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Author Topic: Post Random Maps Here 2.0.  (Read 209993 times)
Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
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« on: January 18, 2018, 08:21:37 AM »
« edited: January 18, 2018, 12:49:59 PM by New Tennessean Politician »

I have 4 prediction Maps with the Candidates named:

2000:


Don Sundquist (R-TN)/Newt Gingrich (R-GA):
280/47.41%

Jerry Brown (D-CA)/John Kerry (D-MA): 258/48.44%

Election too close to call for several days because of Wisconsin being within 250 votes. It was originally a Electoral tie because WI went to Brown but on November 16th, it was decided that WI would go to Sundquist with just a 70 vote lead.



2004:


Sundquist/Gingrich: 370/56.7%
Kerry/Edwards: 168/43.3%

Closest state was Ohio but Sundquist had already won at that point. He would win Ohio on November 10th along with WI, MI, and PA by 2500, 4000, 5000, and 7000 votes respectfully.



2008:


Gingrich/John Hoeven (R-ND): 299/53.2%
Clinton/Strickland: 239/46.8%

Ohio and Florida determined winner and Gingrich would win both by 6300 and 540 votes respectfully.

2008:


Obama/Gore: 443/57.5%
Gingrich/Hoeven: 95/42.5%

Closest state was Florida. Obama would win it with 7% lead. Gingrich was behind by 12 points on Election day
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #1 on: January 18, 2018, 12:50:19 PM »

I have 4 prediction Maps with the Candidates named:

2000:


Don Sundquist (R-TN)/Newt Gingrich (R-GA):
280/47.41%

Jerry Brown (D-CA)/John Kerry (D-MA): 258/48.44%

Election too close to call for several days because of Wisconsin being within 250 votes. It was originally a Electoral tie because WI went to Brown but on November 16th, it was decided that WI would go to Sundquist with just a 70 vote lead.



2004:


Sundquist/Gingrich: 370/56.7%
Kerry/Edwards: 168/43.3%

Closest state was Ohio but Sundquist had already won at that point. He would win Ohio on November 10th along with WI, MI, and PA by 2500, 4000, 5000, and 7000 votes respectfully.



2008:


Gingrich/John Hoeven (R-ND): 299/53.2%
Clinton/Strickland: 239/46.8%

Ohio and Florida determined winner and Gingrich would win both by 6300 and 540 votes respectfully.

2008:


Obama/Gore: 443/67.5%
Gingrich/Hoeven: 95/32.5%

Closest state was Florida. Obama would win it with 7% lead. Gingrich was behind by 12 points on Election day
One minor complaint: if Obama got 67.5% of the national PV he would obviously win every state.

Fixed
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #2 on: January 18, 2018, 06:56:27 PM »

2000:


Don Sundquist (R-TN)/Newt Gingrich (R-GA):
280/47.41%

Jerry Brown (D-CA)/John Kerry (D-MA): 258/48.44%

Election too close to call for several days because of Wisconsin being within 250 votes. It was originally a Electoral tie because WI went to Brown but on November 16th, it was decided that WI would go to Sundquist with just a 70 vote lead.
Who was the third candidate in Wisconsin, and why did their campaign not register similar support (at least 20%, given that Sundquist carried it with >40% of the vote) in other states?

Nader still runs like in OTL, so it was him that took the remaining 4.15% of the NPV. Idk what you mean by Wisconsin though
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #3 on: January 18, 2018, 07:25:37 PM »
« Edited: January 18, 2018, 07:28:06 PM by New Tennessean Politician »

2000:


Don Sundquist (R-TN)/Newt Gingrich (R-GA):
280/47.41%

Jerry Brown (D-CA)/John Kerry (D-MA): 258/48.44%

Election too close to call for several days because of Wisconsin being within 250 votes. It was originally a Electoral tie because WI went to Brown but on November 16th, it was decided that WI would go to Sundquist with just a 70 vote lead.
Who was the third candidate in Wisconsin, and why did their campaign not register similar support (at least 20%, given that Sundquist carried it with >40% of the vote) in other states?

Nader still runs like in OTL, so it was him that took the remaining 4.15% of the NPV. Idk what you mean by Wisconsin though
You have it shaded as >30% which made him think there was a third candidate keeping Sundquist below 40%.

Ah Well, Nader was able to carry just enough members of the working Class to place the Victory percentage in 39% as he (Nader) took 23% and Brown's 38%, making WI extremely close
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #4 on: January 19, 2018, 07:16:03 PM »

1885:

72 Electoral Votes to win

Breckenridge/Bragg: 94/51.2%
Huntington/Jamison: 29/37.5%
Forrest/Wigfall: 19/11.3%

Constitutional Party
True Equality Party
Reactionist Party

Issues: Anglo-American War of 1883; Mexican Civil War; Slavery.

Fictional people: Samuel J. Huntington: born in Knoxville, TN on January 17th, 1834, Samuel J. Huntington was a Major General for the Confederate Army in the Pueblo Rebellion of 1867-1869 and the first Mexican Intervention in 1884. Despite having served as Governor of Tennessee from 1873-1881, he barely lost the state to John C. Breckenridge, though he still remains Popular throughout the state.

Alfred Jamison: born on September 15th, 1850, this young man would serve as Governor of Kentucky from 1881-1889 and was a major reason why the True Equality Party carried the state with 60% of the vote in the 1885 Election. He also served in the Pueblo Rebellion and first Mexican Intervention and would even be a future Confederate President
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #5 on: January 19, 2018, 07:39:08 PM »

Maps for 1887


Second War of Northern Aggression was an Intervention of the CSA against the USA to aid their British Ally during the Third Anglo-American War of 1883 as well as a USA intervention against possible CSA involvement in Mexican Civil War


Despite the CSA having declared war on the United States a few days ago, the USA has decided to dig in and entrance themselves where they are.


After the acquisition of North Eastern Mexico by the CSA into occupied status in 1884, the United States quickly moved and occupied Baja California and established a puppet state in the North provinces of the 2nd Republic of Mexico via the Chiuahuan Republic. The Pro-american president and Government is unpopular and the Constitution of the small Republic blatantly allows the US to March where they want to when they want to. Thus, there are many waiting for the right time to join the Confederate States, seeing it as a better idea to the US puppet state they are currently in. At the same time, Mexico is locked in a three way Civil War between Maximilian I's empire, the 2nd Republic of Mexico, and the Yucatan Union of Marxist with none showing any sign of breaking.
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #6 on: January 21, 2018, 10:12:01 PM »

1992:



Bush/Quayle: 326/42.2%
Brown/Jackson: 212/39.3%
Perot/Stockdale: 0/18.5%

Bush wins Re-election in a moderate Landslide thanks to many seeing Brown as too Liberal. It's still close in several states because of Perot, though.


1996:


Dole/Kemp: 271/49.7%
Biden/Edwards: 267/50.3%

Dole wins by the barest of margins and many thought Biden would win as he was 3 points over Dole in all of the polls on Election Night



2000:


Clinton/Gore: 457/64.6%
Dole/Kemp: 81/35.4%

Clinton destroys Dole in debates and remains a consistent +20 points up in the polls due to a combination of Dole's Low Approval, his loss of the PV in 2000, and many saying he was just as bad as his Boss in '76, Gerald Ford. He would also be nearly completely primared by Tennessee Governor Don Sundquist. Sundquist only lost because of the Western States in the 2000 GOP primary.



2004:


Clinton/Gore: 496/66.8%
Bush/Cheney: 42/33.2%

The election wasn't really a challenge due to weak debate performances from Bush and Cheney, a strong Economy behind Clinton, and a brokered Republican National Convention where Bush barely got the needed delegates due to then Tennessee Senator Don Sundquist and Arizona Senator John McCain taking many states from Bush in the primaries.



2008:


Sundquist/Giuliani: 385/59.9%
Obama/Kerry: 153/40.1%

Sundquist wins the election due to a brokered convention between Obama and Gore for the 2008 Democratic Nomination with Obama winning it but barely. Sundquist loses the first debate but regains composure and wins the 2nd and 3rd debate while the VP debate is considered a tie. When Hillary Clinton gives her own October surprise by stating she was offered the VP position only so Obama could ride her popularity to Victory, he falls in the polls and is 7 points below Sundquist on Election day.



2012:


Sundquist/Giuliani: 403/62.3%
Edwards/Feingold: 135/37.7%

Sundquist wins Re-election due to boasting a strong Economy and, the day before Election day, Osama Bin Laden was killed. Because of that, he soars to +15 points over Edwards in a landslide win. Sundquist did face a somewhat strong opposition with Bobby Jindal of Louisiana. Many Democrats agree that Bin Laden's death was used as a political tool by Sundquist as before that, the President and Edwards we're neck and neck.



2016:


Bredesen/Clinton: 468/66.9%
Bush/McCain: 70/33.1%

The entire General is a massacre as Former Tennessee Governor and current TN Senator Phil Bredesen was very popular with his Centrist ideals over his opponents more conservative ideas.
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #7 on: January 22, 2018, 12:31:09 PM »

1860:





Brecekenridge/Lane: 170/50.8%
Lincoln/Hamlin: 133/49.2%

Breckenridge becomes DEM nominee after Douglas dies from disease in 1859. He barely defeats Lincoln in New York and thus, the ACW is averted, for now.

1864:



Breckenridge/Lane: 210/52.5%
Seward/Cameron: 115/47.5%

Breckenridge wins a second term in a moderate landslide. The union continues to be the untion for another few years

1868:


Lane/Tilden: 215/56.7%
Chates/Mclean: 109/43.3%

Lane wins in a moderate landslide just like in 1864 thanks to the strong Democratic South. They make an agreement to slowly do away with slavery by 1893 but there's a catch. While Slavery is done away with, African American families must live with their former masters and help provide for them. and thus the African Families Act of 1870 is passed overwhelmingly in congress

1872:


Lane/Tilden: 194/49.4%
Clay/Wade: 164/50.6%

Election is a nail biter with Lane barely being re-elected. Cracks begins to show in Democratic Party and Republicans begins to plan for conquest.

1876:


Tilden/Cleveland: 298/57.8%
Hayes/Wheeler: 71/42.2%

Tilden is able to give a large breath of air to the Democratic party thanks to his running mate Grover Cleveland.

1880:


Tilden/Cleveland: 213/53.4%
Garfield/Arthur: 156/46.6%

Party weariness begins to take hold of the Democratic Party and there are new branches forming (Socialists and Dixiecrats being the most prominent)

1884:


Cleveland/Hendricks: 291/46.5%
Logan/Blaine: 79/41.3%
Debs/Seidel: 31/12.2% (So)

Socialists make their first appearance in the elections and cost Logan some states as well as taking states of their own. Many Southern Democrats feel disheartened with new Democratic Northern strategy and begin slowly voting for their own Southern candidates.

1888:


Cleveland/Hendricks: 226/39.5%
Debs/Seidel: 103/30.5%
Harrison/Morton: 72/20%

Vote splitting causes yet another Cleveland win, but the socialists are getting more and more popular with each passing day.

1892:


Hendricks/Bryan: 229/42.3%
Harrison/Reid: 157/43.2%
Debs/Seidel: 58/14.5%

Hendricks very unpopular and after he makes popular Bryan his running mate, he barely wins 1892.

1896:


Hendricks/Bryan: 230/41.2%
Mickenly/Roosevelt: 121/43.7%
Debs/Seidel: 96/10.1%

This is the last election where the Democrats have a combined party as the South has finally grown tired of the increasingly pro-north Dems and break away to form the Dixiecrats.

1900:


Roosevelt/Fairbanks: 225/32.7%
Lee/Longstreet: 159/29.6%
Sinclair/Debs: 35/21.2%
Bryan/Stevenson: 28/16.5%

Closest election at the time. Southern state of Arkansas, Missouri, Kentucky, Virginia, Tennessee, Louisiana, Texas, Alabama, North Carolina, Mississippi, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida secede after President Roosevelt promises to repeal the African Families Act of 1870 in 1901. Roosevelt promises to reunite the country in his inauguration speech.

Should I continue. If so, should I do an electoral Map of the CSA and Union or just the Union?
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #8 on: February 01, 2018, 08:44:30 PM »

In this Timeline, Lamar Alexander decides to run as an Independent in 1978 for Governorship of Tennessee but he Caucuses with the Republicans on Occasion. He goes on with everything continuing as Normal but in 1996 and 2000 he runs as an independent as well as in '08. Before he runs as a Republican in 2016 and wins the Nomination and Election against Hillary Clinton and against Barrack Obama in 2020:

1996:



Pres. Bill Clinton (D-AR)/VP Al Gore (D-TN): 368/43.2%
Sen. Bob Dole (R-KS)/Former Rep. Jack Kemp (R-NY): 132/40.8%
Former Gov. Lamar Alexander (I-TN)/Gov. Angus King (I-ME): 38/15.7%

2000:



Sen. John McCain (R-AZ)/Gov. Don Sundquist (R-TN): 321/51.2%
Former Gov. Mario Cuomo (D-NY)/Former Gov. James Blanchard (D-MI): 171/33.5%
Former Gov. Lamar Alexander (I-TN)/Gov. Angus King (I-ME): 46/15.2%

2004:



Pres. John McCain (R-AZ)/VP Don Sundquist (R-TN): 339/49.3%
Sen. John Edwards (D-NC)/Former Gov. Howard Dean (D-VT): 199/50.4%

2008:



Sen. Joe Biden (D-DE)/Sen. Barrack Obama (D-IL): 310/47.6%
Former Gov. George Bush (R-TX)/Gov. Sarah Palin (R-AK): 139/32.4%
Sen. Lamar Alexander (I-TN)/Rep. Ron Paul (I-TX):
 89/17.4%


2012:



Pres. Joe Biden (D-DE)/VP Barrack Obama (D-IL): 375/54.3%
Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI)/Former Gov. Mitt Romney (R-MA): 163/42.5%

2016:



Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-TN)/Gov. Chris Christie (R-NJ): 380/56.4%
Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY)/Sen. John Kerry (D-MA): 158/41.4%

2020:



Pres. Lamar Alexander (R-TN)/VP Chris Christie (R-NJ): 332/52.3%
Former VP Barrack Obama (D-IL)/Gov. Jerry Brown (D-CA): 206/46.7%

Bridgewater also doesn't happen
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #9 on: February 02, 2018, 08:26:10 AM »


An Election with a Texas Dem and a Arizona running mate?
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #10 on: February 06, 2018, 06:55:43 PM »

Midterms 2018 - Republican Landslide
Democratic momentum is crushed, as the party leadership keeps shooting itself in the foot as November approaches. The polls have turned sour in many states, as the hope of winning Texas is gone, and Democrats just want to minimize losses. Trump's approval is a whopping (for him) 51% heading into election day.

Republican: 59 (+8)
Democratic: 41 (-8)
US House
Republican: 250 (+9)
Democratic: 185 (-9)
With the Democratic wave nonexistent and the Democrats suffering more losses across the country. Tom Perez, Pelosi and Schumer find themselves under risk of losing their leadership positions.

Republicans hold their position, perhaps expanding their gubernatorial and state legislative control into taking more trifectas and taking a supermajority of state legislatures (one short of a supermajority IRL iirc).
The nightmare scenario.

Really depends on who you're asking. Being a Trump supporter I think such a scenario is great.
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #11 on: February 07, 2018, 08:20:03 PM »

2016 to 2032 if Rand Paul was Trump's running mate and not Mike Pence

2016:



Trump/Paul: 350/52.3%
Clinton/Kaine: 188/44.5%

2020:



Trump/Paul: 272/45.4%
Cuomo/Harris: 266/45.5%

2024:



Booker/Gabbard: 310/46.7%
Paul/Rubio: 228/45.2%

2028:



Rubio/Cruz: 324/46.4%
Booker/Gabbard: 214/44.5%
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #12 on: February 10, 2018, 02:05:23 PM »



guess the candidates.
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #13 on: February 10, 2018, 04:30:29 PM »

John Bel Edwards/the ghost of William Jennings Bryan versus any generic GOP ticket.

Big imagination but sadly no.
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #14 on: February 10, 2018, 04:52:40 PM »

Is Ben Nelson somewhere on the Democratic ticket? that would explain Nebraska and Kansas and the other states could simply be explained by it being a massive D landslide.

yes.
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #15 on: February 10, 2018, 04:56:06 PM »

Is Ben Nelson somewhere on the Democratic ticket? that would explain Nebraska and Kansas and the other states could simply be explained by it being a massive D landslide.

yes.
Ben Nelson/Kathleen Sebelius vs. Ted Cruz?

yes.
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #16 on: February 13, 2018, 11:08:26 AM »

1992: Clinton/Gore assassinated; Tsongas loses to Bush



Bush/Quayle: 357/41.3%
Tsongas/Harkin: 191/42.4%
Perot/Stockdale: 0/16.3%

1996: Qualye/Dole says No; Lamar Alexander says yes:



Alexander/McCain: 397/52.3%
Harkin/Jackson: 141/32.2%
Perot/Choate: 0/15.5%

2000: Alexander regains victory:



Alexander/McCain: 346/49.3%
Jackson/Davis: 192/43.3%

2004: McCain's Time:



McCain/Bush: 270/48.2%
Edwards/Kerry: 268/50.3%

2008: A era of Change:



Obama/Biden: 382/51.2%
McCain/Bush: 156/40.3%

2012: Strong Change:



Obama/Biden: 410/53.4%
Bush/Palin: 128/30.5%
Trump/Paul: 0/16.1%

2016: Tie because of Free Trump



Rubio/Hailey: 250/39.5%
Clinton/Kaine: 239/39.5%
Trump/Tillerson: 49/21%

will add details later.
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #17 on: February 20, 2018, 11:06:08 AM »

These are the primaries for both parties. Guess the Candidates:

GOP


DEM:

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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #18 on: February 20, 2018, 12:16:57 PM »

These are the primaries for both parties. Guess the Candidates:


What year is this? If it's 2020, these are my guesses
GOP: Trump (gold), Rubio (blue), Abbott (green), Kasich (yellow), and I really have no clue who the pink could be

Dem: Bernie or Warren (green), Kander (yellow), and Merkley (pink)
it's in 2016
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #19 on: February 20, 2018, 12:28:46 PM »

These are the primaries for both parties. Guess the Candidates:


What year is this? If it's 2020, these are my guesses
GOP: Trump (gold), Rubio (blue), Abbott (green), Kasich (yellow), and I really have no clue who the pink could be

Dem: Bernie or Warren (green), Kander (yellow), and Merkley (pink)
it's in 2016

Then are the Dems Liz Warren (green), Hillary (pink) and Joe Biden (yellow)?

Sanders is green. In the GOP, Rubio is blue, Cruz is green, Kasich is yellow, Trump is pink. Gold is a candidate most wouldn't expect
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #20 on: February 20, 2018, 01:34:42 PM »

Someone from Tennessee, probably. You just opened a Bill Haslam TL, so there's my guess.

Dagnabbit!
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #21 on: February 22, 2018, 04:20:04 PM »

2012: MCCONNELL LANDSLIDE!!!!!

In 2012, Mitch McConnell and John Cornyn run for President and win the entire thing against Obama and Biden:



Mitch McConnell (R-KY)/John Cornyn (R-TX): 538/100%
Barack Obama (D-IL)/Joe Biden (D-DE): 0/0%

(McConnell running for president is a gag I started in the 2012 Election Game that everyone finds good).
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #22 on: February 24, 2018, 10:29:01 PM »


2024

Sec. of Internal Improvements Takeshi Sakamoto (D-Nebraska) / Vice Pres. James A. Kennedy (D-Texas)
~280 votes,
48.7%

Sen. Nelson Guevara (R-New York) / Sen. Andrew Alegrķa (R-Florida)
~260 votes, 50.0%

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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #23 on: February 27, 2018, 05:27:26 AM »

Electoral College 20 Week Abortion Ban Referendum



2/3 of electors required
Yes - 355
No - 183

If it said "Unless in case of Rape" FF TL
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Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,530
United States


« Reply #24 on: March 06, 2018, 09:34:55 PM »

2016 Tossup states map:



Guess the Candidates
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