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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4200 on: June 08, 2014, 08:06:29 AM »

2000: Clinton v. McCain
√ Bill Clinton/Al Gore: 308 (50.2%)
John McCain/Judd Gregg: 230 (48.5%)

2004: Clinton v. Johnson
√ Bill Clinton/Al Gore: 451 (57.9%)
Gary Johnson/Ron Paul: 87 (41.7%)

2008: Gore v. Daniels
√ Al Gore/Jeanne Shaheen: 335 (51.7%)
Mitch Daniels/Tim Pawlenty: 203 (47.0%)

2012: Romney v. Gore
√ Mitt Romney/Susana Martinez: 301 (50.5%)
Al Gore/Jeanne Shaheen: 237 (48.3%)

2016: Romney v. Shaheen
√ Mitt Romney/Susana Martinez: 312 (51.0%)
Jeanne Shaheen/Russ Feingold: 226 (47.3%)

2020: Martinez v. Casey
√ Susana Martinez/Jon Huntsman: 296 (51.7%)
Bob Casey/Deval Patrick: 242 (47.1%)

2020: Patrick v. Martinez
√ Deval Patrick/Tim Kaine: 273 (49.3%)
Susana Martinez/Jon Huntsman: 265 (49.4%)
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Illuminati Blood Drinker
phwezer
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« Reply #4201 on: June 08, 2014, 04:51:48 PM »

President Forever 1980: For Jack and Bobby

1980 Democratic Primaries:



Sen. Ted Kennedy: 2377 Delegates (71.2% PV)
Pres. Jimmy Carter: 897 Delegates (28.8% PV)


1980 Presidential Election Results:

Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-MA)/Sen Lloyd Bentsen (D-TX): 506 EVs, 59.1% PV (48,081,202)
Fmr. CIA Director George H.W. Bush (R-TX)/Rep. Phil Crane (R-IL): 32 EVs, 40.9% PV (33,333,727)

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Oldiesfreak1854
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« Reply #4202 on: June 08, 2014, 06:31:12 PM »

1980: The Realignment

1980

Rep. John Anderson (R-IL)/Fmr. Gov. Ronald Reagan (R-CA): 499 EVs; 55% PV
Pres. Jimmy Carter (D-GA)/Vice Pres. Walter Mondale (D-MN): 39 EVs; 43% PV
Others: 2% PV

1984

Pres. John Anderson (R-IL)/Vice Pres. Ronald Reagan (R-CA): 525 EVs; 58% PV
Fmr. Vice Pres. Walter Mondale (D-MN)/Rep. Geraldine Ferraro (D-NY): 13 EVs; 40% PV
Others: 2% PV

1988

Rep. Jack Kemp (R-NY)/Fmr. Rep. George H.W. Bush (R-TX): 462 EVs; 53% PV
Gov. Michael Dukakis (D-MA)/Sen. Lloyd Bentsen (D-TX): 76 EVs, 45% PV
Others: 2% PV

1992

Pres. Jack Kemp (R-NY)/Vice Pres. George H.W. Bush (R-TX): 515 EVs; 57% PV
Fmr. Sen. Paul Tsongas (D-MA)/Fmr. Gov. Dick Lamm (D-CO): 23 EVs; 41% PV
Others: 2% PV
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MadmanMotley
Bmotley
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« Reply #4203 on: June 08, 2014, 07:32:26 PM »

1996:

Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN)/Gen. Colin Powell (R-NY) 286EV
Pres. Bill Clinton (D-AR)/VP. Al Gore (D-TN) 252EV
Ross Perot/Pat Choate 0EV

2000:

Pres. Richard Lugar (R-IN)/VP. Colin Powell 337EV
Sen. John Kerry (D-MA)/Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) 201EV

2004:

Gov. George W. Bush (R-TX)/Gov. John Engler 249EV
Fmr. VP Al Gore (D-TN)/Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-CT) 289EV

2008:

Gov. Gary Johnson (R-NM)/Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK) 358EV
Pres. Al Gore (D-TN)/VP. Joe Lieberman (D-CT) 180EV

2012:

Pres. Gary Johnson (R-NM)/VP. Liza Murkowski (R-AK) 323EV
Fmr. Pres. Bill Clinton (D-AR)/Gov. Kathleen Sebelius (D-KS) 215EV

2016:

VP. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK)*/Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) 269EV
Gov. Kathleen Sebelius (D-KS)/Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL)* 269EV
*(House elects Murkowski, Senate elects Obama.)

2020:

Pres. Lisa Murkowski (R-AK)/Sen. Mia Love (R-UT) 268EV
VP. Barack Obama (D-IL)/Sen. Kristen Gillibrand (D-NY) 270EV
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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4204 on: June 09, 2014, 09:27:20 PM »

√ Hillary Clinton/Sherrod Brown: 284 (49.9%)
Chris Christie/Susana Martinez: 254 (48.9%)
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MATTROSE94
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4205 on: June 11, 2014, 08:57:36 AM »
« Edited: February 22, 2015, 06:03:34 PM by MATTROSE94 »

2012 (Obama vs. Santorum):

President Barack Obama (D-IL)/Vice-President Joe Biden (D-DE): 389 Electoral Votes 52.5%
Former Senator Rick Santorum (R-PA)/Congresswoman Michelle Bachmann (R-MN): 145 Electoral Votes 44.7%
Other (Libertarian, Green, Constitution, etc.) 0 Electoral Votes 2.8%
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MadmanMotley
Bmotley
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« Reply #4206 on: June 13, 2014, 01:51:55 AM »

2012:

Gov. Gary Johnson (R-NM)/Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL)
Pres. Barack Obama (D-IL)/VP. Joe Biden (D-DE)

2016:


Pres. Gary Johnson (R-NM)/VP. Marco Rubio (R-FL)
Fmr. VP. Joe Biden (D-DE)/Sen. Mark Udall (D-CO)
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Tayya
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« Reply #4207 on: June 13, 2014, 03:09:50 PM »
« Edited: June 22, 2014, 06:01:38 AM by Tayya »

2014 Senate races



AL: Sessions (R) 100%
AK: Begich (D) 49% Sullivan (R) 47%
AR: Cotton (R) 50% Pryor (D) 47%
CO: Udall (D) 52% Gardner (R) 45%
DE: Coons (D) 100%

GA: Kingston (R) 55% Nunn (D) 45%*
HI: Hanabusa (D) 61% Cavasso (R) 25%#
ID: Risch (R) 65% Mitchell (D) 32%
IL: Durbin (D) 62% Oberweis (R) 34%
IA: Ernst (R) 49% Braley (D) 48%
KS: Roberts (R) 60% Taylor (D) 35%
KY: McConnell (R) 49% Grimes (D) 48%
LA: Cassidy (R) 53% Landrieu (D) 47%*
ME: Collins (R) 62% Bellows (D) 36%

MA: Markey (D) 62% Addivinola (R) 34%
MI: Peters (D) 55% Land (R) 41%
MN: Franken (D) 53% McFadden (R) 42%

MS: McDaniel (R) 54% Childers (D) 42%
MT: Daines (R) 56% Walsh (D) 41%
NE: Sasse (R) 59% Domina (D) 39%

NH: Shaheen (D) 57% Smith (R) 41%
NJ: Booker (D) 58% Bell (R) 40%
NM: Udall (D) 63% Weh (R) 36%
NC: Hagan (D) 50% Tillis (R) 46%

OK: Inhofe (R) 68% Silverstein (D) 31%
OK: Lankford (R) 65% Rogers (D) 33%!
OR: Merkley (D) 56% Wehby (R) 40%
RI: Reed (D) 71% Stevensen (R) 30%

SC: Graham (R) 59% Hutto (D) 39%
SC: Scott (R) 63% Dickerson (D) 37%!
SD: Rounds (R) 45% Weiland (D) 31% Pressler (I) 17% Howie (I) 6%
TN: Alexander (R) 62% Ball (D) 33%
TX: Cornyn (R) 60% Alameel (D) 38%

VA: Warner (D) 57% Gillespie (R) 38% Sarvis (L) 5%
WV: Capito (R) 56% Tennant (D) 44%
WY: Enzi (R) 75% Wilde (D) 23%

Republicans: 51 (+6)
Democrats: 47+2 (-6)

*: In run-off election.
#: Incumbent primaried.
!: Special election

2014 gubernatorial races



AL: Bentley (R) 63% Griffith (D) 37%
AK: Parnell (R) 56% Mallott (D) 40%
AZ: Bennett (R) 53% DuVal (D) 45%
AR: Hutchinson (R) 55% Ross (D) 42%

CA: Brown (D) 59% Kashkari (R) 40%
CO: Hickenlooper (D) 56% Tancredo (R) 40%
CT: Malloy (D) 50% Foley (R) 49%
FL: Crist (D) 49% Scott (R) 46%
GA: Carter (D) 46% Deal (R) 45% Hunt (L) 8%

HI: Ige (D) 53% Hannemann (I) 23% Aiona (R) 22%

IL: Rauner (R) 52% Quinn (D) 43% Summers (G) 6%
IA: Branstad (R) 55% Hatch (D) 43%
ID: Otter (R) 65% Balukoff (D) 29%
KS: Brownback (R) 48% Davis (D) 48%

ME: Michaud (D) 47% LePage (R) 34% Cutler (I) 17%
MD: Brown (D) 58% Lollar (R) 39%
MA: Coakley (D) 50% Baker (R) 47%
MI: Schauer (D) 51% Snyder (R) 48%
MN: Dayton (D) 54% Johnson (R) 45%

NE: Ricketts (R) 62% Hassebrook (D) 36%
NM: Martinez (R) 55% King (D) 42%
NV: Sandoval (R) 56% Goodman (D) 35% NOTA 6%
NH: Hassan (D) 58% Hemingway (R) 41%
NY: Cuomo (D) 58% Astorino (R) 30% Hawkins (G) 7%
OH: Kasich (R) 54% FitzGerald (D) 44%
OK: Fallin (R) 63% Dorman (D) 33%
OR: Kitzhaber (D) 59% Richardson (R) 40%
PA: Wolf (D) 55% Corbett (R) 39%
RI: Raimondo (D) 60% Fung (R) 36%
SC: Haley (R) 54% Sheheen (D) 45%
SD: Daugaard (R) 54% Wismer (D) 40%
TN: Haslam (R) 58% Gore (D) 38%

TX: Abbott (R) 57% Davis (D) 42%
VT: Shumlin (D) 65% Milne (R) 30%
WI: Walker (R) 49% Burke (D) 47%

WY: Mead (R) 100%

Democrats: 25 (+4)
Republicans: 25 (-4)

2014 House Pickups

AZ-2: McSally (R) 52% Barber (D) 48%
CA-7: Ose (R) 50% Bera (D) 50%

CA-31: Aguilar (D) 52% Chabot (R) 48%
CA-36: Nestande (R) 52% Ruiz (D) 49%
NC-7: Rouzer (R) 57% Barfield (D) 41%

NJ-3: Belgard (D) 50% MacArthur (R) 49%
NY-11: Recchia (D) 54% Grimm (R) 46%

NY-21: Stefanik (R) 50% Woolf (D) 47%
UT-4: Love (R) 58% Owens (D) 35%

WV-2: Casey (D) 49% Mooney (R) 44% Jones (L) 5%


Republicans: 236 (+2)
Democrats: 199 (-2)

Pickup in bold. Open seat in italics.
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Tayya
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« Reply #4208 on: June 14, 2014, 04:06:07 PM »
« Edited: June 22, 2014, 06:02:15 AM by Tayya »

2015 Senate races



UT: Chaffetz (R) 67% Robles (D) 32%!

Republicans: 51 (n/a)
Democrats: 47+2 (n/a)

!: Special election.

2015 gubernatorial races



KY: Conway (D) 53% Comer (R) 45%
LA: Dardenne (R) 56% Vitter (R) 44%*
MS: Fallin (R) 63% Dorman (D) 33%

Democrats: 25 (n/a)
Republicans: 25 (n/a)

*: In run-off election.

2015 mayoral elections

Chicago: Emanuel (I) 58% Preckwinkle (I) 42%*
Dallas: Rawlings (D) 69% Dennings (R) 31%
Houston: Garcia (I) 53% Bell (I) 47%*
Philadelphia: Butkovitz (D) 71% Featherman (R) 26%
Phoenix: Stanton (D) 56% Neely (R) 43%*


*: In run-off election.

Pickup in bold. Open seat in italics.
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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4209 on: June 15, 2014, 10:27:08 PM »

Read my Lips: Bush Wins Again
√ Pres. George Bush (R-TX)/Vice Pres. Dan Quayle (R-IN): 279 (49.8%)
Gov. Bill Clinton (D-AR)/Gov. Jerry Brown (D-CA): 259 (48.7%)

At an End: The Democrats Finally* Win
√ Senator Bob Kerrey (D-NE)/Sen. Paul Tsongas (D-MA): 274 (49.4%)
Vice Pres. Dan Quayle (R-IN)/Sec. Jack Kemp (R-NY): 264 (49.5%)

Good Times: Kerrey Reelected
√ Pres. Bob Kerrey (D-NE)/Sen. Bob Graham (D-FL): 343 (51.9%)
Sec. Jack Kemp (R-NY)/Sen. Jim Jeffords (R-VT): 195 (46.4%)

Nail Bitter: Graham v. Powell
√ Gen. Colin Powell (R-NY)/Sen. Olympia Snowe (R-ME): 272 (50.1%)
Vice Pres. Bob Graham (D-FL)/ Sen. Tom Daschle (D-SD) 266 (49.0%)

No Competition: Powell Reelected
√ Pres. Colin Powell (R-NY)/ Vice Pres. Olympia Snowe (R-ME): 453 (55.8%)
Sen. John Kerry (D-MA)/Sen. John Edwards (D-NC): 85 (43.5%)

Another First: Snowe Elected President!
√ Vice Pres. Olympia Snowe (R-ME)/Gov. Mitch Daniels (R-IN) 390 (54.4%)
Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR)/Gov. Brian Schweitzer (D-MT): 148 (44.3%)

2016: Three's a Crowd: Snowe v. O'Malley v. Johnson
√ Pres. Olympia Snowe (R-ME)/Vice Pres. Mitch Daniels (R-IN) 285 (45.9%)
Gov. Martin O'Malley (D-MD/Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) 225 (39.1%)
Gov. Gary Johnson (L-NM)/Rep. Justin Amash (R-MI) 30 (14.0%)
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MATTROSE94
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4210 on: June 16, 2014, 09:17:49 AM »

2016:

Governor Scott Walker (R-WI)/Governor Susana Martinez (R-NM): 283 Electoral Votes 51%
Vice President Joe Biden (D-DE)/ Mayor Bill de Blasio (D-NY): 255 Electoral Votes 48%
Others (Libertarian, Green, Constitution, Etc.): 0 Electoral Votes 1%
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SPC
Chuck Hagel 08
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« Reply #4211 on: June 16, 2014, 11:43:11 AM »

One Party Rule

1968:


Nixon/Agnew 43.4% 301
Humphrey/Muskie 42.7% 191
Wallace/LeMay 13.5% 46

1972:


Nixon/Agnew 60.7% 521
McGovern/Shriver 37.5% 17

1976:


Ford/Bush 50.1% 394
Carter/Mondale 47.9% 144

Ford and Bush's avoidance of major gaffes during the Presidential debates allows the ticket to continue to gain momentum for an upset victory.

1980:


Reagan/Bush 49.6% 283
Kennedy/Glenn 48.8% 255

Kennedy appeared to be a shoo-in with stagflation under the Ford administration and a divided Republican Party after Governor Reagan's primary victory over Vice-President Bush. However, an October Surprise in the form of the Iranian government releasing the American hostages gave Reagan the boost needed to win the election.

1984:


Reagan/Bush 54.8% 421
Hart/Dukakis 44.6% 117

A recovering economy, Reagan's personal charisma, and Hart's marital indiscretions enable a comfortable re-election for the President.

1988:


Bush/Quayle 53.4% 426
Dukakis/Bentsen 45.7% 112

1992:


Bush/Quayle 38.0% 275
Clinton/Gore 38.6% 259
Perot/Silber 22.7% 4

Divided opposition enables the incumbent to narrowly prevail despite a recession, largely thanks to Senator Gore's inability to deliver his home state for the Democratic ticket. Democrats are frustrated by the loss in the Electoral College despite obtaining more popular votes.

1996:


Dole/Kemp 48.8% 274
Cuomo/Gephart 48.8% 264

President Bush's immense popularity is just barely enough to drag Senator Dole across the finish line, after an easy primary victory over Vice-President Quayle. Democrats blame Ralph Nader for siphoning votes from Cuomo.
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Maxwell
mah519
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« Reply #4212 on: June 16, 2014, 06:06:40 PM »

The Landslides of President Mondale



President Gerald Ford (R-MI)/Senator Bob Dole (R-KS) - 49.8%, 284 EV's
Governor Jimmy Carter (D-GA)/Senator Lloyd Bentsen (D-TX) - 48.7%, 254 EV's

1976 - Ford narrowly wins election against Jimmy Carter, as Bentsen proves to be little electoral benefit and Ford's gaffes are kept to a minimum.



Senator Walter Mondale (D-MN)/Former Governor Terry Sanford (D-NC) - 54.1%, 489 EV's
Congressman Phil Crane (R-IL)/Congressman Jack Kemp (R-NY) - 44.2%, 49 EV's

1980 - As a revival of Hubert Humphrey, Walter Mondale wins the Democratic Nomination, picking North Carolina Governor Terry Sanford as VP, and faces an easy election over a weak Republican field, which produces Congressmen Phil Crane and Jack Kemp.



President Walter Mondale (D-MN)/Vice President Terry Sanford (D-NC) - 58.7%, 528 EV's
Former Vice President Bob Dole (R-KS)/Congresswoman Milicent Fenwick (R-NJ) - 40.0%, 10 EV's

1984 - The Mondale years were considered a new era of prosperity for the country. With new programs benefiting the American people, Republicans had to dig back in order to find their nominee - Former Vice President Bob Dole rose to the challenge. He picked New Jersey Congresswoman Milicent Fenwick to shake up the race. Unfortunately, this didn't help anything, and people called out the Congresswoman as unqualified to be Vice President. Mondale won in a landslide, with Dole only winning Kansas.
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Maxwell
mah519
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« Reply #4213 on: June 16, 2014, 08:48:10 PM »
« Edited: June 16, 2014, 11:07:42 PM by IDS Legislator Maxwell »

The Post-Mondale Years



Vice President Terry Sanford (D-NC)/Senator Daniel P. Moynihan (D-NY) - 52.8%, 416 EV's
Former Senator Paul Laxalt (R-NV)/Governor George Deukmejian (R-CA) - 45.3%, 122 EV's

1988 - President Mondale's approvals held in spite of some last minute scandals, but Sanford suffered from them during the campaign, and by the time of the conventions, Lexalt lead the Vice President by 20 points. However, Lexalt ran a particularly poor general election campaign, refusing to fight back on accusations of conceiving a child out of wedlock, and George Deuk, inspite of his popularity in the state, did very little to push California to the Republican Party.  Ultimately, Laxalt lost big time to Sanford. Still, the Republicans did better than expected in the Midwest, even though they lost those states too.



President Terry Sanford (D-NC)/Vice President Daniel P. Moynihan (D-NY) - 40.5%, 326 EV's
Senator Dan Quayle (R-IN)/Former Majority Leader Howard Baker (R-TN) - 38.9%, 212 EV's
Businessman Ross Perot (I-TX)/Vice Admiral James Stockdale (I-IL) - 19.8%, 0 EV's

1992 - Sanford faced a tough 4 years, but he also faced relatively weak opposition. The troubled Republican Party nominated gaffe-prone rising star Dan Quayle for the Presidency, and for VP, picked old concensus builder Howard Baker, in his early 70s. Ross Perot performed strongly, but took from both candidates, so Sanford won narrowly, even with 41% approval.



Senator John McCain (R-AZ)/Former Governor Tom Kean (R-NJ) - 46.8%, 280 EV's
Vice President Daniel P. Moynihan (D-NY)/Governor Bill Clinton (D-AK) - 45.7%, 258 EV's
Businessman Ross Perot (R-TX)/Economist Pat Choate (R-OK) - 6.3%, 0 EV's

1996 - In spite of a charismatic VP and a popular President, Daniel P. Moynihan could not fight the anti-Democratic sentiment of the nation. John McCain proved to be a popular candidate, and even with poor debate performances, managed to win, even picking up New Jersey thanks to Tom Kean as VP.
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badgate
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4214 on: June 16, 2014, 11:28:28 PM »

I could see Bill Clinton knocking McCain out in the 2000 debates. Problem is the relatively good economy at the time.
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TNF
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« Reply #4215 on: June 17, 2014, 12:06:51 AM »

1896



William Jennings Bryan of Nebraska and Arthur Sewall of Maine (Democratic Party/People's Party): 51.71% of the popular vote / 244 electoral votes
William McKinley of Ohio and Garret Hobart of New Jersey (Republican Party)Sad 46.02% of the popular vote / 203 electoral votes

1900



William Jennings Bryan of Nebraska and Adlai Stevenson of Illinois (Democratic Party): 51.52% of the popular vote / 300 electoral votes
William McKinley of Ohio and Theodore Roosevelt of New York (Republican Party): 45.64% of the popular vote / 147 electoral votes

1904



William Jennings Bryan of Nebraska and Adlai Stevenson of Illinois (Democratic Party): 56.59% of the popular vote / 391 electoral votes
Chauncey Depew of New York and Albert Beveridge of Indiana (Republican Party): 37.42% of the popular vote / 85 electoral votes

1908



William Jennings Bryan of Nebraska and John Kern of Indiana (Democratic Party): 51.04% of the popular vote / 325 electoral votes
Joseph Foraker of Ohio and Walter M. Chandler of New York (Republican Party): 43.57% of the popular vote / 158 electoral votes

1912



William Jennings Bryan of Nebraska and Joseph Dixon of Montana (Farmer-Labor Party): 27.39% of the popular vote / 8 electoral votes
Theodore Roosevelt of New York and Charles Fairbanks of Indiana (Republican Party): 41.18% of the popular vote / 418 electoral votes
Judson Harmon of Ohio and William Sulzer of New York (Democratic Party): 23.83% of the popular vote / 105 electoral votes

1916



Theodore Roosevelt of New York and Charles Fairbanks of Indiana (Republican Party): 49.11% of the popular vote / 339 electoral votes
James Clark McReynolds of Kentucky and Adlai Stevenson of Illinois (Democratic Party): 46.25% of the popular vote / 192 electoral votes

1920



Elihu Root of New York and Hiram Johnson of California (Republican Party): 34.35% of the popular vote / 22 electoral votes
A. Mitchell Palmer of Pennsylvania and Samuel Ralston of Indiana (Democratic Party): 60.12% of the popular vote / 509 electoral votes

1924



A. Mitchell Palmer of Pennsylvania and Samuel M. Ralston of Indiana (Democratic Party): 54.82% of the popular vote / 482 electoral votes
Richard S. Aldrich of Rhode Island and Ted Roosevelt of New York (Republican Party): 28.03% of the popular vote / 19 electoral votes
Joseph Dixon of Montana and Philip LaFollete of Wisconsin (Farmer-Labor Party): 16.62% of the popular vote / 30 electoral votes

1928



Carl Hatch of New Mexico and Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas (Democratic Party): 58.79% of the popular vote / 506 electoral votes
Louis Brandeis of Kentucky and Charles Curtis of Kansas (Republican Party): 40.22% of the popular vote / 25 electoral votes
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Maxwell
mah519
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« Reply #4216 on: June 17, 2014, 12:10:22 AM »

Adn then, I'm guessing, the Republicans become the liberal party Tongue
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TNF
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« Reply #4217 on: June 17, 2014, 10:38:06 AM »

Adn then, I'm guessing, the Republicans become the liberal party Tongue

That remains to be seen.

1932



President Carl Hatch of New Mexico and Vice President Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas (Democratic Party): 39.41% of the popular vote / 133 electoral votes
Senator George W. Norris of Nebraska and House Speaker Bertrand Snell of New York (Republican Party): 57.65% of the popular vote / 398 electoral votes

1936



President George W. Norris of Nebraska and Vice President Bertrand Snell of New York (Republican Party): 60.54% of the popular vote / 442 electoral votes
Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt of New York and Burton K. Wheeler of Montana (Democratic Party): 36.80% of the popular vote / 89 electoral votes
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Maxwell
mah519
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« Reply #4218 on: June 17, 2014, 03:25:09 PM »



President John McCain (R-AZ)/Vice President Tom Kean (R-NJ) - 50.8%, 295 EV's
Governor Bill Clinton (D-AR)/Minority Leader Dick Gephardt (D-MO) - 47.4%, 243 EV's

2000 - President McCain holds steady with high approval ratings until the last couple of months, with the economy starting to go down and poor debate performances pulling the numbers close. Still, Tom Kean does will against Gephardt, and Clinton's large agreement with the McCain foreign policy weakens his case in the third debate, allowing McCain to win re-election narrowly.



Senator George Allen (R-VA)/Governor Jeb Bush (R-FL) - 49.4%, 270 EV's
Senator John Kerry (D-MA)/Former Senator Sam Nunn (D-GA) - 49.6%, 268 EV's

2004 - America's at war, and Senator George Allen, the victor over the President's personal choice Senator Kay Bailey Hutchinson, proves to be a controversial nominee, and he faces the strongest Dem ticket on foreign policy in a long time, with John Kerry and Former Senator Sam Nunn battling the administration on it's handling of Iraq. In the end, Kerry wins the popular vote, but Allen wins the electoral vote.



Senator Joe Biden (D-DE)/Senator Evan Bayh (D-IN) - 53.2%, 351 EV's
President George Allen (R-VA)/Vice President Jeb Bush (R-FL) - 45.7%, 187 EV's

2008 - With the economy tanking, President George Allen faced an uphill battle for re-election. He faced a strong opponent, Senator Joe Biden from Delaware, who made an amazing recovery from his 1988 plagiarism scandal and rocked the crowned Hillary Clinton AND rising star Barack Obama. Evan Bayh proved to be a successful VP pick, and won Indiana by 8 points, more than the electoral margin.

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badgate
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4219 on: June 17, 2014, 03:36:41 PM »

Inspired by my short list perhaps?
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NHI
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« Reply #4220 on: June 17, 2014, 06:27:12 PM »

√ Hillary Clinton: 294 (50.6%)
Chris Christie: 244 (47.9%)
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BaconBacon96
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« Reply #4221 on: June 19, 2014, 08:27:08 PM »

Dwight Eisenhower Declines To Run for Re-election



Tennessee Senator Estes Kefauver/Massachusetts Senator John F. Kennedy-281 EVs
Vice President Richard Nixon/Wisconsin Governor Walter J. Kohler- 250 EVs



President Estes Kefauver/Vice President John F. Kennedy-228 EVs
New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller/Retired General Alfred M. Gruenther-252 EVs
Georgia Senator Herman Talmadge/Former Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus-57 EVs

Angered by the strongly pro-civil rights agenda of the Kefauver Administration, the Southern Democrats launch a pro-segregationist third party bid led by Herman Talmadge. President Kefauver and Vice President Kennedy are very narrowly reelected by Congress
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MadmanMotley
Bmotley
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E: -1.29, S: -5.91

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« Reply #4222 on: June 19, 2014, 11:14:23 PM »

Dwight Eisenhower Declines To Run for Re-election



Tennessee Senator Estes Kefauver/Massachusetts Senator John F. Kennedy-281 EVs
Vice President Richard Nixon/Wisconsin Governor Walter J. Kohler- 250 EVs



President Estes Kefauver/Vice President John F. Kennedy-228 EVs
New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller/Retired General Alfred M. Gruenther-252 EVs
Georgia Senator Herman Talmadge/Former Arkansas Governor Orval Faubus-57 EVs

Angered by the strongly pro-civil rights agenda of the Kefauver Administration, the Southern Democrats launch a pro-segregationist third party bid led by Herman Talmadge. President Kefauver and Vice President Kennedy are very narrowly reelected by Congress
Which leads to...


Vice-President John F. Kennedy/Texas Governor John Connally 247EV
Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater/Pennsylvania Governor William Scranton 291EV
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Tayya
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« Reply #4223 on: June 22, 2014, 07:21:07 AM »

2016 presidential race



Fmr. Sec. of State Hillary Clinton (D-NY)/Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ) 276 EV, 50.1%
Gov. John Kasich (R-OH)/Gov. Susana Martinez (R-NM) 262 EV, 48.7%

2016 Senate races



AL: Shelby (R) 66% Black (D) 34%
AK: Murkowski (I) 52% Sullivan (R) 44%#
AZ: Schweikert (R) 50% Carmona (D) 47%
AR: Boozman (R) 54% Hays (D) 44%
CA: Newsom (D) 52% Boxer (D) 48%
CO: Bennet (D) 49% Coffman (R) 48%
CT: Blumenthal (D) 61% Foley (R) 36%
FL: Rubio (R) 52% Deutch (D) 46%
GA: Loudermilk (R) 54% Nunn (D) 46%*
HI: Hanabusa (D) 65% Hannemann (R) 31%
ID: Labrador (R) 57% Minnick (D) 40%
IL: Madigan (D) 53% Kirk (R) 44%
IA: Grassley (R) 56% Loebsack (D) 46%
KS: Moran (R) 61% Boyda (D) 36%
KY: Massie (R) 51% Edelen (D) 48%
LA: Boustany (R) 53% Vitter (R) 47%*

MD: Edwards (D) 64% Carson (R) 30% Bertocchi (C) 5%
MO: Luetkemeyer (R) 51% Zweifel (D) 48%#
NV: Reid (D) 46% Sandoval (R) 46% NOTA 7%
NH: Ayotte (R) 49% Kuster (D) 47%
NY: Schumer (D) 65% Hayworth (R) 32%
NC: Burr (R) 50% Foxx (D) 47%
ND: Hoeven (R) 79% Taylor (D) 21%
OH: Portman (R) 55% Brunner (R) 43%
OR: Lankford (R) 100%
OR: Wyden (D) 58% Conger (R) 39%
PA: Sestak (D) 51% Toomey (R) 48%
SC: Scott (R) 58% Colbert Busch (D) 38%
SD: Thune (R) 57% Johnson (D) 43%
UT: Lee (R) 68% Dabakis (D) 32%

VT: Leahy (D) 100%
WA: Murray (D) 56% Driscoll (R) 40%
WI: Pocan (D) 52% Johnson (R) 48%

Democrats: 50+2 (+3)
Republicans: 48 (-3)

#: Incumbent primaried.
*: In run-off election.

2016 gubernatorial races



DE: Biden (D) 64% Ramone (R) 34%
IN: Bayh (D) 53% Pence (R) 46%

MO: Schweich (R) 51% Koster (D) 48%
MT: Bullock (D) 54% Rosendale (R) 46%
NC: Cooper (D) 49% McCrory (R) 49%

ND: Dalrymple (R) 62% Sinner (D) 37%
NH: Hassan (D) 64% Rich (R) 33%
UT: Herbert (R) 53% Matheson (D) 45%
VT: Shumlin (D) 88% Spilton (I) 12%
WA: Inslee (D) 52% Reichert (R) 46%
WV: Manchin (D) 66% Storch (R) 32%


Democrats: 26 (+1)
Republicans: 24 (-1)

2016 House Pickups

CA-7: Bera (D) 54% Ose (R) 46%
CA-21: Renteria (D) 52% Valadao (R) 48%
CA-25: Rogers (D) 50% Strickland (R) 49%
CO-6: Romanoff (D) 51% Balmer (R) 48%
FL-2: Graham (D) 52% Southerland (R) 46%¤
FL-10: Demings (D) 54% Webster (R) 44%¤
FL-13: Ehrlich (D) 50% Jolly (R) 48%¤

FL-26: Martinez (R) 51% Bullard (D) 48%!
FL-26: Porter (D) 52% Martinez (R) 47%¤
CA-36: Ruiz (D) 53% Nestande (R) 47%
MN-07: Westrom (R) 52% Erickson (D) 47%
NY-11: Molinari (R) 54% Recchia (D) 44%

PA-6: McGinty (D) 50% Costello (R) 49%


Republicans: 228 (-8)
Democrats: 207 (+7)

¤: Election held with redrawn district lines.
!: Special election.
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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4224 on: June 22, 2014, 03:07:12 PM »

√ Sen. John Edwards/Gen. Wesley Clark: 295 (50.5%)
Pres. George W. Bush/Vice Pres. Dick Cheney: 243 (48.0%)

√ Sen. John McCain/Gov. Mitt Romney: 328 (51.7%)
President John Edwards/Vice Pres. Wesley Clark: 210 (46.9%)

√ Pres. John McCain/Vice Pres. Mitt Romney: 356 (52.8%)
Gov. Martin O'Malley/Sen. John Kerry: 182 (45.0%)

Gov. Hillary Rodham Clinton/Sen. Martin Heinrich: 281 (50.1%)
Vice Pres. Mitt Romney/Sen. Lisa Murkowski: 257 (48.7%)

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