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MATTROSE94
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4375 on: October 08, 2014, 06:28:37 PM »

A Different World

1964: Rematch
√ John F. Kennedy/Lyndon Johnson: 327 (51.8%)
Richard Nixon/William Scranton: 211 (48.0%)

1968: LBJ v Goldwater
√ Barry Goldwater/Nelson Rockefeller: 323 (50.9%)
Lyndon Johnson/Hubert Humphrey: 215 (48.1%)

1972: It's Barry in a Landslide
√ Barry Goldwater/Nelson Rockefeller: 379 (56.9%)
Hubert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie: 159 (42.8%)
You maps look pretty good actually, though I think that in 1964, the Deep South would likely go unpledged or vote for a Dixiecrat candidate if the matchup turned out to be Kennedy vs. Nixon.
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Bigby
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« Reply #4376 on: October 09, 2014, 01:54:41 AM »
« Edited: October 09, 2014, 05:30:24 AM by GOPLibertarian »

2008 Presidential Election:



Former Governor Mike Huckabee (R - AR)/Senator Kay Hutchison (R - TX): 314 EVs
Vice President Joseph Lieberman (D - CT)/Former Governor Tom Vilsack (D - IA): 224 EVs

(Footnote: Gore replaced Bush in-universe and managed to get re-elected.)
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MATTROSE94
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4377 on: October 09, 2014, 07:38:50 AM »
« Edited: December 10, 2014, 05:02:13 PM by MATTROSE94 »

1964 (Nelson Rockefeller gets the Republican nomination):

President Lyndon Johnson (D-TX)/Senator Hubert Humphrey (D-MN): 448 Electoral Votes (56.8%)
Governor Nelson Rockefeller (R-NY)/Former Governor Cecil Underwood (R-WV): 73 Electoral Votes (39.5%)
John Kasper (National States Rights-NY)/J. B. Stoner (National States Rights-GA): 17 Electoral Votes (3.4%)
Others (Communist, Socialist Workers, Prohibition, Etc.): 0 Electoral Votes (0.2%)
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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4378 on: October 09, 2014, 09:46:19 AM »

Plausible West Wing Maps

1998

√ Bartlett: 297 (49.5%)
Republican Vice President: 241 (49.0%)

2002:
√ Bartlett: 358 (53.7%)
Ritchie: 180 (44.9%)

2006:
√ Vinick: 325 (51.1%)
Santos: 213 (47.7%)

2010:
√ Vinick: 471 (60.0%)
Russell: 67 (38.7%)
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Maxwell
mah519
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« Reply #4379 on: October 09, 2014, 03:37:15 PM »

2000: Gore wins!



Vice President Al Gore (D-TN)/Senator Joe Lieberman (D-CT) - 48.7%, 292 EV's
Governor George W. Bush (R-TX)/Fmr. Defense Secretary Dick Cheney (R-WY) - 47.9%, 246 EV's

2004: New Running mate, Same President



President Al Gore (D-TN)/Secretary of State Joe Biden (D-DE) - 48.2%, 272 EV's
Senator John McCain (R-AZ)/Governor Mitt Romney (R-MA) - 48.5%, 266 EV's

2008: The Rise of Fitzgerald



Senator Peter Fitzgerald (R-IL)/Senator Lamar Alexander (R-TN) - 53.9%, 402 EV's
Vice President Joe Biden (D-DE)/Congressman Chet Edwards (D-TX) - 43.8%, 136 EV's

2012: A tough re-election



President Peter Fitzgerald (R-IL)/Vice President Lamar Alexander (R-TN) - 50.6%, 298 EV's
Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY)/Senator Mark Warner (D-VA) - 47.2%, 240 EV's
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BaconBacon96
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« Reply #4380 on: October 09, 2014, 06:45:33 PM »
« Edited: October 09, 2014, 11:02:48 PM by BaconBacon96 »



Illinois Governor Adlai Stevenson/Alabama Senator John Sparkman- 294 EVs
Fmr. Minnesota Governor Harold Stassen/Ohio Senator John Bricker- 196 EVs
General Douglas MacArthur/South Carolina Governor James F. Byrnes- 41 EVs


In 1952, The Republican Party nominated liberal Harold Stassen after a long convention fight. Conservatives draft general Douglas MacArthur to run on a strong anti-communist platform. The split vote allow Stevenson to win the election and assume the presidency.
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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4381 on: October 12, 2014, 06:25:28 PM »

√ (D)  Clinton/Bayh: 443 (44.7%)
(R) Bush/Paul: 64 (34.9%)
(I) Huckabee/Palin: 31 (19.3%)
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Dixie Reborn
BeyondTruthAndIdeals
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« Reply #4382 on: October 12, 2014, 09:31:03 PM »

√ (D)  Clinton/Bayh: 443 (44.7%)
(R) Bush/Paul: 64 (34.9%)
(I) Huckabee/Palin: 31 (19.3%)
I think that MS & SC would go for Clinton while TN, KY & WV would go to Huckabee.
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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4383 on: October 24, 2014, 08:52:57 PM »

√ John F. Kennedy/Lyndon Johnson: 407 (55.1%)
Barry Goldwater/William Miller: 131 (44.6%)

√ Lyndon Johnson/Hubert Humphrey: 270 (42.1%)
Richard Nixon/Nelson Rockefeller: 223 (42.0%)
George Wallace/Curtis LeMay: 14.9%

√ Ronald Reagan/George Romney: 344 (53.4%)
Hubert Humphrey/Lloyd Bentsen: 195 (45.7%)


√ Ronald Reagan/George Romney: 511 (59.9%)
George McGovern/Walter Mondale: 27 (39.3%)

√ John Connally/Bob Dole: 391 (55.9%)
Robert F. Kennedy/Henry Jackson: 147 (44.0%)

√ Lloyd Bentsen/John Glenn: 275 (49.6%)
John Connally/Bob Dole: 263 (49.4%)

√ Lloyd Bentsen/John Glenn: 466 (60.1%)
Bob Dole/Paul Laxalt: 72 (38.9%)

√ John Glenn/Bill Clinton: 351 (52.5%)
George H.W. Bush/Dan Quayle: 187 (45.9%)

√ Bill Clinton/Jerry Brown: 367 (49.5%)
Arlen Specter/Lamar Alexander: 171 (44.3%)
Pat Buchanan/Gary Bauer: 0 (5.2%)

Bill Clinton/Jerry Brown: 272 (49.2%)
John McCain/Kay Bailey Hutchinson: 269 (49.3%)

√ John McCain/John Engler: 342 (51.8%)
Jerry Brown/John Kerry: 196 (46.5%)

√ John McCain/John Engler: 426 (57.4%)
Howard Dean/Dianne Feinstein: 112 (41.5%)

√ Olympia Snowe/Tim Pawlenty: 373 (54.1%)
Martin O'Malley/Hillary Clinton: 165 (43.8%)
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Bigby
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« Reply #4384 on: October 25, 2014, 07:42:54 AM »

I had too much fun making a random title for this map.

1988, Year of the Pornstache



Governor Terry Branstad (R - IA)/Senator Pete Wilson (R - CA): 54.5% PV, 403 EVs
Governor Mario Cuomo (D - NY)/Governor Bob Kerrey (D - NE): 44.8% PV, 135 EVs
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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4385 on: October 25, 2014, 05:54:01 PM »

√ Glenn Allan Walken: 311 (51.0%)
Matt Santos: 227 (47.7%)
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FEMA Camp Administrator
Cathcon
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« Reply #4386 on: October 28, 2014, 05:19:06 PM »


1972: President Richard M. Nixon (R-NY)/Vice President Spiro T. Agnew (R-MD) 369 electoral votes
1984: President Ronald W. Reagan (R-CA)/Vice President George H.W. Bush (R-TX) 169 electoral votes


Senator Barry Goldwater (R-AZ) 271 electoral votes
Senator George McGovern (D-SD) 267 electoral votes
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Yelnoc
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4387 on: October 28, 2014, 06:49:06 PM »
« Edited: October 28, 2014, 07:05:23 PM by Yelnoc »

1980: Anderson gives Carter a second term



Jimmy Carter 41.0%, 297 EVs
Ronald Reagan 40.75%, 241 EVs
John Anderson 16.61%
Others 1.62%

For the fun of it, I subtracted 10 from Obama 2012 and 6 from Romney 2012 to get this hypothetical 2016 map under the same conditions.



Hillary Clinton 41.01%, 272 EVs
Ted Cruz 41.15%, 266 EVs
Bernie Sanders, 16.35%
Others 1.48%
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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4388 on: October 28, 2014, 09:09:26 PM »

The American President: Reelection
[b√ ]Bob Rumson: 271 (49.3%)[/b]
Andrew Sheppard: 267 (49.2%)
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MATTROSE94
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4389 on: October 30, 2014, 09:12:24 AM »
« Edited: November 07, 2014, 08:40:13 AM by MATTROSE94 »

Here's a series of maps based off of this timeline http://www.alternatehistory.com/discussion/showthread.php?t=1754:

1960:

Vice President Richard Nixon (R-CA)/UN Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R-MA): 276 Electoral Votes
Senator John F. Kennedy (D-MA)/Senate Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson (D-TX): 253 Electoral Votes
Unpledged Electors: 8 Electoral Votes

1964: (note: The Civil Rights Act isn't passed until late 1966 and the Voting Rights Act is not passed until 1973. The reason why the passage of The Civil Rights Act is delayed is because Lyndon Johnson refuses to work with President Nixon on the civil rights issue and returns to his Dixiecrat roots in order to appeal to voters in the Deep South in 1964)

President Richard Nixon (R-CA)/Vice President Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R-MA): 293 Electoral Votes
Senate Majority Leader Lyndon Johnson (D-TX)/Congressman James Roosevelt (D-CA): 245 Electoral Votes


1968:

Senator Robert Kennedy (D-NY)/Senator George McGovern (D-SD): 305 Electoral Votes
Vice President Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (R-MA)/Governor Nelson Rockefeller (R-NY): 81 Electoral Votes
Governor George Wallace (Dixiecrat-AL)/Senator Strom Thurmond (Dixiecrat-SC): 152 Electoral Votes

1972:

President Robert Kennedy (D-NY)/Vice President George McGovern (D-SD): 276 Electoral Votes
Governor Nelson Rockefeller (R-NY)/Governor Spiro Agnew (R-MD): 246 Electoral Votes
Unpledged Electors: 16 Electoral Votes

1976:

Governor Ronald Reagan (R-CA)/House Speaker Gerald Ford (R-MI): 371 Electoral Votes
Vice President George McGovern (D-SD)/Governor Jimmy Carter (D-GA): 167 Electoral Votes

1980:

President Ronald Reagan (R-CA)/Vice President Gerald Ford (R-MI): 386 Electoral Votes
Senate Majority Leader Robert Byrd (D-WV)/Senator Ernest Hollings (D-SC): 152 Electoral Votes

1984:

Senator Walter Mondale (D-MN)/Senator Gary Hart (D-CO): 285 Electoral Votes
Vice President Gerald Ford (R-MI)/Senator George H.W. Bush (R-TX): 253 Electoral Votes

1988:

Senator Bob Dole (R-KS)/Congressman Jack Kemp (R-NY): 325 Electoral Votes
President Walter Mondale (D-MN)/Vice President Gary Hart (D-CO): 213 Electoral Votes

1992:

Governor Michael Dukakis (D-MA)/Congressman Dick Gephardt (D-MO): 299 Electoral Votes
President Bob Dole (R-KS)/Vice President Jack Kemp (R-NY): 239 Electoral Votes

1996:

President Michael Dukakis (D-MA)/Vice President Dick Gephardt (D-MO): 379 Electoral Votes
House Speaker Newt Gingrich (R-GA)/Senator Dan Quayle (R-IN): 159 Electoral Votes

2000:

Senator John McCain (R-AZ)/Governor John Engler (R-MI): 272 Electoral Votes
Vice President Dick Gephardt (D-MO)/Senator Bill Clinton (D-AR): 266 Electoral Votes

2004:

President John McCain (R-AZ)/Vice President John Engler (R-MI): 394 Electoral Votes
Governor Howard Dean (D-VT)/Congressman Dennis Kucinich (D-OH): 144 Electoral Votes
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Maxwell
mah519
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« Reply #4390 on: November 01, 2014, 04:44:06 PM »
« Edited: November 01, 2014, 05:46:55 PM by IDS Emperor Maxwell »

2016

President Obama's weak approval ratings had no bearing on Hillary Clinton, who by 2016 was riding high on the hog, leading Christie, Bush, Paul, and Cruz by margins of 6, 6, 5, and 12 respectibly. However, nobody could've predicted what was about to happen. The four frontrunners bombarded eachother with attacks and ads and it raised their negatives to the sky. Out of the blue, Ben Carson sweeps the Iowa causes convincingly, and knocks Ted Cruz out of the race. Paul wins New Hampshire, upsetting Christie, and Bush wins South Carolina. Ben Carson's grassroots operation is stronger than most expected (which was about Herman Cain levels of expectation), and Carson surprised everyone with a triple win in MO-MN-CO. Paul's grassroots support dried after Carson's surge, and Bush proved to be a weak operator, losing states like Illinois to Carson. Carson became the GOP nominee in spite of much unrest from the establishment GOP.

Which led to a crucial moment. Former Presidential nominee and Senator John McCain, furious with the Tea Party and not running for re-election, endorsed Clinton along with Senator Lindsey Graham, Senator Susan Collins, and Senator Lamar Alexander, who hailed Clinton as a "sensible, pragmatic figure who could get things done". This doomed Carson from the start, who had a notable history of gaffes. While the VP debates were unexpected (Gillespie beat Landrieu in what many thought was an inspiring and hopeful debate), Clinton decimated Carson, charging that his views were out of the mainstream. Clinton won Democrats 98-2, Independents 56-42, and lost Republicans only 24-72. This was a disaster for Republicans.



Former S.O.S. Hillary Clinton (D-NY)/Former Senator Mary Landrieu (D-LA) - 58.3%, 484 EV's

Dr. Benjamin Carson (R-MD)/Former Senate Candidate Edward Gillespie (R-VA) - 38.9%, 54 EV's
Others - 2.8%, 0 EV's

2020

President Hillary Clinton left office with mediocre approval ratings, facing off against a Republican Senate constantly and rarely getting much done. Vice President Landrieu decided against running for President, fearing the wrath of the voters would strike her again after he narrow loss against Senator Bill Cassidy. Meanwhile, the Republican primaries between Former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie and Texas Senator Ted Cruz, two losers from the previous cycle, got hot and heavy early, coming at eachother with the most negative campaign anyone had ever seen. Through the darkness, Senator Cory Gardner rose and won Iowa, then New Hampshire, and after a narrow loss in Mark Sanford's own South Carolina, sweeped the race of the nation with grace. Meanwhile, Michelle Nunn, with her record of accomplishment in the Republican Senates, ran a graceful operation that focused heavily on inner state operations, and after barely losing Iowa to Senator Dave Loebsack (elected in 2016) and New Hampshire to Kirsten Gillibrand, cleaned house in the rest of the country.

The general election was one of the most contentious seen. Both candidates had high favorable, and each had a commanding control of a good amount of the other party. Gardner's pick of Charlie Baker angered social conservatives, but made him strongly competitive in the Northeast, with most polls showing he would sweep the Northeast (including Massachussets) with ease. Meanwhile, Michelle Nunn dominated in the former Safe south (her VP pick of Paul Davis, though controversial in some circles, satisified the Democratic base, since he was more liberal than her, and put a couple of points up in Kansas), with some polls even showing her ahead in Alabama (though Oklahoma and Utah were still in the 30-40 point range as they had been in the Obama administration).

As the election came to a close, however, both bases managed to come back, but a surprise twist when a video of Nunn caught her chastising workers, which immediately allowed Gardner to pull out a new nice guy ad, attacking her as a member of the political elite while at the same time not going overboard on the attack. Gardner swept the Mideast region and won the election by the narrowest of margins.



Senator Cory Gardner (R-CO)/Governor Charlie Baker (R-MA)
- 48.8%, 282 EV's

Senator Michelle Nunn (D-GA)/Governor Paul Davis (D-KS) - 48.6%, 256 EV's
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New_Conservative
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« Reply #4391 on: November 01, 2014, 05:18:20 PM »

2016


Governor Jeb Bush/Senator Marco Rubio (R): 292
Governor Martin O'Malley/Governor Howard Dean: 246

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MadmanMotley
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« Reply #4392 on: November 01, 2014, 05:22:27 PM »

2016


Governor Jeb Bush/Senator Marco Rubio (R): 292
Governor Martin O'Malley/Governor Howard Dean: 246


You do realize Bush and Rubio are both from Florida, right?
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New_Conservative
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« Reply #4393 on: November 01, 2014, 07:47:11 PM »

2016


Governor Jeb Bush/Senator Marco Rubio (R): 292
Governor Martin O'Malley/Governor Howard Dean: 246


You do realize Bush and Rubio are both from Florida, right?

I do realize that, yes.
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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4394 on: November 02, 2014, 04:51:36 PM »

√ Hillary Clinton/Mark Warner: 270 (48.79%)
Jeb Bush/Joni Ernst: 268 (48.70%)
Bernie Sanders/Dennis Kucinich: 0 (1.98%)
Other: 0 (0.53%)

√ Brian Sandoval/Kelly Ayotte: 291 (50.89%)
Hillary Clinton/Mark Warner: 247 (47.69%)
Other: 0 (1.42%)
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Bigby
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« Reply #4395 on: November 04, 2014, 05:34:25 AM »

2016


Governor Jeb Bush/Senator Marco Rubio (R): 292
Governor Martin O'Malley/Governor Howard Dean: 246


You do realize Bush and Rubio are both from Florida, right?

I do realize that, yes.

Does Bush move to like South Carolina to run on the same ticket as Rubio or something, then?
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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4396 on: November 05, 2014, 09:27:34 AM »


√ Walker/Ayotte: 295 (51%)
O'Malley/Warren: 243 (47%)
Other: 0 (1%)
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New_Conservative
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« Reply #4397 on: November 05, 2014, 05:45:43 PM »
« Edited: November 05, 2014, 06:01:18 PM by Branden Cordeiro »


√ Walker/Ayotte: 295 (51%)
O'Malley/Warren: 243 (47%)
Other: 0 (1%)

I think O'Malley/Warren would be a disastrous ticket for the Democratic Party, I think that ticket loses Pennsylvania, and maybe Nevada.

2016


Governor Jeb Bush/Senator Marco Rubio (R): 292
Governor Martin O'Malley/Governor Howard Dean: 246


You do realize Bush and Rubio are both from Florida, right?

I do realize that, yes.

Does Bush move to like South Carolina to run on the same ticket as Rubio or something, then?

It was just a random map I made.
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SPC
Chuck Hagel 08
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« Reply #4398 on: November 05, 2014, 08:05:47 PM »

If the polling biases of 2012 and 2014 switched:

Romney 321-Obama 217


GOP 52
Dems+Ind 48


GOP 56
Dems+Ind 42
Runoffs 2
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Yelnoc
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4399 on: November 07, 2014, 02:06:41 AM »
« Edited: November 07, 2014, 02:26:37 AM by Yelnoc »

This is a R+10 shift map adjusted for 538's elasticity ratings.



Republican 57.15%, 430 EVs
Democrat 41.01%, 108 EVs

Here is a D+5 map produced by the same methodology.



Democrat 56.01%, 385 EVs
Republican 42.15%, 153 EVs
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