List of Prime Ministers of the American Commonwealth

You gotta love Teddy Roosevelt. He is an early 20th Century Chuck Norris :D
 
Last edited:
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
 
Jeesh, a butterfly net that large could double as a solar sail

1789:
John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)

1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]
1938: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [21]

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
[21] Often called "the Republican Revolution", the long minority Republican-Socialists gained considerable ground in the Depression, supporting Roosevelt's reforms until his pledge to assist Great Britain in her revanchist aims. Popular discontent over rearmament and the threat of another Great War leads to the Republican-Socialists entering government, leaving the British Empire and forming a constitutional republic.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]
1940: Robert Taft, MP for Columbus (Conservative) [21]

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
[21] Led the nation during the Second Great War between Britain-USA-France vs. Germany-Russia-Italy
 
Looks like I beat you. And since we were thinking very similarly, but with very different outcomes, I propose that we split the lists into two TLs.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1928: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]
1938: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [21]
1939: Robert Taft, MP for Columbus (Conservative)

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
[21] Often called "the Republican Revolution", the long minority Republican-Socialists gained considerable ground in the Depression, supporting Roosevelt's reforms until his pledge to assist Great Britain in her revanchist aims. Popular discontent over rearmament and the threat of another Great War leads to the Republican-Socialists entering government, though a bill to leave the British Empire narrowly failed in Parliment.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1928: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]
1938: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [21]
1939: Robert Taft, MP for Columbus (Conservative)
1940: Franklin D. Roosevelt, MP for NY-UE (Lib. Democrat)

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
[21] Often called "the Republican Revolution", the long minority Republican-Socialists gained considerable ground in the Depression, supporting Roosevelt's reforms until his pledge to assist Great Britain in her revanchist aims. Popular discontent over rearmament and the threat of another Great War leads to the Republican-Socialists entering government, though a bill to leave the British Empire narrowly failed in Parliment.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1928: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]
1938: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [21]
1939: Robert Taft, MP for Columbus (Conservative)
1940: Franklin D. Roosevelt, MP for NY-UE (Lib. Democrat)
1942: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [22]

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
[21] Often called "the Republican Revolution", the long minority Republican-Socialists gained considerable ground in the Depression, supporting Roosevelt's reforms until his pledge to assist Great Britain in her revanchist aims. Popular discontent over rearmament and the threat of another Great War leads to the Republican-Socialists entering government, though a bill to leave the British Empire narrowly failed in Parliment.
[22] Roosevelt's government collapses following the outbreak of the Second Great War with the failure of the mobilization bill. With British aggression hurting Liberal Democrat and Conservative turnout, the Republican-Socialist majority government declares a republic, and withdraws from the empire.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1928: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]
1938: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [21]
1939: Robert Taft, MP for Columbus (Conservative)
1940: Franklin D. Roosevelt, MP for NY-UE (Lib. Democrat)
1942: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [22]
1947: Huey Long, MP for Baton Rouge (Lib. Democrat) [23]

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
[21] Often called "the Republican Revolution", the long minority Republican-Socialists gained considerable ground in the Depression, supporting Roosevelt's reforms until his pledge to assist Great Britain in her revanchist aims. Popular discontent over rearmament and the threat of another Great War leads to the Republican-Socialists entering government, though a bill to leave the British Empire narrowly failed in Parliment.
[22] Roosevelt's government collapses following the outbreak of the Second Great War with the failure of the mobilization bill. With British aggression hurting Liberal Democrat and Conservative turnout, the Republican-Socialist majority government declares a republic, and withdraws from the empire.
[23] At the end of the Second Great War, the rebellious government of the Republican Socialists once again becomes a dominion, with popular support.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1928: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]
1938: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [21]
1939: Robert Taft, MP for Columbus (Conservative)
1940: Franklin D. Roosevelt, MP for NY-UE (Lib. Democrat)
1942: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [22]
1947: Huey Long, MP for Baton Rouge (Lib. Democrat) [23]
1951: Huey Long, MP for Baton Rouge (Lib. Democrat)

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
[21] Often called "the Republican Revolution", the long minority Republican-Socialists gained considerable ground in the Depression, supporting Roosevelt's reforms until his pledge to assist Great Britain in her revanchist aims. Popular discontent over rearmament and the threat of another Great War leads to the Republican-Socialists entering government, though a bill to leave the British Empire narrowly failed in Parliment.
[22] Roosevelt's government collapses following the outbreak of the Second Great War with the failure of the mobilization bill. With British aggression hurting Liberal Democrat and Conservative turnout, the Republican-Socialist majority government declares a republic, and withdraws from the empire.
[23] At the end of the Second Great War, the rebellious government of the Republican Socialists once again becomes a dominion, with popular support.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1928: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]
1938: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [21]
1939: Robert Taft, MP for Columbus (Conservative)
1940: Franklin D. Roosevelt, MP for NY-UE (Lib. Democrat)
1942: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [22]
1947: Huey Long, MP for Baton Rouge (Lib. Democrat) [23]
1951: Huey Long, MP for Baton Rouge (Lib. Democrat)
1954: Richard Nixon, MP for Whittier (Conservative)

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
[21] Often called "the Republican Revolution", the long minority Republican-Socialists gained considerable ground in the Depression, supporting Roosevelt's reforms until his pledge to assist Great Britain in her revanchist aims. Popular discontent over rearmament and the threat of another Great War leads to the Republican-Socialists entering government, though a bill to leave the British Empire narrowly failed in Parliment.
[22] Roosevelt's government collapses following the outbreak of the Second Great War with the failure of the mobilization bill. With British aggression hurting Liberal Democrat and Conservative turnout, the Republican-Socialist majority government declares a republic, and withdraws from the empire.
[23] At the end of the Second Great War, the rebellious government of the Republican Socialists once again becomes a dominion, with popular support.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1928: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]
1938: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [21]
1939: Robert Taft, MP for Columbus (Conservative)
1940: Franklin D. Roosevelt, MP for NY-UE (Lib. Democrat)
1942: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [22]
1947: Huey Long, MP for Baton Rouge (Lib. Democrat) [23]
1951: Huey Long, MP for Baton Rouge (Lib. Democrat)
1954: Richard Nixon, MP for Whittier (Conservative)
1961: Lyndon Johnson, MP for Austin North (Lib. Democrat)

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
[21] Often called "the Republican Revolution", the long minority Republican-Socialists gained considerable ground in the Depression, supporting Roosevelt's reforms until his pledge to assist Great Britain in her revanchist aims. Popular discontent over rearmament and the threat of another Great War leads to the Republican-Socialists entering government, though a bill to leave the British Empire narrowly failed in Parliment.
[22] Roosevelt's government collapses following the outbreak of the Second Great War with the failure of the mobilization bill. With British aggression hurting Liberal Democrat and Conservative turnout, the Republican-Socialist majority government declares a republic, and withdraws from the empire.
[23] At the end of the Second Great War, the rebellious government of the Republican Socialists once again becomes a dominion, with popular support.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1928: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]
1938: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [21]
1939: Robert Taft, MP for Columbus (Conservative)
1940: Franklin D. Roosevelt, MP for NY-UE (Lib. Democrat)
1942: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [22]
1947: Huey Long, MP for Baton Rouge (Lib. Democrat) [23]
1951: Huey Long, MP for Baton Rouge (Lib. Democrat)
1954: Richard Nixon, MP for Whittier (Conservative)
1961: Lyndon Johnson, MP for Austin North (Lib. Democrat)
1964: Richard Nixon, MP for Whittier (Conservative)

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
[21] Often called "the Republican Revolution", the long minority Republican-Socialists gained considerable ground in the Depression, supporting Roosevelt's reforms until his pledge to assist Great Britain in her revanchist aims. Popular discontent over rearmament and the threat of another Great War leads to the Republican-Socialists entering government, though a bill to leave the British Empire narrowly failed in Parliment.
[22] Roosevelt's government collapses following the outbreak of the Second Great War with the failure of the mobilization bill. With British aggression hurting Liberal Democrat and Conservative turnout, the Republican-Socialist majority government declares a republic, and withdraws from the empire.
[23] At the end of the Second Great War, the rebellious government of the Republican Socialists once again becomes a dominion, with popular support.
 
1789: John Adams, MP for Braintree (Unionist Party)
1790: George Clinton, MP for Ulster County (Unionist)
1796: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1799: Gouverneur Morris, MP for New York (Unionist)
1801: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist) [1]
1805: Thomas Jefferson, MP for Richmond (Unionist)
1810: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)
1812: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig) [2]
1816: Alexander Hamilton, MP for Hudson-Bergen (Whig)[3]
1821: Joseph Calvert, 8th Lord Baltimore, MP for Lower Potomac (Whig)[4]
1823: Andrew Jackson, MP for Nashville (Patriot-Whig Coalition) [5]
1827: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York City (Whig-Patriot) Coalition [6]
1829: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig) [7]
1833: Peter Augustus Jay, MP for New York-Battery (Whig)
1835: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1839: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston (Liberal)
1845: Sir Daniel Webster, MP for East Boston-South End (Liberal)
1850: Sir Frederick Douglass, MP for New Bedford (Liberal) [8]
1854: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, (Conservative Party)[9]
1855: Robert Lee, 3rd Earl of Arlington, MP for Duquesne (Conservative Party)[10]
1859: Franklin Pierce, MP Concord (Conservative)
1864: Lysander Spooner, MP for Lancaster-York (Liberal)
1865: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Constitution Party) [11]
1870: James Buchanan, MP for Harrisburg (Liberal) [12]
1872: Jefferson Davis, MP for Vicksburg (Conservative)
1876: Frederick Stanley, 16th Earl of Derby, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1884: James S. Bush, MP for Hartford (Conservative) [13]
1885 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1889 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal)
1891 : Frederick Stanley, MP for Halifax-Harbour (Liberal) [14]
1896: Levi P Morton, MP for Shoreham (Conservative)
1901: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal)
1905: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (National Government) [15]
1911: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Bullmoose)[16]
1913: Lord Leonard Wood, 4th Viscount of the Dakotas, MP for Black Hills (Conservative) [17]
1916: Theodore Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Progressive Democrat) [18]
1920: Hiram Johnson, MP for Los Angeles-South (Progressive Democrat)
1922: Hiram Johnson, MP for LA-South (Prog. Dem./Lib.Coalition)
1924: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1928: John Davis, MP for Huntington (Conservative)
1932: Carter Glass, MP for Richmond-Petersburg (Conservative)[19]
1933: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, MP for New York-Upper East (Liberal Democrat) [20]
1938: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [21]
1939: Robert Taft, MP for Columbus (Conservative)
1940: Franklin D. Roosevelt, MP for NY-UE (Lib. Democrat)
1942: James P. Cannon, MP for Detroit-Arsenal (Republican-Socialist) [22]
1947: Huey Long, MP for Baton Rouge (Lib. Democrat) [23]
1951: Huey Long, MP for Baton Rouge (Lib. Democrat)
1954: Richard Nixon, MP for Whittier (Conservative)
1961: Lyndon Johnson, MP for Austin North (Lib. Democrat)
1964: Richard Nixon, MP for Whittier (Conservative)
1968: E. Aaron Presley, MP for Denver-Harbourside (Conservative)[24]

[1] Was responsible for separating Church and State in the nation, recognizing Mahommedans as equal citizens. (TJ was quite interested in world religions.
[2] Prime Minister Hamilton survives a vote of no confidence, and calls a general election after war with France breaks out.
[3] Alexander Hamilon signs the Treaty that recognizes American control over New Orleans
[4] Also served as Hereditary Lieutenant-Governor of Maryland until his death.
[5] Andrew Jackson was a war hero in the French-American War, and lead the anti-bank, pro western expansion Patriot Party to a narrow victory.
[6] Following Andrew Jackson's untimely death Peter Jay forms a Pro-Bank and Pro-Western Coalition
[7] Successfully negotiated the end of HBC Monopoly and the transfer of Rupert's Land to the American Commonwealth in 1830, satisfying the (Northern) Pro-Western Faction .
[8] He ended slavery in the American Commonwealth, following suit with the rest of the British Empire
[9] The Conservatives were founded shortly after the transformation of the Whigs into the Liberal Party, as an amalgamation of the Patriots and the Unionists
[10] Finally got a seat in Parliament at the bye-election in Duquesne (OTL Pittsburgh)
[11] James Buchanan's Constitution Party was focused on creating a written Constitution rather than the current Unwritten one. They passed an act that required Parliament to hold elections ever 5 years. Buchanan was once quoted to have said "I acknowledge no master but the law"
[12] Fallowing the passage of the Constitution Act of 1869, Buchanan decided to run as a Liberal, the Constitution Party being Absorbed into the Liberals
[13] A border dispute between the Commonwealth and Mexico leads to war.
[14] Negotiated the end of the war with Mexico (and their Prusso-Franco-Spanish Allies). Managed to win a few thousand acres of swamp west of New Orleans plus a cool, ornate silver bowl :D.
[15] All party government formed with the outbreak of the Great War in Europe. America-Britain-German Republic vs. France-Russia-Italy-Austria
[16] Theodore Roosevelt formed another party following the Liberals removing him as their head of the party, and so Roosevelt was elected Prime Minister as part of the Bullmoose Party.
[17] The unfavorable terms of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the Great War, broke Roosevelt and the Bullmoose Party, as well as the Liberals for their leadership in the war. The loss of Cuban territories, and stiff reparations to the victors, has caused deep discontent, and harmed relations with Mother Britain.
[18] The Bullmoose Party merges with the growing Socialist Party, as well as the Pacifist Party, and the Union Party, to form the Progressive Democrats.
[19] Prime Minister for two months after Davis resigned from parliament pending elections.
[20] Responsible for uplifting the country out of the Depression and saw the merging of the Progressive Democrats and the Liberals.
[21] Often called "the Republican Revolution", the long minority Republican-Socialists gained considerable ground in the Depression, supporting Roosevelt's reforms until his pledge to assist Great Britain in her revanchist aims. Popular discontent over rearmament and the threat of another Great War leads to the Republican-Socialists entering government, though a bill to leave the British Empire narrowly failed in Parliment.
[22] Roosevelt's government collapses following the outbreak of the Second Great War with the failure of the mobilization bill. With British aggression hurting Liberal Democrat and Conservative turnout, the Republican-Socialist majority government declares a republic, and withdraws from the empire.
[23] At the end of the Second Great War, the rebellious government of the Republican Socialists once again becomes a dominion, with popular support.
[24] Ran under the campaign campaign "To Rio Nueces or Fight!" Started a devastating war against Mexico after demands of the secession of the East Texan Plains failed.
 
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