), Julius Evola (Vanguard), Mariano Rumor (Liberal), Eugenio Scalfari (Italian Republicans), Lucio Magri (Italian Communist)


1975-???: Pietro Valpeda (Autonomist)

(I'll be adding footnotes to this sometime soon, so readers won't have to research every single person.)
 
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I just ran most of the Ameri-lists from the past month through a Markov chain generator. My intention was that I could somehow filter something coherent out of the product and create a comprehensible, plausible, list.

On reflection, I think this speaks for itself.

Tower (Republican), Nina Turner/Anthony Pollina Turner/Allen West/John Rousselot/John McCain III/Orrin Granton/Spiro Agnew
1972-1989: Joe Lieberman
2017-2021
2012: Ted Strickland/Steve King (Communist)
1999-2001: Bill Browder (American Independent)
1938-1939: Douglas

1977: Gerald Ford / vacant (Democrat-Peace), Barkley/John Edward State
Defeated (1932):
Henry Jack Kemp/John McCain/Jim Hood (Democratic)

1937 - 1985: James Janos/Walter Mondabolu (as Johnson (New Democratic) [4]
1953-1961
1945 - 1953: Clarence (R-NY)/Vacant (Republican), Jackie Lowe (Alliance), Harry Truman (Republican) [2]
1971-1977-1985: Gerald R. Ford (1968):
Mario Cuomo/Mitt Romney/Clare Boothe Lucy Flores (Allian Castro (Democratic): 2001-2009: Michael Bloomberg/Chuck Graham/Cathy McDonald Trump/Rocky De La Fuente (Republican), Donald Rumsfeld (Republican)
2013-2010: Anton/Chris Dodd (Democratic): 1989-1993: George Bush/Harold Stassen/Jack Kemp (Republican), Tom Vilsack Obama/Joe Biden/Zell Miller (Republican)
2009-2017: Hillary Clinton / Alan Cranston Jr/Thomas Elijah Manley Dukakis (Democrat)
1974-1969)
39th Vice President Lyndon Jr. (Progressler (NY)/Robert Joseph P. Kennedy / John Edwards (NC)
2017-present

1977 – 1993: Patty Murray Rothbard Tydings ("Rebel" Democrat)
1963):
Herbert Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / vacant (Democratic) [4]
1993-2017: Buddy Roemer/Mary Landrieu (Democratic) 2057-2061
2056: def. Ivanka Truman
39th President Williken/Jerry Brown (CA), Hubert Stanley) (Democrat)
1980: James Roosevelt (NV) and Matt Shearer (as Birch Bayh (Democratic), Ross Perot
2057-2058: Audrey (Democratic) , William Harrison 3 Episode 12 (2006-2009)]

1993-2001: Bernie Sanders/Russ Feingold (Democratic)

1985-1981: Joseph McKellar (Democratic): 2013: Thomas LeMay (American Independent), Anthony S. Earl/William G. Milliam Knowland/Stevenson/ Jim Sensenbrenner

1969: Mary Landrieu/Tom Cotton (2)
1969)
39th Vice Present: Tom Cotton/Chris George Wallace/Curtis LeMay (American Independent Franklin Dellums/Barbara Boxer (Democrat) and Jesse (R-NY)/Vacant (Democratic)
1977
1997-2001: Jerry Brown / Paul Laxalt (Democratic) , John Nance), Cesar Chase Smith/Kay Baines (New Democratic), Peter / Cyril Briggs (Republican) and (2006-2009)]
37th President Lyndon Baker (MA)
2048: defeats Everett Dirksen (IL)/Richard Nixon / Spiro Agnew (1969-1973-1973: Richard Lamm (CO)
- 1944*: Wendent)
1980: Jason Carter (14)

1973-1977: Ronald Reagan/Joseph McCain | John Sununu)
1989 – 2009-2017: Birch Bayh/Henry Jack Kemp
def. Ty Afzal (Alliance), Cory Booker (Democratic)
2041 - 2000 defeated (1964-1974: Richard Nixon/Melvin Brown
1980: Jack Randon / John Anderson/Morris (Green), Noah Dyer/Jim Sensenbrennedy †
38th President Richard Russell Long (as Beth Fukumoto) & Seaton Fish III/Orrin Granton (Communist)

1981-1982: Gerald Ford/Bob Dole / Elizabeth Ann Warren/Harold Edwards (Democrat)
1988-Def: John Kerry Brown / Paul Weickenlooper
1952 defeats Hillary Clinton / Kevin Sununu)
1999-2001
8. Collapse]
2060 - ////: Ali Wong (as Beth Fukumoto) & Seaton Smith Judd (People's) , Jesse Jackson/Nina Turner/Miller (D-NJ)/Jason Clinton P. Anderboegh (Progressive), Dennis Kucinich/Jesse Jackson/James E. Carter
33rd Vice President Walter Mondale / Jack Kemp (NY)/William Brock
George Wallace/John E. Brown/ Frank Keating/Clinton/Al Sharpton (Democratic): 1997: Douglas

1965-1969: Maurice Meisner / VACANT

1965 - 1973-1973: Richard Nixon/Joseph McCain (I-UT)/Mindy Finn (I-UT)/Greg Orman (Republican)
Def. 2016: Tim Pawlenty (Republican)

1963 - 1957: Douglas Matthias / Paul Douglas (NC)
2009-2017: Patty Murkowski

1963-1969: Lyndon B. Johnson (New Democrat)
2016: Elizabeth Dole (R) 1961-1961: Dan Aykroyd (as Bill Clinton Baker (MD)/Hubert Humphrey (Republican)
Aria Moon (Democraut)
1978: Huberty)
2009: George McGovern / Karl Rolvaag (Populist)
1984: Harry Haywood / Mike Johanns (Republican)
2016: Hillary Clint Dirksen (IL)/Ralph Nader (CO)/Austin Peter Camejo/Mike McCain (Republican) [2]
1935 - 1935: Frank Lauschel Glenn, Jr. (Democratic)
Cory Booker (Democrat)
1989-1993 - 2001: Normand (as Beth Fukumoto) & Seaton Smith (Republican)

1993-1997-1991: Ronald Reagan/Henry M. Jackson (Democratic)
2017-Present: Brian Castro (Democrat)
2004: James O. Earl Warren / George Herberg (Democratic) [5]
2004: George W. Bush/Dick Cheney/Clarence Thomas Cannon) & John Sparkman (Democratic)
2012 defeats Lyndon John B. Dayton/William Scranton/Joe Biden (Democratic) , Wallace / Charles Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1982: Williance), Cornel West/John Rarick (American Independent)
2001-2009: Chris Murphy) & Adal Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew (Republican)
1968-Def: Edmund Muskie (Democrat)
1973-1974: Gerald Trump/Oprah Winfrey (MN)
- 2012: Joseph McNarner (Democrat)

2005: Jack Kemp/John Conte/J. Edgar Hoover/Donald Reagan | George Bush (Republican)
2017-2018: Mike Manchinson (American Independent), Matt Shearer (as Malia Obama (Democrat)
1985-1969: H. John f. Kit Bond/Robert Michel
1991-1991-1993
7. Houston FLouney
1993-2001-2001: Pierce Campion (as Christensen/James Rhodes (11)
2031-2009:Joe Lieberman Cain (Green)
2001-2006)] *
48th Vice Meitner (Democratic), George Bushfield (L-MA), John Lindsay (NY)
- 1972-1977: Charlie Kirk)
[Hiatus due to the First Collapse]
2013-2017: Meg White

1974-1977: Gerald Trump (NY)/Mark (CA)/Tom Cotton (R) [1]
1973-1969: H. John f. Kennedy / Lindsay (NY)
1997-2001: Richard Nixon / Spiro Agnew
1977-1981: James Bond (Republican)
1944-1949-1953)
37th Vice President John McCain
def. Gerald R. Ford (Coalition - Socialist)
1999-2017

John F. Kennedy
1964 def. Joaquín Castro (Democratic)

32nd President Harrison Mitchell
41. Gerald Ford (R) 1965-1969: Clinton (AR)/Russelot/James O. Contendent-Green)

---
Interregnum
---
39th Vice President Republican)
Aria Moorhead/Jerry Whitman (CA)/George Thomas Dewey (Republican), Tulsi Gabbard (Independent)
Steve Bannon (AZ)
- 2004 defeats Hillary Cabot Lodge Jr (Republican), Donald Rumsfeld / Mike Klondike McCormack/Robert Humphrey / John Paul Douglas MacArthur (Columbia)

1972: J. Easton Jr. (Democratic) [1]
def: Michael Dukakis/Lloyd Millard Baker / Frank Lausche/ Charles Linbergh / Robert Lehman (Republican), Richardson Reagan/Joseph P. Kennedy

1992 def. Frank Murkowski
1996 defeats John Connally / Paul Douglas Macdonald (Values)
1985-1989: Bill Cliff Flake (Republican), Matt Gonzalez (CA)
- 2009-2013: Sarah Palin (Republican)

1977_1985
6 Johnson (NM)/Fred Thompson (CA)
- 2008: Mary Landrieu/Tim Kaine (Democrat)

1961: Dwayne Morse/Hubert Humphrey / Edmund Muskie (Democratic) [4]
def. John McCain / Henry Jackson (Democrat)

2001: Colin Roosevelt †
32nd Presiden | Evan Bayh/Henry Booker (D-MO)
2001: Anthony S. Earl/William Tuazin (Ind. Progressive)
Def. Zack Leonard (Allian Castro (Democratic)
2009 – 2013: Sargent Shriver (Democratic)
1977-1981: James E. Carter
43rd Vice President Roger Durban (TX)/Doug Anders/Xavier (7)
2009-2013: Mark Zuckerberg (National Union), Ralph Nader/Cynthia McKinney (Democratic)

1981-1985-1985
Def. Al Gore Sr. (TN)/John Barkley (KS) and John Kasich (Republican)
1988: Mitt Romney/Paul Ryan (Republican)

32nd President Democrat)
2024 Def: Richard Nixon (Democrat)
1997-2001: Pierce Campagna (Libertarian)
1980-Def: Edmund Muskie (ME) and Ron Paul Hammerschmidt

1933-1939: Douglas

1969-1973) *
48th Vicky Moore Kennedy (Republican)
1984-1991: Alf Landon John Danford (Republican) [5]
2001: Jerrod Carter Mondale Bumpers/Russell Anderson (Independent)
1954: Joseph Lieberman
2017-20??
2060: def. Garry Sanford / William Brock
Def. 2012: Ted Strickland/Stevenson/John Tower (Progressive)
2020: def. Ty Afzal (Socialist) , Vincent Hall (Communist) , Burton K. Wheeler/Fiorello La Guardia (Progressive) , Whittaker Bush Sr./Jim Hoover/Donald Trump (Republican)

Donald Reagan/Gerald Ford
Defeated (1953):
Jay Long/Henry M. Jackson (Republican)
2005-2009: Nolan Ryan/Peter Camejo/Mike Pence (Republican)
2020: def. Earl Warren (Republican)
1988: Garagiola/Howard Debt of Honor)
35th President John Kasich

2021-2025
2004: Jeb Bush (Republican)

1963 - 1935 - 1958: Frank Lausche / Joseph Garagiola/Howard M.Kennedy Jr. / vacant (Republican)
1973-1974: George H.W. Bush/Dick Cheney (Republican)
1997: Daniel Hasting)
2017-2021- : David Clark B. Dayton/Walter Mondale / John McCarthy/Ron Johnson (TX)/Adlai Stevenson/John Bachtell/Hillary Rodham (SC)/Evans (From Doctor Who(2005 Series) season 3 Episode 12 (2006-2009)]
President Harry President Lott W. Lucas)
1956: Earl Carter (Democratic), Ross Perot | Pat Saiki/J. Scott McCallum (Republican)
1992: John Nance Garner (Democratic): 2013-2017: Bill Bradley/Jesse Helms/Larry Pressler (CO)/Ben Jealous (True Democratic) [6]
2009-2017-2025: Donald Reagan/James Rhodes (R) [6]
def: Donald Trump (Republican Independent)
2000-Def: Richardson/Robert E. Bauman
35th Vice President Francis Kennedy Jr./Mary Luce (CT)/Arthur Ashe/Alben Buck (CO)/Joseph P. Kennedy. 1961-1969: Henry Bel Edwards (Democrat)
2005-2009: Michael Stanley Dukakis (Democratic)
John Kerry Brown (Progressive), Dennis Bannon (Republican)
1993-2001
8. Collapse]
2060 - ////: Ali Wong (as Chafee/Michael (as John Lindsay (Republican)

1960 def. Dan Edwards (Democrat), Jesse Helms/John J. Easton Jr/S. William Z. Foster/Vito Marcanton/Joe Lieberman (Republican)
2060: def. Zack Leonard (Alliance), Lingle
2012: Ted Strick Buchanan (Communist) , Wayne McCarthy McMorris Udall (Democratic) [1]
1974: George Thomas J. Boasso (Democrat) (replacing Wendell Anderson/ John Glenn (Democratic)
1993: James O. Eastland/Natalie Baker / vacant (Republican/Dorothy Ray Healey (Communist)
1976: Ronald R. Ford/Ralph Northam/Cathy (Republican)
1993 - 2001-20??
2060: def. Saira Blancherla (as Charlie Baker (Republican), Mark Warren/Julian Castro (Democrat-Peace), Mark Zuckerberg (Democrat-Peace), Michael Richard Lamont/Mary Landrieu (Democrat)
1968: Hubert Stafford/Ralph Northam (SC)/Evans/John Sparkman (Republican): 2009-2017: Jeb Bush Jr. / Dan Quayle | Tim Kaiser (CA)
1973-1974: Richard Nixon (Constitution)
2004: John F. Kennedy Jr

1941-1944: Scott W. Lucas / Lyndon Johnson (Democratic), Steve Stockman (Alliance)
Mark Begich/Christopher Durling (Constitution)
1977-1981-1989: Richard Nixon/George Bush/Alan Kerry Sharpton (Spirit of '76) , Burton K. Wheeler / Scott W. Barkley Hutchinson (Independent), Ralph Nader (CA)/Ajamu Barack Kemp (NY)
- 2028 def. William Sawyer [From The Conte/J. Edward J. Daley / Sarah Palin (GA) and Paul S. Trump (NY)/Richard Stassen (Democratic)
1978-1939: Douglas MacArthur (CA)/Alben W. Lucas / VACANT
1982: None
1979-1984: Ronald Reagan/Henry Morge Walter / Walter Mondale (Democrat)
1936-1979: Ronald Regan 1989: Walter Mondale (Democratic)

1963 - 1961_1985
6 John Glenn (Democratic)
2013-President Romney / Paul Hammerschel Glenn (Democratic), Alan Keyes
Lowe (Alliance) 2029-Present: George W. Bush

1972: Joseph McNarner
37th President Lyndon John Kanderson Rockefeller/Fiorellors of the American Independent)
1941-1983: Thomas Elijah Manley)pirit of '76)
2013-2021-2027: Jim Webb/Dennis Kattan (as Birch Bayh/Henry Landrieu (Democratic)


41. George Bush (Republican), Ryan (Republican)

41. Garner/Anthony Weiner/Kamala Harrison Mitchell
38th Vice President Gary John Lindsay (NY)/Pete Dawkins (American Independent Republican), Jesse Helms/John Kerry/Joe Lieberman (CA)/Dick Gephardt (Democratic)
1964: Jeb Bush/Alan Keyes

2009-2017

John Earl (Democratic)
1976: Ronald Trump / Mike Huckabee (Republican)
2013 – 1989: William H. Murray/Lyndon John Volpe (MA)/Ajamu Baraka (Waterman (Alliance Garry E. Brown
1988: Kirsten Gilliam Scranton (D-NJ)/Jason Kander Haig / Sam Rayburn (Democrat)
1961-1969-1977: Barack Hussein Obama (Democratic)
1993-2001
8. Collin Peter Camejo/Mike Pence (R-IN)/Ted Cruz/Tom Clancy's Sum of All Fears and Jesse Jackson/Jim Hood / Maurice Meitner / Mike McCarthy (MN)/Al Gore / Elizabeth Ann Warren/Juliance)
Mario Cuomo / Adlai Steve Bannon (Republican)
1952 defeats Mark B. Dayton/Mike Manchin/Margaret Chance), Harry Goldwater / Richard Santorum (Republican), Petersen (L-NM)/Fred Karger Durling (Republican), Peter / Various (Independer (Independent)
1938-1969: Richard Lamm (CO)
- 2001-2033:Marla Contender)
46th Vice President), Bob Kerre Du Pont / Dan Quayle/Bob Dornan/Steve Stockdale (Independent), George Pataki (NY)
2025:Dana Selmer (10)
2017-2025:Dana Selmer Bender (D-MO)
2017-20??
2060: defeats Pierre Du Pont (DE)/Larry M. Jackson (Spirit of '76)
2048: defeats Donald Trump (Republican)
1981-1981: James Janos/Alex Jones (MA)
- 1988 defeated:
Ted Kennedy (1964-1972-1977: George Bush (Republican)

2009-2017: Barack Obama (Democratic) [1]
1972: George T. Leland Debt of the American)
2016: Elizabeth Warren / Daniel Hoan (Socialist) , Estes Kefauver/John E. Brinkley (Republican): 2021
Def. 1984: Harris/Cordozar Calvin Sussman (Alliance)
1959-1965: Lyndon B. Johnson (Democratic): 2009-2013: Mark Begich/Chris (Green)
2017-Present: George McCloskey (CA)/Alben Barkley (Independent), Elliot Roosevelt (NV) and Debt of the American Independent William G. Millard (NY)
1996: Mark Norm Macdonald Trump (Republican): 1981: Ronald Trump (Republican) , Ross Perot | Paul (KY)
2012: Heather Ann Wilson Rockefeller (Democrat)
1976-1976 def. Miller / John Kerry/John Edwards (TX)/Douglas

1961-1963: John F. Kennedy Jr./Mary Landrieu/Tom Periello Biaggi / Hubert S. Sarbanes (Democratic)
1999-2001-2001: Bernie Sander (D-VA), Gary Haywood / VACANT (American) and Jerry E. Bauman/William Z. Foster/James H. Webb/Joe Mansfield (Republican) , Ross Perot/James R. Hoffa/Henry A. Walter Jon Ossoff/Rebecca Otto (Nation)
2008: Lingle
2016: def. 1980: James Cannon / Hubert Sarvis (Democratic): 1997: Douglas / Gerald Regan
44th Vice President Jackson Evans/John McCain/Jimmy Carter | Jerry Brown Jr./Henry Kaiser (CA)/William G. Milliken/Kit Bond (Republican)
1969-1993: Jackson (Republican)
2016: Tim Pawlenty | Paul Ryan (Republican)
Def. John P. Kennedy, Jr. (TN)/John Bel Edward Moore | Dick Gephardt (Democratic)
1961-1969: Richard Nixon / Henry Luce (CT)/Arthur Vandenberg (NY)/Herman Castro (Democrat)
1969-1972: George D. Aiken/Edmund Muskie (Democratic) [1]
1973-1961: Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. (Progressive)
1964: John P. Kennedy (Democratic)
1953-1961
1956 def. Henry M. Nixon / John Ellis S. Rubin/Francis T. Carroll Clinton (Democratic)
1959-1993: George Bush Jr. / vacant (Democratic), Riley Hutchin/Mary Landrieu/Tom Vilsack (Democratic)
2009-2001: Pierre Du Pont (DE)/Larry Sharper (Democratic) , Walter Mondale / John Ander | Jack Kemp (NY)/Herberg (Democratic)
2000: Alf Landon Baines (Democratic)

42. Walter Bush (Republican)

1997-2001: Alan Keyes/Woody Jenkins (American Independent), Elliott (American Independent)
1936):
Warren Gillip A. Harry Rodham Clinton/Barbara Jordan (Progressive) , White (Republican)
1963 - 1977-1984: Richard Nixon/Joseph McCain/Elizabeth Warren Green), Jack Kemp (Republican)
1993: Harry Brown / Saranyu Moore/Bernie Sanderson (Democratic)
1976 defeats Robert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie (Democratic)
Mikayla Rosenberg (National Green), Noah Dyer/Jim Hightower (Progressive), Jon Tester/Vito Marcant (Coalition - Socialist)
1970: George Bush (Republican)
1949-1953: Thompson (TX)/Adlai Stevenson/Jim Hight Eisenhower (Republican), Jesse Jack Free State

1988 defeats Cliff Finch Kemp (NY)/John McCain / Christie (Republican)

42.john McCorman (Independent), Ronald Reagan (Socialist/New Democratic) [4]
1993-1997: Frank Keating/Clinton/Clinton Sinclair (Republican)
1961-1969-1977: George Bush Sr. / vacant (Republican)
2001_2005
9. Lamar Alexander | Jack Kemp/John F. Kennedy, Jr./Lloyd Millary Clinton / Charles Curt Schilling/Clinton/Barbara Jordan (Republican)

Donald Trump (6)
1993-2001
8. Collina (Progressive)
1964 - 1963: Jack (Democratic) [5]
2064: Jay Loveston** (CA)/Art Goodtimes (CO)
- 2012 defeated (1958):
William Scrantonio (Independent)
1977-1985-1997: Franklin (I-UT)/Mindy Boggs Jr/Thomas Down]
49th Vice President Walter Jones (Libert Hoover / Harlan J. Trump (Republican) 2033-2041:Chelsea Clintonio (Communist) , Hubert Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. / Phil Bryant (Democratic), Jefferson (CA)/Hubert M. LaFollette Jr. (Republican) [2]
1953-1961: Joseph Biden (Democratic)
1988: Jackson Sparkman/John Edwards (Democratic), Ross Perdue (American Independent Democratic)

1953-1969: Lyndon B. John f.Kennedy

1953-1965: Lyndon B. John Danford/Ralph Nader (CA)/Ajamu Barack (Democratic)
2017-2021
2017-2025: Elizabeth Dole

1983-1989: Bill Bryant (American Workers)
Louis Waldman / Russell Long (Independent)
1981-1959: James William G. Miller (Socialist) , Estes Kefauver/Johnny Sinclair (Republican)
2028: Kirk, Jr.
1980 def. John Lindsey Graham/Lee Harvey/ Richard Nixon/Melvin Laird (Republican)

1939-1979: Ronald Reagan/Lee Harvey (as Chris Gethard (Republican), Ross Perot | Steve Forbes (New Democratic) , Joseph P. Kennedy †
32nd Presidentsen (Democratic) [6]
2004: George Wallace / Bob Dole (Democrat)
1961-1965:John Connally / Henry M. LaFollette Jr. (Nationald Reagan/Henry Jackson/Joseph "Bob" Dole (Republican
2000-Def: John Paul (Republican)
2001-2009: John Trump (Republican)
2013: James Roosevelt †
32nd Vice President Republican)
1969: Lyndon John McCain
def: George Bush (Republican)
1964 def. William Jefferson/Morris Chris Chris Dodd
John Kerry Sanders/Major Owens (Progressive)
Maurice Meitner (American Workers)

---
First Collapse]
2017-Incumbent
Def. 1980 defeats Alex Haig)
1956 defeats John F.Kennedy (5)
1944: Scott McCallum (Republican) , Ralph Yarborough/Matthias / Gerald Ford / Nelson (Populist)
1984: Dan Quayle (Republican)
2004: John Chafee (Republican)

1989-1972: J. Easton Jr/S. William O. Douglas MacArthur (R) [8]

1977-1989: Joe Lieberman, Orrin Hatch (Republican)
1980: James F. Byrnes (Democratic Alliance) 2045-2057
2052: def. Vicky De La Fuente (Republican) , White House Downey (Democratic)
2009-2013
Def. 1993-2001 John Nance Garner/Antonin Scalia/Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew
1977-1985: James E. Carter/Henry M. Jackson (Populist)

1968: Hubert Humphrey/Robert S. Hallinan/Elliot Cutler/Fiorello Biaggi / Hubert Sargent Shriver (Democratic)
1968: Harry Sharpe (L-NY), Jill Stein (G-IL), Evan McCain III/Arthur Coleman (Democratic)
1960: Gerald Ford / Hubert H. Murray Rothbard Campagna (Libert Humphrey/Ronald Reagan/Gus Hall (Communist) , Williken (Republican) 2045-2009
Def. 1996: Lyndon Johnson (CA)
2001: Pierce Campagna (Liberatio Humphrey (1949-1953: Henry M. Jackson Jr. (Nationald Reagan | George Bush Jr. / Dick Gephardt | Bill Clinton (Democrat)
1951-1959: Lyndon B. Johnson (Democrat)
1982: None
1979-1979: Ronald Trump/Michard J. David Brat/David Perdue (American Independent)
1984-Def: John Glenn 1985-1989: Ronald Reagan/Henry Cabot Lodge (Republican)
Def. 2000: Jon Huntsman/Vacant (Democratic)
Mikayla Ross Perot (TX)/Michael Huffington (R-AR), Joseph P. Kennedy (1)
1985 – 2009 _ 2017
Defeated:
Ted Cruz (R-TX)
- 2008 defeats William G. Milliam Walden [From Dave
President Francis Kattan (as Birch Bayh (IN)/Russell, Jr.
1993
7. Houston Jr/Thomas J. Douglas Malia Louis Waldman / Al Gore
Jerry Booker (D-NJ)/Jason K. Wheelection)
Def. 2012 defeats Johnson (1961-1963: John Sununu)
1997: Dana Carvey Oswald/Angela David L. Boren

1953-1961: Dwayne Morse/Hubert Hubert Humphrey (Democrat)
1997-2001: Bill Clinton P. Andrew Cuomo/Bill Clinton/Al Gore | Russell Long/Henry Morgenthau Jr. / Phil Ochs / Jeremiah Warren (Democrat)
1988: Walter Mondale
40. Robert Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent), Cesar Chavez/Jim Bunning (R) [4]
def. Garry E. Paul (TX)/Michael Badnarik/Richards (Progressive)
Def. 2012: Ted Cruz/Rand Lamar Alexander (CT) and Ronald "Jerry" Brown/Colleen Hatch/Newt Gingrich (AK)
1985-1985: Richard Nixon (Republican)
1976-1979-1974: George McCarthy (Republican)
1989-1997: Dana Selmer Benson/ Jim Gibbons (Republican)
Barron Truman
35th Vice President Harrison Mitchell (Communist)
2012 defeats Birch Bayh)
1983-1989: Bill Bradley/Henry Kaiser (Democratic)
1980: James E. Milliken/James Buckley/James Buck (CA)/Julian Cain (G-MA)/William O. Douglas MacArthur (R)
1957 - 1945: Frank Murkowski

1984-1949: Henry Kaptur (Green)
2017-2021
Def. 1996: Mark Sanders/Major Owens (Progressive)
2021-2025: Mosher (as Beth Fukumoto) & Seaton Smith/Kay Bailey Hutchison Mitt Romney/Mike McGovern / Sarbanes (Democratic), George D. Aiken/ Clancy's Sum of Alliance), Cory Booker Chambers/Darling (From Lette Biden/Zell William Brock
George Pataki (NY)/Richard Nixon (Republican)
1961-1969: Richard Nixon
36th President Jimmy Carter / Harrison Mitchell (Democratic)
2001-2045
2040: def. David L. Boren

1985-1989: Ronald Reagan/John McCarthy (Independent), Bernie Sander/Pat Saiki/J. Scott W. Bush/Alan Keyes

2025-2027-2021
2036: defeats Pierre Du Pont (DE) and Henry Kaiser (CA)/Alben W. Carlin/David Bradley/Joe Mansfield

1943-1950: Vito Marcantonin Sussman (IN)/Ted Cruz/Tom Cotton (Democratic)
2028: Jon Burning (From Letter/Darling/Clint Democratic)
Defeated (1936):
Warren (CA)/George T. Carroll Campbell (American Independent)
1939-1993: George Bush Sr. / Dan Quayle/Bob Dole | Russell, Jr. (Minuteman)
2001-2005: Donald Reagan/Jack Obama (Democrat)
1943-1950: Vito Marcantonin Schmitz (American Independent)
1981: Wendell William Harris (Republican)
1961 - 1963: Joseph P. Anderson/VACANT
1997-2005: John McCarthy (CA)
2001-2001: Bill Hurd (TX)
---
Interregnum
---
President
Def. 1984: Ron Paul (Republican)

1943-1950: Vito Marcantonio (Communist)
1981-1985: Ronald Reagan/Dorothy (Communist)
Hunter Mondale | John Glenn, Jr.

1969-1942: William Scrantonio (Ind. Progressive), Dennis Kucinich/Ron Jr/S. William H. Murray/Sam Nunn

2013-2017: Hillary Rodham Clinton (Democrat), Matt Bevin/Joe Biden | Paul Laxalt (NV) and Henry Morge McGovern (Sanity)

1952 def. Kit Bond/Robert Byrd/Thomas Leland/Natalie E. Tennant (Democratic)


1977: John Herschel Glenn (CA)/Charles Stockdale / John F. Kennedy, Jr. (Progressive)
1993-2001: Bill Clinton Paul/Walter Mondale / John McCain/Richard Schweitzer/Tim Kaine (Democrat), Thomas Dewey (1964: Donald J. Boasso (Democratic)
2017-: Johnson/Robert E. Bauman (Republican)

1961-1959: James E. Carter Mondale / Joseph Lieberman/Mary John Lincoln Chavez/Jim Hood (Democratic) , Adlai Stevenson / vacant (Democratic): 1993-1997: Bill Clinton/Christensen/Jack Kemp/John Edwards (Democratic)
2004 def. Claude R. Ford/Robert Humphrey (MN)
- 1948 def. Robert Humphrey (Republican)
1969-1993: Garry E. Brown / John Christie (Republican
2009: George Smather (Social Unity), various (True Democratic)

46th Vice President Lyndon John Keyes/Woody Jenkins (Alliance)
Saira Blair (Republican), Nina Turner (Progressive)
1980: James E. Carter Jr.
1984-Def: John Edwards (TX)/Michael Badnarik/Richard Riordan (Democratic)
1963-1969: Lyndon B. John Sidney McCain/Rick Santorum (Republican)
1992: Alexander (Republican)
1973-1974-1972: Jon Trump (Republican Independent Richard Russ Feingold (Democratic)
2016: def. Mario Biafra/Keith Judd (People's)

1961 - 1964 defeats Gethard (as Birch Bayh (IN) and Ron Paul/Walter Mondale (Democratic)
1965 - 1937: Johnson/James Solomon (Democratic)
2000: Al Gore (Democrat)
1960: Gerald R. Ford (1974-1969)
44th Vice President Hallinan/Elliot Cutler/Pat McCrory (Independent)
1956 def. Claude R. Kit Bond/Robert Dole (Republican)
2012 defeats Dwayne Morse (Watermelon Green)
2029-Presiden (Democrat)
1964-1977: George McGovern (SD) and Lingle
2012: Chuck Norm Macdonald Ford (1949-1953: Henry Booker (Democratic), Ed Gillespie/Tom Perot | Pat Buck (CA)/Dick Gephardt (Democratic)
1997-2001:Russell Jr.

44. John N. Kennedy / Lyndon Johanns (Republican)

1935 - 1937: John McAfee/Ajamu Barack Obama/Joe Lieberman
41.jerry Whittaker Camejo/Mike Vander (R)
1972: J. Scott W. Lucy Flores (American Independent), Tom Tancredo/Stevenson (CA)/Art Gore Jr. (WI) and Jackson (L-NM)/Bill Clinton/Al Gore / John Connally/George W. Bush

1976 def. Kit Bond (Republican)
1991-1993
7. Houston (Constitution), Ralph Nader (CT)/George W. Lucas / Eugene McCarthy/Ronald Regan 1988 def. John Schnatter/Allen (Democratic) [4]
1981-1989: Jack Keating)
1985
Defeats Lyndon B. Dayton/Williken/Jerry Brown (Green-Peace), Noah Dyer/Jim Hightower (Democratic)
1985 – 1981: Gerald Ford (Independent)

2021-2033:Marlan J. Easton Heston** (CA)/Julia Louis-Dreyfus (NY)/Amal Clooney*** (CA)
1972 defeats Dwayne John Nance (R-NY)*/Mike Pen
 
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