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President of the civil service full of trans activists
Peebs
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« Reply #5250 on: May 05, 2016, 08:08:46 AM »

Another crosspost, this time from the President Elect 1988 thread.
1960: Better Than Expected

Senator John F. Kennedy (D-MA) / Senator Lyndon B. Johnson (D-TX) - 461/33,773,636/53.28%
Vice President Richard Nixon (R-CA) / Former Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. (R-MA) - 76/29,616,208/46.72%
1964: Near-Sweep

President Lyndon B. Johnson (D-TX) / Senator Hubert H. Humphrey (D-MN) - 521/36,752,056/62.19%
Senator Barry Goldwater (R-AZ) / Representative William E. Miller (R-NY) - 17/22,348,236/37.81%
1968: Nixon Never

Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey (D-MN) / Senator Edmund Muskie (D-ME) - 379/28,459,240/45.28%
Former Vice President Richard Nixon (R-CA) / Governor Spiro Agnew (R-MD) - 120/26,092,292/41.52%
Governor George Wallace (I-AL) / General Curtis LeMay (I-CA) - 39/8,297,051/13.20%
1972: Same Votes, Next Cycle

President Hubert H. Humphrey (D-MN) / Vice President Edmund Muskie (D-ME) - 379/38,222,944/52.05%
Governor Ronald Reagan (R-CA) / Senator Richard Schweiker (R-PA) - 159/35,214,136/47.95%
1976: Party Like It's 1948

Vice President Edmund Muskie (D-ME) / Governor Jimmy Carter (D-GA) - 310/39,310,336/50.21%
Senator Bob Dole (R-KS) / Senator Howard Baker (R-TN) - 228/38,975,524/49.79%
1980: Combo-Breaker

Former Governor Ronald Reagan (R-CA) / Former Director George Bush (R-TX) - 486/44,226,528/51.23%
President Edmund Muskie (D-ME) / Vice President Jimmy Carter (D-GA) - 52/35,631,188/41.27%
Representative John B. Anderson (I-IL) / Former Ambassador Patrick Lucey (I-WI) - 0/6,470,025/7.50%
1984: The Sweep

President Ronald Reagan (R-CA) / Vice President George Bush (R-TX) - 535/55,189,824/58.95%
Vice President Jimmy Carter (D-GA) / Senator Gary Hart (D-CO) - 3/38,269,656/41.05%
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bagelman
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« Reply #5251 on: May 05, 2016, 01:36:41 PM »

The liberal party's biggest landslide in modern history, even managing to win Oklahoma.



It's better than the 332-206 result as a result of different population distribution, but still fairly unimpressive compared to the Republican's best landslide from both OTL and ATL.
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VPH
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« Reply #5252 on: May 05, 2016, 04:01:03 PM »

Confederacy Remerger Vote-1956

A CSA vote was held in accordance with the demands of US negotiators as to whether or not the CSA would merge back into the US. The measure was defeated 51%-49%. Here's a rundown of areas of support for the measure.
Oklahoma: While the Southeastern part of the state strongly opposed the measure, the western areas  of the state strongly backed it.
Texas: Similarly to Oklahoma, portions of the state along the Southern border and out west sought to rejoin the US, as there are better agricultural markets for their products and the denizens of these areas do not ascribe to the same sorts of social policies advocated by the Confederate leadership.
Kentucky: After the repression of miner strikes by the CSA military, the central government became especially unpopular in Kentucky. In Appalachian regions, many counties voted upwards of 80% for the measure, which easily offset margins opposed in the western part of the state. Small farmers in the mountain areas also opposed the pro-planter central policies.
Tennessee: A close victory for the measure, thanks to Nashville's development as a center of commerce and the desires of Memphis and Nashville business interests to open up trade. The pro-business forces allied with yeomen farmers in Appalachia to support the measure.
Virginia: Especially in Northern Virginia, those aligned with business were strongly in favor of the rejoining. This measure would fuel commerce and economic development in Virginia especially, and so much of the initial support base for this measure existed in the state.
Florida: Despite the panhandle's overwhelming opposition to this measure, those in Southern Florida with more liberal social ideas opposed the CSA all along and turned out en masse. Business also came into play here.
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Maxwell
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« Reply #5253 on: May 05, 2016, 06:57:50 PM »

2012 Presidential Election - Romney beats Obama
Romney's dominant debate performances and Obama's poor handling of Hurricane Sandy solidified one of the closest Presidential elections ever in Romney's favor.



Former Governor Mitt Romney (R-MA)/Congressman Paul Ryan (R-WI) - 50.1%, 273 EV's
President Barack Obama (D-IL)/Vice President Joe Biden (D-DE)- 48.3%, 265 EV's

2016 Presidential Election - President Romney defeats Bernie Sanders' political revolution
President Romney was expected to face Hillary Clinton, a candidate who he trailed consistently in public opinion polls, but a rough Democratic match-up allowed Romney to pull ahead of Clinton significantly while only leading Senator Bernie Sanders by a relatively mild margin. Nevertheless, Sanders' political revolution did not come to fruition against President Romney.



President Mitt Romney (R-MA)/Vice President Paul Ryan (R-WI) - 51.8%, 295 EV's

Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT)/Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) - 47.2%, 243 EV's

2020 Presidential election - The Return of Obama
Ryan faced an impossibly tough primary challenge from anti-immigrant Senator Ted Cruz, who harped on Ryan's unwillingness to back away from President Romney's immigration reform package. Ryan hedged far to the right on the subject, while leaving intraparty moderates behind. Obama is being reflected on as a successful President, and decides to run again in 2020, clearing the field. Obama begins to open up the electoral map.



Former President Barack Obama (D-IL)/Senator Kamala Harris (D-CA) - 53.2%, 374 EV's
Vice President Paul Ryan (R-WI)/Senator Joni Ernst (R-IA) - 45.5%, 164 EV's

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ExtremeRepublican
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« Reply #5254 on: May 05, 2016, 07:07:10 PM »

Guess what would cause this map:

Overall PV: Trump/Christie: 57.9%, Clinton/Sherrod Brown: 37.2%

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Mike Thick
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« Reply #5255 on: May 05, 2016, 07:09:59 PM »

Guess what would cause this map:

Overall PV: Trump/Christie: 57.9%, Clinton/Sherrod Brown: 37.2%



Indictment? Conviction? Tongue
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ExtremeRepublican
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« Reply #5256 on: May 05, 2016, 07:18:38 PM »

Guess what would cause this map:

Overall PV: Trump/Christie: 57.9%, Clinton/Sherrod Brown: 37.2%



Indictment? Conviction? Tongue

Explain New Mexico then
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Mike Thick
tedbessell
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« Reply #5257 on: May 05, 2016, 07:26:19 PM »

Guess what would cause this map:

Overall PV: Trump/Christie: 57.9%, Clinton/Sherrod Brown: 37.2%



Indictment? Conviction? Tongue

Explain New Mexico then

How did I miss that? Well, the indictment comes just days before the election. In addition, Trump makes YUGE gains among whites, but struggles with Latino voters. A natural disaster, perhaps a wildfire, depresses turnout in rural areas very, very heavily, and lets Clinton pull off an oh-so-narrow semi-upset after weeks of recounts.
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ExtremeRepublican
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« Reply #5258 on: May 05, 2016, 07:30:40 PM »

Guess what would cause this map:

Overall PV: Trump/Christie: 57.9%, Clinton/Sherrod Brown: 37.2%



Indictment? Conviction? Tongue

Explain New Mexico then

How did I miss that? Well, the indictment comes just days before the election. In addition, Trump makes YUGE gains among whites, but struggles with Latino voters. A natural disaster, perhaps a wildfire, depresses turnout in rural areas very, very heavily, and lets Clinton pull off an oh-so-narrow semi-upset after weeks of recounts.

It's the result I got from playing this game as Hillary and making the absolute worst moves I could to sabotage her.  Clinton won 43.91%-43.73%.  Johnson got 10.05%.

https://www.americanhistoryusa.com/campaign-trail/
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Mike Thick
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« Reply #5259 on: May 05, 2016, 07:45:48 PM »

Guess what would cause this map:

Overall PV: Trump/Christie: 57.9%, Clinton/Sherrod Brown: 37.2%



Indictment? Conviction? Tongue

Explain New Mexico then

How did I miss that? Well, the indictment comes just days before the election. In addition, Trump makes YUGE gains among whites, but struggles with Latino voters. A natural disaster, perhaps a wildfire, depresses turnout in rural areas very, very heavily, and lets Clinton pull off an oh-so-narrow semi-upset after weeks of recounts.

It's the result I got from playing this game as Hillary and making the absolute worst moves I could to sabotage her.  Clinton won 43.91%-43.73%.  Johnson got 10.05%.

https://www.americanhistoryusa.com/campaign-trail/

Wow. That is very, very weird.
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The Other Castro
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« Reply #5260 on: May 05, 2016, 08:52:32 PM »

Clinton v.s. Trump v.s. Sasse


Clinton/Kaine: 54.1%, 469 EV
Trump/Fallin: 34.2%, 69 EV
Sasse/Coburn: 9.9%, 0 EV
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bagelman
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« Reply #5261 on: May 05, 2016, 10:25:31 PM »



R-ID/R-TX defeats D-MA/D-VT 289-249

Primary issue at hand in this election is education and how it should be regulated and provided (or not) at the federal level, state level, local level, and even individual level.. The western GOP ticket favored less regulations and more choice for both local governments and families, while the New Englander Democratic ticket wanted free public college and a strong common curriculum for all public schools nationwide created by the federal government.

Some notes about this alt US:

*The Gov. of Utah had a plan, in the event of a dem. win, to create a education plan that would have used clever trickery to teach Mormon tenets in public schools without technically violating the separation of church and state.
*MI and IL voted to the right of WI.
*Ohio is considered a transition state rather than the eastern part of the midwest. It retains swing state status as in our world, but there is a more pronounced east/west divide and little of a north/south one. Toledo for exampled has more in common with Cincinnati than Cleveland.
*CA was the big swing state in this election. While the Bay Area went all in for the Democrats, it wasn't enough to counter Orange County, the Inland Empire, and high turnout of Mormons and rural people. Latino turnout in LA wasn't high enough to compensate, and some CA Latinos actually supported the GOP in anglophone dominated neighborhoods where Spanish speakers attending public school were liable to be in tiny minorities.
*PR and Guam both voted GOP.
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beaver2.0
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« Reply #5262 on: May 06, 2016, 02:08:05 PM »



US Presidential Election 2072:
Governor Carlos P. London (D-NM) / Senator Ralph Vincente (D-NY) (Democratic)
Governor Pat Greene (R-WI) / Representative Steve Chu (R-OR) (Republican)
Representative Joey Lewis-Zitsky (D-CA) / Mayor Carly C. Vega (D-LA) (Justice)
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bagelman
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« Reply #5263 on: May 06, 2016, 11:33:31 PM »



317-215-3-3, President H. Clinton
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« Reply #5264 on: May 06, 2016, 11:38:54 PM »

Credit to NHI to giving me the idea of not putting electoral votes on my map and making titles for the elections.

Joe in '04-2004

Joe Lieberman/Bob Graham (Democratic), 279 Electoral votes, 50.5% of the Popular vote
George W. Bush/Dick Cheney (Republican), 259 Electoral votes, 48.1% of the popular vote

Joe is a Bore...-2008

John McCain/Tim Pawlenty (Republican), 291 Electoral votes, 50.6% of the Popular vote
Joe Lieberman/Bob Graham (Democratic), 277 Electoral votes, 47.9% of the Popular vote

...But the man who isn't is Gore!-2012

Al Gore/Tom Vilsack (Democratic), 341 Electoral votes, 51.9% of the Popular vote
John McCain/Tim Pawlenty (Republican), 197 Electoral votes, 47.6% of the Popular vote

WHY DOES THIS KEEP HAPPENING TO ME?!?!-2016

Jeb Bush/Susana Martinez (Republican), 273 Electoral votes, 49.5% of the Popular vote
Al Gore/Tom Vilsack (Democratic), 265 Electoral votes, 49.9% of the Popular vote

Why can't I be more like Lieberman?-2020

Jeb Bush/Susana Martinez (Republican), 303 Electoral votes, 50.8% of the Popular vote
Tom Vilsack/Tulsi Gabbard (Democratic), 235 Electoral votes, 47.6% of the Popular vote

I Rand and Won! (or: new state, new possibilities!)-2024

Rand Paul/Kelly Ayotte (Republican), 286 Electoral votes, 52.3% of the Popular vote
Tulsi Gabbard/Kamala Harris (Democratic), 267 Electoral votes, 48.5% of the Popular vote

Rand-Slide-2028

Rand Paul/Kelly Ayotte (Republican), 428 Electoral votes, 57.6% of the Popular vote
Patrick Murphy/Eric Salwell (Democratic), 125 Electoral votes, 42.3% of the Popular vote

A realigning election (Or: Return of the Kennedys)-2032


Joe P. Kennedy III/Pete Aguilar (Democratic), 371 Electoral votes, 42.2% of the Popular vote[/b]
Lee Zeldin/Carlos Curbelo (Republican), 123 Electoral votes, 36.6% of the Popular vote
Justin Amash/Cory Gardner (Libertarian-Republican), 59 Electoral votes, 20.1% of the popular vote

This marks an end of this map series.
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Mike Thick
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« Reply #5265 on: May 07, 2016, 11:53:51 AM »

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Slow Learner
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« Reply #5266 on: May 07, 2016, 12:38:24 PM »

2004: Pay yer dues


Congressman Dick Gephardt (D-MO)/Governor Tom Vilsack (D-IA): 291 EVs, 49.7%
President George W. Bush (R-TX)/Vice President Dick Cheney (R-WY): 247 EVs, 49.2%

2008: You Can't Floor-s the Coors


Businessman Pete Coors (R-CO)/Senator Michael Steele (R-MD): 322 EVs, 52.5%
President Dick Gephardt (D-MO)/Vice President Tom Vilsack (D-IA): 216 EVs, 46.3%

2012: Discombobulation


President Pete Coors (R-CO)/Vice President Michael Steele (R-MD): 290 EVs, 49.9%

Senator Mark Udall (D-CO)/Congresswoman Dina Titus (D-NV): 248 EVs, 48.1%
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NHI
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« Reply #5267 on: May 07, 2016, 03:30:55 PM »

(Republican) Donald Trump: 260 (36.46%)
(Democrat) Hillary Clinton: 206 (34.69%)
(Independent) Bernie Sanders: 41 (15.78%)
(United Conservatives/Independent) Mitt Romney: 28 (10.98%)
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bagelman
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« Reply #5268 on: May 07, 2016, 09:20:11 PM »

(Republican) Donald Trump: 260 (36.46%)
(Democrat) Hillary Clinton: 206 (34.69%)
(Independent) Bernie Sanders: 41 (15.78%)
(United Conservatives/Independent) Mitt Romney: 28 (10.98%)

The black vote in the primaries leads me to believe that Clinton wins DC with at least two thirds of the vote.
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Oldiesfreak1854
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« Reply #5269 on: May 08, 2016, 08:24:40 AM »



Fmr. Gov. Mitt Romney (I-MA)/Gov. John Kasich (I-OH): 276 EVs (37% PV)
Fmr. Sen. Hillary Clinton (D-NY)/Fmr. Gov. Martin O'Malley (D-MD): 201 EVs (34% PV)
Mr. Donald Trump (R-NY)/Gov. Chris Christie (R-NJ): 61 EVs (21% PV)
Fmr. Gov. Gary Johnson (L-NM)/Mr. John McAfee (L-VA): 0 EVs (5% PV)
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President of the civil service full of trans activists
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« Reply #5270 on: May 08, 2016, 12:05:28 PM »

Yet another crosspost, this time, breaking FiveThirtyEight's demographics calculator.
I had too much fun, broke the simulator, and accidentally caused the Hillary-pocalypse.

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bagelman
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« Reply #5271 on: May 08, 2016, 03:20:57 PM »
« Edited: May 08, 2016, 07:10:34 PM by bagelman »




Left wing civil-rights Democratic ticket wins against a state's rights GOP ticket and a Libertarian ticket with a moderate stance of civil rights and a further right wing economic policy than the GOP.

The Carolinas and FL were easily winnable for the dems, but the Democrats chose a hardline stance on civil rights (which will be vindicated by mainstream historians as an important move forward). There was plenty of campaigning by all three sides in the 'four corners' and in ID & WY.

AL, MS, TN, AR, and LA all have statewide voting policies that are regressive. GA and FL allow county governments to have regressive voting policies. Libertarians oppose the former policies almost as fervently as the Democrats but are more tolerant of the latter, with one congressmen from GA supporting the idea of separate black counties where blacks are allowed to segregate whites out of the county and send black congressmen to DC to represent their interests separate but equal with their southern white counterparts.

SECOND PLACE WINNER:

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NHI
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« Reply #5272 on: May 08, 2016, 05:17:32 PM »

2016: Clinton v. Trump
✓ Hillary Clinton/Cory Booker: 279 (50.3%)
Donald Trump/Joni Ernst: 259 (48.0%)

2020 Republican Primary: The Sweep
✓ Brian Sandoval: 53.1%
Joni Ernst: 30.4%
Ben Sasse: 13.8%
Scott Walker: 1.1%
Other: 1.5%

2020: Clinton vs. Sandoval
✓ Brian Sandoval/Pamela Bondi: 353 (53.4%)
Hillary Clinton/Cory Booker: 185 (45.1%)

2024 Democratic Primary: The Broken Convention
Tulsi Gabbard: 46.5%
Cory Booker: 41.8%** Becomes the Nominee at a Brokered Convention
Russ Feingold: 8.9%
Other: 2.8%

2024: Booker vs. Sandoval vs. Gabbard[/size][/b]
✓ Brian Sandoval/Pamela Bondi: 517 (50.8%)
Cory Booker/Maura Healey: 17 (26.8%)
Tulsi Gabbard/Keith Ellison: 4 (21.0%)
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« Reply #5273 on: May 09, 2016, 07:10:00 PM »
« Edited: May 10, 2016, 12:51:15 AM by mencken »

Rubio Packs it After New Hampshire

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« Reply #5274 on: May 09, 2016, 08:12:57 PM »



2020

Vice President Paul LePage (R-ME)/ Governor Bruce Rauner (R-IL): 195 EV

Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY)/ Brian Schatz (D-HI): 343 EV
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