List of Alternate Presidents 2.0.
       |           

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
April 28, 2024, 08:49:35 PM
News: Election Simulator 2.0 Released. Senate/Gubernatorial maps, proportional electoral votes, and more - Read more

  Talk Elections
  Presidential Elections - Analysis and Discussion
  Election What-ifs? (Moderator: Dereich)
  List of Alternate Presidents 2.0.
« previous next »
Pages: 1 ... 33 34 35 36 37 [38] 39 40 41 42 43 ... 57
Author Topic: List of Alternate Presidents 2.0.  (Read 244638 times)
Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,529
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #925 on: May 05, 2020, 08:20:25 PM »
« edited: May 05, 2020, 08:26:26 PM by Congrats Senator Manny Sethi »

Presidents of the Enclave and NCR

Enclave

?. *First Name Unknown* Richardson (Party Unknown, Likely Independent) [Before 2220]
?. Richard Richardson {IDK if I can say his nickname here} (Party Unknown, Likely Independent) [2220-2242]
?. John Henry Eden (Party Unknown, Likely Independent) [2242-2277]
*No Presidents ever again unless America Rising Mod is installed*
?. Russell Ward (Party Unknown, Likely Independent) [2287-?] {First Ever President to ever defeat the Brotherhood of Steel with the help of the Sole Survivor}

New California Republic
1. Aradesh Aradesh (2186-2196) (Party Unknown, Likely Independent)
2. Tandi Aradesh (2196-2248) (Party Unknown, Likely Independent)
3. Joanna Tibbett (2248-2253) (Party Unknown, Likely Independent)
4. Wendell Peterson (2253-2273) (Party Unknown, Likely Independent)
5. Aaron Kimball (2273-2281) (Party Unknown, Likely Independent) [Depending on Player choices in New Vegas should he either die (Legion Storyline) or take the blame for the fall of Hoover Dam with General Oliver (if he's spared) or if he's alone (Mr. House/Yes-Man Storyline) but could remain President if the NCR Storyline is done]
6. ? (2281-?) (Party Unknown, Likely Independent)
Logged
Captain Chaos
GZ67
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 735
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #926 on: May 06, 2020, 08:13:15 AM »

What?
Logged
Huey Long is a Republican
New Tennessean Politician
YaBB God
*****
Posts: 4,529
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #927 on: May 06, 2020, 09:09:37 AM »


Based it off the Fallout Franchise using what I had from the information given in the series.
Logged
P. Clodius Pulcher did nothing wrong
razze
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,084
Cuba


Political Matrix
E: -6.52, S: -4.96


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #928 on: May 07, 2020, 09:21:31 PM »


1944
Pres. Henry A. Wallace - 46%
vs.
52% - Gov. Thomas E. Dewey
1948
Sen. Harry S Truman - 49%
vs.
50% - Pres. Thomas E. Dewey
1952
GEN Ike Eisenhower - 54%
vs.
44% - Pres. Thomas E. Dewey
1956
Pres. Ike Eisenhower - 54%
vs.
45% - Gov. Earl Warren
1960
VP Lyndon B. Johnson- 47%
vs.
50% - Gov. Earl Warren
1964
Gov. George C. Wallace - 36%
vs.
59% - Pres. Earl Warren
1968
Sen. John F. Kennedy - 35%
vs.
52% - Pres. Earl Warren
& 14% - Gov. George C. Wallace
1972
Mayor Ronald Reagan - 50%
vs.
50% - Sen. Richard Nixon
1976
Pres. Ronald Reagan - 51%
vs.
48% - Amb. George H. W. Bush
1980
Pres. Ronald Reagan - 53%
vs.
43% - Gov. Jim Thompson
1984
VP Reubin Askew - 48%
vs.
51% - Gov. George H. W. Bush
1988
Gov. Michael Dukakis - 47%
vs.
50% - Pres. George H. W. Bush
1992
Gov. Bill Clinton - 43%
vs.
37% - Pres. George H. W. Bush
& 18% - Ross Perot
1996
Pres. Bill Clinton - 49%
vs.
40% - Sen. Bob Dole
& 8% - Ross Perot
2000
VP Bob Graham - 51%
vs.
48% - Gov. George W. Bush
2004
Pres. Bob Graham - 55%
vs.
43% - Sen. John McCain
2008
VP Jeanne Shaheen - 49%
vs.
49% - Gov. Charlie Crist
2012
Sen. Barack Obama - 53%
vs.
46% - VP Meg Whitman
2016
Pres. Barack Obama - 52%
vs.
45% - Donald Trump
Logged
Unconditional Surrender Truman
Harry S Truman
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 14,139


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #929 on: May 07, 2020, 09:57:22 PM »

PRESIDENTS of the UNITED STATES
18. Ulysses S. Grant (Republican, Ohio) 1869–1877
19. Samuel Jones Tilden (Democratic, New York) 1877–1881
20. Ulysses S. Grant (Republican, Ohio) 1881–1885
21. Stephen Grover Cleveland (Democratic, New York) 1885–1893
22. William McKinley (Republican, Ohio) 1893–1897
23. Richard Parks Bland (Democratic, Missouri) 1897–1901
24. Henry Cabot Lodge (Republican, Massachusetts) 1901–1909
25. Theodore Roosevelt (Republican, New York) 1909–1921
26. Leonard Wood (Republican, New Hampshire) 1921–1925

27. Allan Louis Benson (Farmer-Labor, New York) 1925–1929
28. Frank Orren Lowden (Republican, Illinois) 1929–1933
29. Norman Thomas (Farmer-Labor, New York) 1933–1941
30. Arthur Hendrick Vandenberg (Republican, Michigan) 1941–1949
31. Burton Kendall Wheeler (Farmer-Labor, Montana) 1949–1953
32. Douglas MacArthur (Republican, Arkansas) 1953–1961
33. Darlington Hoopes (Farmer-Labor, Pennsylvania) 1961–1969
34. Richard Milhous Nixon (Republican, California) 1969–1973
35. George Stanley McGovern (Farmer-Labor, South Dakota) 1973–1981
36. Donald Henry Rumsfeld (Republican, Illinois) 1981–1989
37. Phillip Miller Crane (Republican, Illinois) 1989–1997
38. Joseph Robinette Biden (Farmer-Labor, Delaware) 1997–2009
39. John Sidney McCain (Republican, Arizona) 2009–2017
40. Bernard Sanders (Farmer-Labor, Vermont) 2017–present
Logged
McGarnagle
SomethingPolitical
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 1,612


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #930 on: May 09, 2020, 11:29:30 AM »

Alternate 2016 - Clinton defeats Trump
45 - President Hillary Clinton (D-NY) - January 20, 2017 - January 20, 2021
46 - President John Kasich (R-OH) - January 20, 2021 - January 20, 2029
47 - President Brian Sandoval (R-NV) - January 20, 2029 - January 20, 2033
48 - President Joe Kennedy III (D-MA) - January 20, 2033 - January 20, 2041
49 - President Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) - January 20, 2041 - January 20, 2045
50 - President Meghan McCain (R-AZ) - January 20, 2045 - January 20, 2049
51 - President Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) - January 20, 2049 - January 20, 2053

Clinton wins MI, PA and WI on Election Night 2016, narrowly defeating Donald Trump in a closer-than-expected election.

Due to high unemployment resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Clinton is defeated by Former Governor John Kasich in 2020, who serves two terms. His VP, Brian Sandoval, serves one. In 2033, Joe Kennedy III takes office and serves two terms, surviving an assassination attempt during his re-election campaign in 2036. His VP declines to run, and Senator Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wins the nomination after a long primary battle, narrowly winning the election. Meghan McCain, Governor of Arizona, narrowly defeats President Ocasio-Cortez in 2044, but AOC comes back and defeats President McCain in 2048, becoming the first President since Governor Cleveland to win two non-consecutive terms.
Logged
Continential
The Op
Atlas Politician
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 10,564
Political Matrix
E: 1.10, S: -5.30

P P P

Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #931 on: May 09, 2020, 03:53:17 PM »

Feingoldmania

Ross Perot/Lowell Weicker 1993-1997
Russ Feingold/Charles Stenholm 1997-2005
George Pataki/John Engler 2005-2013
Donald Trump/David Boren 2013-2014
David Boren/Jerry Brown 2014-2014
Jerry Brown/Marcy Kaptur 2014-2017

Joseph Cao/George W. Bush 2017-
Logged
Unconditional Surrender Truman
Harry S Truman
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 14,139


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #932 on: May 15, 2020, 12:52:26 AM »

PRESIDENTS of the UNITED STATES
1. George Washington (Unaffiliated, Virginia) 1789–1793 †
–. John Adams (Federalist, Massachusetts) 1793–1797 1
2. Thomas Jefferson (Republican, Virginia) 1797–1801 2
3. John Adams (Federal Unionist, Massachusetts) 1801–1809 3
4. John Marshall (Federal Unionist, Virginia) 1809–1821 4
5. John Quincy Adams (Unionist, Massachusetts) 1821–1829 5
6. Andrew Jackson (National Democratic, Tennessee) 1829–1833 6
7. John Caldwell Calhoun (Black Cockades, South Carolina) 1833–1837 7
8. Henry Clay (Unionist, Kentucky) 1837–1845 8
9. Thomas Hart Benton (National Democratic, Missouri) 1845–1849 9
10. James Buchanan (National Unionist, Pennsylvania) 1849–1853 10
11. Millard Fillmore (National Unionist, New York) 1853–1857 11
12. Stephen Douglas (Republican, Illinois) 1857–1861 ‡ 12
13. Hannibal Hamlin (Republican, Maine) 1861–1873 13

† Died in office of natural causes          ‡ Assassinated

1 Washington's death in the 1793 Philadelphia yellow fever epidemic elevated Adams to the position of chief magistrate, in fact if not in name. The precise wording of Article II left unclear whether a vice president who assumed the full discharge of the powers and duties of the presidency on the death of the previous magistrate, himself became president, or merely acted as president for the remainder of the existing term. In the uncertainty of the moment, Adams was unable to assert himself as a full president, and deferred to the Cabinet (whose members had all been appointed by Washington) on most important matters. The resultantly bellicose response to the Whiskey Rebellion of 1794 badly damaged Adams' reputation with the public, leading to the election of his rival Jefferson in the election of 1796.
2 The reign of the Republicans did not last long. Jefferson entered office amidst rising tensions with the French Republic over the Jay Treaty, negotiated by his predecessor, which Jefferson and his allies accused was an unmanly capitulation to Britain. Jefferson's conciliatory address to Congress in the spring of 1796 was poorly received, and the Federalist majority in the Senate initially blocked his plan for a peace mission. The Senate finally agreed to send Charles Lee to Paris to treat with the Directory; but in the meantime the anti-American party in the revolutionary government, and negotiations stalled. When Jefferson was forced to confirm that bribes had been demanded of Lee in exchange for a meeting with the French foreign minister, Talleyrand, the resulting anti-French outcry catapulted the Federalists to a majority in the House and doomed Jefferson's chances for reelection in 1800.
3 During the campaign of 1800, the Federalist party divided along factional lines. The Federalist Ultras who controlled the Congressional nominating caucus and their leader, Alexander Hamilton, favored South Carolina's Charles Cotesworth Pinckney as the candidate to challenge incumbent President Jefferson; however, the more moderate Federalist Unionists supported the renomination of former Vice President John Adams. Away from Philadelphia, Adams' supporters accounted for a majority of Federalist voters, but Hamilton had sufficient sway with the electors to produce a tie. Hoping to deny Hamilton victory, Jefferson instructed the Republicans in the House to vote for Adams, who thus became the third president of the Union.
4 On leaving the presidency in 1809, Adams bequeathed the coalition of moderate Federalists and "national" Republicans to his Secretary of State, John Marshall, who won the next three presidential elections with only token opposition from the extreme right and the extreme left. The Federal Unionist party drew support heavily from the merchant class, Yankees, Congregationalists, Unitarians, and the financial elites; after the adoption of the Land Act of 1802, the party also enjoyed strong support from small landholders in Ohio and Pennsylvania.
5 The pro-market policies of Marshall, however, alienated Southern Federalists, who took up cause with the remnant Ultras to oppose Adams' son, John Quincy, in the election of 1820. Adams won reelection in 1824 against a divided opposition, but a financial panic the following year weakened his influence in Congress; never personally popular, he was defeated by an alliance of ultras and radicals in 1828.
6 Popular for his exploits against the Indians in the Southeast, Jackson ran in 1828 as the candidate of the landless masses and poor tenant farmers, the last shattered remains of the Jeffersonians reorganized as the National Democratic party. Favoring a strong central government led by a strong executive, they found common cause with John C. Calhoun and the Federalist extreme right, who nominated Jackson on a fusion ticket against Adams in 1828. Sixty-one years old on the day of his inauguration, Jackson served only one term as president, but during it dramatically expanded the powers of the presidency, using his control of patronage to push through a dramatic reduction of the price of federal lands.
7 By 1822, Calhoun had emerged as the leader of the Southern Ultras, who vigorously opposed the expansion of the franchise throughout the South but otherwise favored low tariffs and minimal taxation —policies that favored both the common man and the planter elites. Aggressively expansionist, he added Tejas and Spanish Louisiana to the Union but was driven out of office after just four years by his former friend and ally, Henry Clay.
8 Dubbed the American Mercury, Clay supported Adams in the elections of 1820 and 1824 before deserting him for Jackson in 1828. He soon broke with his new chief, and after a term as leader of the opposition was borne into the White House in 1836 on the strength of his pro-tariff credentials. Having worked out an alliance of New England merchants and planters in the Mississippi River Valley, Clay pursued a pro-tariff, anti-expansion policy that deemphasized issues such as slavery that threatened to divide his disparate coalition. In 1844, his luck ran out, and the presidency fell to the radical Thomas Hart Benton.
9 While Benton hailed from North Carolina and had represented the slave state of Missouri in the Senate, it was anti-slavery fervor that put him in the presidency. Reacting to the "Rhodes Family Incident" in which federal authorities attempted to seize a family of free blacks living near Westfield, Indiana in defiance of the local courts, yeomen farmers in the Northwest and upper South united behind Benton in the election of 1844. Their object was not abolition, but anti-expansion: as president, Benton advocated a "free soil" policy and vowed to veto the admission of any new slave states to the Union. His position lost him the support of his native Southerners, who joined forces to eject him in 1848.
10 An alarmed slave power leapt into motion, forging an alliance between the "lords of the loom" and the "lords of the lash" to oppose Benton in 1848. Under the banner of the National Union party, inland planters, friends of the tariff, and Northern capitalists simply hoping to keep the peace supported James Buchanan for the presidency and narrowly won, sweeping the South plus New York, New Jersey, as well as (by a plurality) Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and the candidate's native Pennsylvania. In spite of this apparent rout, were Benton's votes combined with the radical abolitionist ticket, however, the president would have won reelection, striking terror to the hearts of the Southern aristocracy. Buchanan's platform was not explicitly pro-slavery, but proclaimed neutrality on the issue and fidelity to the constitution. Once in office, however, he took swift action to shore up the institution, signing the Fugitive Slave Act of 1849 and the Nebraska Act of 1850 to secure the future of slavery in the territories. Denied renomination in 1852, his last act as president was to sign the resolution annexing California to the Union.
11 Fillmore's four years in office were overshadowed by bloody fighting over slavery in California, as the appointed pro-slavery governor grappled with anti-slavery leaders in the territorial legislature, many of whom had opposed American annexation. Hoping to diffuse the situation, Fillmore sent 2,000 federal troops to San Francisco to disband the legislature and proclaim martial law; but the force was unable to maintain order outside the city, and the anti-slavery lawmakers organized a shadow government in the mountains. Exhausted, Fillmore did not seek reelection in 1856, plunging the nation into chaos.
12 Several factors converged to allow the election of the first radical president since Jefferson in 1856. Beginning in 1840, the expansion of the electorate to include landless citizens and recent immigrants made universal (white) male suffrage the rule in the West and Mid-Atlantic, while in New England property requirements for voting were reduced or replaced with a lighter poll tax. The Second Great Awakening gave rise to new denominations that attached the strict hierarchies of the established churches and advocated for democratic church governance. Meanwhile, the battle over slavery split the Unionist party in New England, as anti-slavery conservatives joined forces with the radical democrats to oppose the increasingly Southernized national party. Finally, the splintering of the National Unionists at their 1856 convention ensured a divided vote, allowing the anti-slavery forces to prevail. Organized under the banner of the new Republican party (its name an homage to Thomas Jefferson's political organization), an alliance of Western farmers, urban laborers, capitalists, and Protestant evangelicals nominated Stephen Douglas on an anti-expansion platform. Though he lost every slave state save Missouri, the division in the Unionist camp allowed Douglas to win a majority in the electoral college. Despite this, the Three-Fifths proviso ensured Southern Unionists and their Northern allies would command majorities in both houses of Congress: their attempts to prevent Douglas' inauguration in March 1857 provoked the American Civil War.
13 Douglas' assassination in the spring of 1861 elevated Hannibal Hamlin as the thirteenth president of the United States. Contending against the Southern "Congressional" government of by Acting President Alexander Hamilton Stephens headquartered at Washington, Hamlin invoked his authority as commander-in-chief to expand Douglas' 1857 emancipation edict to apply to all slaves in states rebelling against the presidency and to appoint Ulysses S. Grant commanding general of the presidential armies, replacing the inept John Charles Frιmont. The fall of Atlanta signaled the impending victory of the Presidential forces which was confirmed on May 1, 1863, when Congressional forces abandoned Fredericksburg, Virginia, allowing Grant to march into Washington. The Constitution of 1862 —proposed by the Presidential legislature —formally abolished slavery throughout the United States, extended the rights of citizenship to all Americans (including former slaves), guaranteed universal male suffrage in state and federal elections, mandated the direct election of senators, revoked the Senate's right to confirm presidential appointments, and replaced the electoral college with a direct popular vote for president.
Logged
bagelman
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 8,616
United States


Political Matrix
E: -4.90, S: -4.17

P P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #933 on: May 15, 2020, 06:26:07 AM »

No because the next Democratic president after Biden, even if she is Biden's VP, won't be up against a Republican who's name begins with "D". Smiley

This is all just for fun of course, but here's my take on a 40 year cycle that respects the spirit, but not the letter, of previous cycles:

46. Joe Biden (D-DE) (2021-2025)

The Old Man, but old enough to step down after one term. In this scenario he picks Warren as his VP, despite Baker.

47. Liz Warren (D-MA) (2025-2029)

The Veep, also steps down after only one term. Rutherford B. Hayes (1877-81, R-OH) is the most recent President to do this before Biden, btw.

48. (R) (2029-2037)

The Moderate, is able to revive the Republican Party post-Trump. With economic progressives in office for the past 8 years, this could be a libertarian figure - fiscally conservative but just drops most social issues. (Gay/Lesbian Republican maybe?) Of course, that might be an issue in the south, and there's still a chance of a rural WCW populist instead. One thing's for sure, Trumpist methods for actually running the country are not returning, ever.

49. (R) (2037-2041)

This one doesn't correspond to anything, and I deliberately put it in specifically to ruin the sanctity of the cycle, while at the same time making sure it's 40 years instead of 36. Previous President's VP, first President since Bush I to lose reelection, although the fairness of the 2040 election is questioned.

Perhaps in the future we'll have a popular vote compact, and that will lead to a situation where the Democrats win a very close election thanks only to running up the margins in the big states.

As for the one term that s/he does get, it's a third term of the previous president, with some minor surface differences. The nation continues trucking along, trying to deal with climate change....

50. (D-TX) (2041-2049)

The Scion and The Texan. I assume there's some Democratic political family somewhere in Texas. Climate change gets baaaaaad in the early 40s. Cities like Houston, New Orleans, and Miami drown in hurricanes and high tide. Heat waves create a new dust bowl, as the great plains become a complete wasteland. Despite high levels of personal corruption, people place their hopes in this president to provide relief.

51. (R) (2049-2057)

The More Things Change, The More They Stay The Same. Turns out people don't like living in FEMA camps indefinitely, and people start getting really mad at the way the previous President is doing things. One pattern shared by both Texans is that both of their parties nominated their more humble political rivals in the next election (H3 68/McCain 2k8) which they lost. The loser of the 2040 Democratic primary, who is neither a scion nor particularly corrupt, is back to get embarrassed.

52. (D) (2057-2061)

The Wildcard, a very young figure (born in the early 20s) who nonetheless attracts some grouchy old millennial progressives. Kids these days never had to deal with Dubya Bush or Donald Dump! They have ZERO respect for their elders. This youngster is one of the GOOD ones we can trust to keep the future alive! Global climate change will destroy humanity and the only way to stop it is to BAN LAB GROWN MEAT! At least tofu isn't made from CHEMICALS!!!1. I'M NOT OLD!!

53. (R) (2061-2069)

The Old Woman

Carrying herself like a Matriarch, this figure is a millennial and was originally a Democrat, much like Ronald Reagan used to be over 100 years ago. Her platform is mostly about issues that don't exist or aren't understood yet. 2064 is the first true landslide in the 21st century, as they nation just throws itself at 4 more years.

However, to deliberately break the cycle, the Democrats come back in 2068 and win that year, although they essentially concede most issues from 2060/64 to the GOP. Who knows what the future will bring, and what new divisions will wreck havoc on America?
Logged
HomestarSB9
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 471
United States


P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #934 on: May 17, 2020, 07:32:44 PM »

The Kingpins of the United States

Richard Nixon (Republican, California), 1969 - 1977
Ray Blanton (Democrat, Tennessee), 1977 - 1981
Ronald Reagan (Republican, California), 1981 - 1989
Bob Packwood (Republican, Oregon), 1989 - 1993
Edwin Edwards (Democrat, Louisiana), 1993 - 2001
John G. Rowland (Republican, Connecticut), 2001 - 2005
Mark Foley (Republican, Florida), 2005 - 2009
Anthony Wiener (Democrat, New York), 2009 - 2013
Michael Grimm (Republican, New York), 2013 - 2017
Al Franken (Democrat, Minnesota), 2017 - incumbent

The Deputy Kingpin(s)

Spiro Agnew (Republican, Maryland), 1969 - 1977
Harrison A. Williams (Democrat, New Jersey), 1977 - 1981
George H. W. Bush (Republican, Texas), 1981 - 1989
Donald Lukens (Republican, Ohio), 1989 - 1993
James Traficant (Democrat, Ohio), 1993 - 2001
Mark Foley (Republican, Florida), 2001 - 2005
Bob Ney (Republican, Ohio), 2005 - 2009
Eric Holder (Democrat, Washington D.C.), 2009 - 2013
Duncan Hunter Jr. (Republican, California), 2013 - 2017
Bob Menendez (Democrat, New Jersey), 2017 - incumbent
Logged
The world will shine with light in our nightmare
Just Passion Through
Atlas Legend
*****
Posts: 45,269
Norway


Political Matrix
E: -6.32, S: -7.48

P P P

Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #935 on: May 18, 2020, 12:34:45 AM »

@Scott, I would love to hear how a McCarthyist stoner who looks like Rust Cohle from "True Detective" somehow managed to be elected president in 1960!

IT WAS THE SIXTIES MAAAAAN.

Another poster (I think Razze?) included Allen Ginsberg in one of his hypotheticals, so it only made sense to include his better, less problematic half.  Vietnam still happens but Kerouac's election paves a quicker path forward for social liberalism in America, eventually giving way for the election of the first openly-LGBT black female president in 1980 (following nearly three years of the first Mormon president, no less!).  The Silent Majority eventually says enough is enough and the Christian Right holds power for sixteen uninterrupted years.  Another realignment gets anti-Christian icon Marilyn Manson elected in a very narrow three-way race, before he is easily defeated after the 2008 crash.  Following that, America goes back to electing social moderates as the religious culture wars lose steam.

Or, at least that's how it played out in my head.
Logged
GM Team Member and Senator WB
weatherboy1102
Atlas Politician
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 13,836
United States


Political Matrix
E: -7.61, S: -7.83

P
WWW Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #936 on: May 19, 2020, 03:44:07 PM »
« Edited: May 19, 2020, 04:06:55 PM by stand on the shoulders of proud Newfoundlanders »

It Happened Here (From HOI4 game)

PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES
32. Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic) 1933-1937

1936 Election:


Gov. Alfred M. Landon/Vice Pres. John N. Garner: 266 EV
Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt/Sec. Henry A. Wallace: 265 EV

Roosevelt's seemingly insane decision to oust Garner led to a massive split for the Democrats, and his replacement exacerbated the issue. Garner approached Landon, offering to help swing the "solid south" away from "That crazy communist". Landon, though extremely hesitant to the idea, accepted. (this is the only way I can even think of FDR coming close to losing and it's unrealistic, obviously)

Despite a 5-point win in the PV nationally, FDR's betrayal of the south was his downfall.

33. Alfred M. Landon (Republican) 1937-1939*
34. Douglas MacArthur (Military Junta) 1939-1940


Loyalists
Constitutionalists


PRESIDENTS OF THE CONSTITUTIONALIST "BOSTON GOVERNMENT"

1. Franklin D. Roosevelt (United Democratic) 1939-1940^
2. Frank F. Merriam (United Democratic) 1940**

PRESIDENTS OF THE CONFEDERATED STATES OF AMERICA

1. Douglas MacArthur (Christian) 1940-

*Resigned after the breakout of the Second American Civil War to allow MacArthur to temporarily take over
^Disappeared after the capture of Boston by Loyalist forces
**Fled America 2 days before capture of Seattle by Loyalist forces, ending the Civil War
Logged
Brother Jonathan
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 1,030


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #937 on: May 20, 2020, 05:23:13 PM »

On an 8th Grade History quiz, one of the questions asked "Which of the following was not a consequence of Richard Nixon's decision to invade Cambodia". One of the answers, the correct one, was "A movement began to draft Henry Kissinger for President". Though it of course would not be permitted by the Constitution, the idea of a Kissinger Presidency has sort of oddly captivated me ever since. So I used that as a starting point for something of a major American political fragmentation. So here is a wild ride inspired by one question on an 8th grade history quiz:

38. Henry Kissinger/Nelson Rockefeller (R)1973-1977
      Henry Kissinger/George H.W. Bush (R) 1977-1981
          def. George McGovern/Edmund Muskie (D) and John Ashbrook/John Connally (AI)
          def. Edmund Muskie/Frank Church (D) and John Connally/Bill Nichols (AI)
39. Jimmy Carter/Morris Udall (D) 1981-1989
          def. Ronald Reagan/Prentiss Walker (AI) and George H. W. Bush/Howard Baker (R)
          def. Howard Baker/Jack Kemp (R) and Bill Nichols/Meldrim Thomson (AI)
40. John Rarick/Barry Goldwater Jr. (AI) 1989-1993
          def. Morris Udall/Al Gore (D) and Bob Dole/Pierre du Pont (R)
41. Daniel Patrick Moynihan/Jack Kemp (NW)1993-20011
          def. Al Gore/Jesse Jackson (D) and John Rarick/Pat Buchanan (AI)
          def. Ross Perot/Bob Dornan (AI) and Jesse Jackson/Jerry Brown (D) and Pat Robertson/Jerry Falwell (C)
42. Tom Carper/Bob Graham (D) 2001-2009
          def. Jack Kemp/Mike DeWine (R) and Pat Robertson/Jerry Falwell (C) and Bob Dornan/Ron Paul (AI)
          def. Donald Rumsfeld/Thomas Kean (R) and Dennis Kucinich/Russ Feingold (L) and Jerry Falwell/David Duke (AI/C)
43. Arnold Schwarzenegger/Richard Lugar (R) 2009-2017
          def. Russ Feingold/Joe Lieberman (D/L) and Pat Buchanan/Tom Tancredo (AI)
          def. Barack Obama/Patty Murray (D) and Ron Paul/Gary Johnson (AI) and Pat Robertson/Rick Santorum (C)
44. Donald Trump/Jeff Sessions (AI) 2017-
          def. Mike Bloomberg/Paul Ryan (R) and Barack Obama/Jeff Merkley (D) and Mark Warner/Kent Conrad (ND)

1 Elected as nominees of the "New Whig Party", an alliance of disaffected moderate Democrats and the Republican Party. Technically not a party, as the GOP remained an independent force that returned to Presidential politics at the end of Moynihan's term.
Logged
HomestarSB9
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 471
United States


P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #938 on: May 21, 2020, 01:06:22 PM »

THE PRESIDENTS OF THE INDEPENDENT MICRONATION OF WISSISSIPPI
THE FEDERATION OF WISCONSIN AND MISSISSIPPI

1. James K. Vardaman (People's Popular Labor Party, 1913 - 1921); elected 1913, re-elected 1914.
2. Robert M. La Follette Sr. (Progressive National Unity Coalition, 1921 - 1925); elected 1920, died in office.
3. Irvine Lenroot (Progressive National Unity Coalition, 1925 - 1927); defeated for re-election 1926.
4. Theodore G. Bilbo (People's Popular Labor Party, 1927 - 1933); elected 1926, term-limited.
5. John E. Rankin (People's Popular Labor Party, 1933 - 1939); elected 1932, term-limited.
6. Phillip La Follette (Progressive National Unity Coalition, 1939 - 1945); elected 1938, term limited.
7. Oscar Rennebohm (National Republican Party, 1945 - 1951); elected 1944, term limited.
8. Fielding Wright (Imperial - Fascist Party, 1951 - 1956); elected 1950, died in office.
9. Joseph McCarthy (Imperial - Fascist Party, 1956 - 1957); re-elected 1956, died in office.
10. Bidwell Adam (Imperial - Fascist Party, 1957 - 1963); term-limited.
11. Gaylord Nelson (New Liberal Democratic Party, 1963 - 1969); elected 1962, term-limited.
12. Paul B. Johnson Jr. (People's Popular Labor Party, 1969 - 1975); elected 1968, term-limited.
13. Charles L. Sullivan (People's Popular Labor Party, 1975 - 1979); elected 1974, died in office.
14. Patrick Lucey (People's Popular Labor Party, 1979 - 1987); re-elected 1980, term-limited.
15. Thad Cochran (National Conservative Party, 1987 - 1993); elected 1986, term-limited.
16. Tommy Thompson (National Conservative Party, 1993 - 1999); elected 1992, term-limited.
17. Ronnie Musgrove (People's Popular Labor Party, 1999 - 2005); elected 1998, term-limited.
18. Russ Feingold (New Liberal Democratic Party, 2005 - 2011); elected 2004, term-limited.
19. Phil Bryant (National Conservative Party, 2011 - 2017); elected 2010, term-limited.
20. Scott Walker (National Conservative Party, since 2017); elected 2016, term-limited.

Underlined denotes a vice-president who succeeded to the Presidency upon the death / resignation of their predecessor.
Logged
LAKISYLVANIA
Lakigigar
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 15,158
Belgium


Political Matrix
E: -7.42, S: -4.78

P P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #939 on: May 21, 2020, 02:14:24 PM »
« Edited: May 21, 2020, 02:22:13 PM by Laki »

3-way party system

Democratic Party -> Social Democratic Party
American Worker's Party (founded by Bryan) -> Communist Party -> Socialist Party
Greenback Party -> Progressive Party -> American Farmer's Party -> Progressive Party -> Green Agrarian League

1900-1904: William Jennings Bryan
1904-1908: Theodore Roosevelt
1908-1912: William Jennings Bryan
1912-1916: Theodore Roosevelt
1916-1924: Eugene V. Debs
1924-1932: Robert M. La Follette Sr.
1932-1936: Norman Thomas
1936-1944: Franklin D. Roosevelt
1944-1952: Henry Wallace
1952-1956: Dwight E. Eisenhower
1956-1960: Richard Nixon
1960-1968: Hubert Humphrey
1968-1970: John F. Kennedy
1970-1976: Robert F. Kennedy
1976-1980: Frank Church
1980-1984: Eugene McCarthy
1984-1992: Jesse Jackson
1992-2000: Ross Perot
2000-2004: Ralph Nader
2004-2012: Barack Obama
2012-2016: Donald J. Trump
2016-2024: Bernie Sanders
2024-2032: Andrew Yang
2032-2040: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
2040-2044: Josh Hawley
2044-2052: Julia Salazar

Logged
Joe Biden 2024
Gorguf
Sr. Member
****
Posts: 2,369


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #940 on: May 21, 2020, 03:20:54 PM »

Obama as Grant

44. Barack Obama/Nancy Pelosi 2009-2013, Patrick Leahy 2013-2015, vacant 2015-2017
45. J. B. Pritzker/Kirsten Gillibrand 2017-2021
46. Beto O'Rourke/Andrew Gillum 2021
47. Andrew Gillum/vacant 2021-2025
48. Chris Sununu/Tom Corbett 2025, vacant 2025-2029

Losing Tickets

2008: Mitt Romney/Eric Cantor
2012: Michelle Bachmann/Rick Perry
2016: Charlie Baker/Tom Corbett
2020: James Mattis/Mike Pence
2024: Chris Murphy/Kamala Harris
Logged
Brother Jonathan
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 1,030


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #941 on: May 21, 2020, 09:01:17 PM »

The Grand Old (Federalist) Party

1. George Washington/John Adams (Non-Partisan/Federalist) 1789-1797
         Unopposed
2. John Adams/Thomas Jefferson (Federalist/Democratic-Republican) 1797-1801
          def. Thomas Jefferson (Democratic Republican)
3. Thomas Jefferson/Aaron Burr (Democratic Republican) 1801-1805
          def. John Adams/Charles Pinckney (Federalist)
    Thomas Jefferson/George Clinton (Democratic Republican) 1805-1809
          def. Charles Pinckney/Rufus King (Federalist)
4. Charles Pinckney/Rufus King (Federalist) 1809-1817
          def. George Clinton/James Madison (Democratic Republican)
          def. Elbridge Gerry/James Monroe (Democratic Republican)
5. Rufus King/John Marshall (Federalist) 1817-1821
          def. James Madison/Daniel D. Tompkins (Democratic Republican)
6. James Madison/Daniel D. Tompkins (Democratic Republican) 1821-1825         
          def. Rufus King/John Marshall (Federalist)
          def. Rufus King/John Marshall (Federalist)
    James Madison/Vacant (Democratic Republican) 1825-1826
    James Madison/John C. Calhoun (Democratic Republican) 1826-18291
7. John Marshall/John Quincy Adams (Federalist) 1829-18352
          def. John C. Calhoun/William H. Crawford(Democratic Republican)
          def. Andrew Jackson/William Wilkins (Jacksonian Democrat) and John C. Calhoun/John Randolph (Constitutionalist)
8. John Quincy Adams/Vacant (Federalist) 1835-1836
    John Quincy Adams/Richard Rush (Federalist) 1836-1841
          def. Andrew Jackson/William Wilkins (Democratic) and John C. Calhoun/Hugh L. white (Constitutionalist)
9. Andrew Jackson/William Wilkins (Democratic) 1841-18453
          def. John Quincy Adams/Richard Rush (Federalist) and John C. Calhoun/Willie P. Magnum (Constitutionalist)
          def. John Quincy Adams/Daniel Webster (Federalist)
10. William Wilkins/Vacant (Democratic) 1845-1846
      William Wilkins/Martin Van Buren (Democratic) 1846-1849
11. Daniel Webster/Charles F. Adams (Federalist) 1849-18524
          def. William R. King/John Y. Mason (Southern Democratic) and Martin Van Buren/Lewis Cass (Northern Democratic)
12. Charles F. Adams/Vacant (Federalist) 1852
      Charles F. Adams/Winfield Scott (Federalist) 1852-18575
          def. John Y. Mason/Lewis Cass (Unity Democratic) and William R. King/George Troup (Southern Democratic)
      Charles F. Adams/Millard Fillmore (Unionist) 1857-18616
          def. Lewis Cass/Stephen Douglas (Peaceful Union Party) and Franklin Peirce/John A. Dix (Democratic)
      Charles F. Adams/Andrew Johnson (Unionist) 1861-1865
          def. Stephen Douglas/John A. Dix (Democratic)
      Charles F. Adams/William H. Seward (Federalist) 1865-1869
          def. John A. Dix/George H. Pendleton (Democratic)
13. Horace Greeley/Schuyler Colfax (Federalist) 1869-18727
          def. Horatio Seymour/James Rood Doolittle (Democratic)
14. Schuyler Colfax/Vacant (Federalist) 1872-1873
15. Thomas A. Hendricks/Andrew Curtin (Democratic) 1873-1881
          def. Horace Greeley/Schuyler Colfax (Federalist)
          def. Schuyler Colfax/Rutherford B. Hayes (Federalist)
16. Samuel J. Tilden/Samuel J. Randall (Democratic) 1881-1885
          def. Schuyler Colfax/James G. Blaine (Federalist)
17. James G. Blaine/John Sherman (Federalist) 1885-1889
          def. Samuel J. Tilden/Samuel J. Randall (Democratic)
18. Grover Cleveland/William McKinley (Republican) 1889-18978
          def. James B. Weaver/William Jennings Bryan (Democratic)
          def. William Jennings Bryan/Thomas E. Watson (Democratic)
19. William McKinley/John Hay (Federalist) 1897-1901
          def. Grover Cleveland/John M. Palmer (Democratic) and William Jennings Bryan/Thomas E. Watson (People's)
20. Adlai Stevenson I/George Dewey (Democratic) 1901-1909
          def. William McKinley/John Hay (Federalist)
          def. John Hay/Charles W. Fairbanks (Federalist)
21. Elihu Root/Charles Francis Adams III (Federalist) 1909-1921
          def. William Jennings Bryan/Thomas E Watson (Democratic)
          def. Thomas E. Watson/John W. Kern (Democratic)
          def. William Jennings Bryan/Hiram Johnson (Democratic/Peace)
22. Charles Francis Adams III/Herbert Hoover (Federalist) 1921-1929
          def. Al Smith/Gilbert Hitchcock (Democratic)
          def. Thomas R. Marshall/Carter Glass (Democratic)
23. Joseph T. Robinson/Atlee Pomerene (Democratic) 1929-1933         
          def. Herbert Hoover/Calvin Coolidge (Federalist)
24. Hiram Johnson/Burton K. Wheeler (Progressive) 1933-1941
          def. Herbert Hoover/John J. Blaine (Federalist) and Joseph T. Robinson/Atlee Pomerene (Democratic)
          def. James Farley/Frank Knox (Democratic-Federalist)9
25. Cordell Hull/Thomas E. Dewey (Democratic-Federalist) 1941-1949
          def. Hiram Johnson/Burton K. Wheeler (Progressive)
          def. Burton K. Wheeler/Gerald Nye (Progressive)
26. Thomas E. Dewey/Earl Warren (Federalist) 1949-1957
          def. Burton K. Wheeler/Joseph Kennedy (Democratic-Progressive)
          def. Joseph Kennedy/Averell Harriman (Democratic) and Strom Thurmond/Fielding Wright (New Constitutionalist)
27. Earl Warren/Richard Nixon (Federalist) 1957-1961
          def. Burton K. Wheeler/Strom Thurmond (Democratic)
28. Averell Harriman/Albert Gore (Democratic) 1961-1969
          def. Earl Warren/Richard Nixon (Federalist)
          def. Henry Cabot Lodge Jr./Hiram Fong (Federalist) and Strom Thurmond/Orval Faubus (Dixiecrat)
29. Nelson Rockefeller/John Tower (Federalist) 1969-1977
          def. Burton K. Wheeler/Abraham Ribicoff (Progressive Democratic) and Albert Gore/Pat Brown (Democratic)
          def. George McGovern/Edmund Muskie (Democratic)
30. John Tower/Lowell Weicker (Federalist) 1977-1981
          def. Edmund Muskie/Dale Bumpers (Democratic)
31. Jimmy Carter/Thomas McIntyre (Democratic) 1981-1989
          def. John Tower/Lowell Weicker (Federalist)
          def. Lowell Weicker/Bob Packwood (Federalist) and Barry Goldwater Jr./Paul Laxalt (Conservative)
32. Lowell Weicker/George H. W. Bush (Federalist) 1989-1993
          def. Reubin Askew/Jerry Brown (Democratic) and Paul Laxalt/Jesse Helms (Conservative)
33. Bob Graham/Harris Wofford (Democratic) 1993-2001
          def. Lowell Weicker/George H. W. Bush (Federalist) and Pat Buchanan/Ron Paul (Conservative)
          def. Bob Dole/Colin Powell (Federalist)
34. George Pataki/Fred Thompson (Federalist) 2001-2009
          def. Harris Wofford/Albert Gore Jr. (Democratic)
          def. Max Cleland/Dick Durbin (Democratic)
35. Joe Manchin/Tom Daschle (Democratic) 2009-2017
          def. Mike Huckabee/Tom Tancredo (Patriots) and Charlie Crist/Mitt Romney (Federalist)
          def. Mitt Romney/Lindsey Graham (Federalist) and Mike Huckabee/Newt Gingrich (Patriots)
36. Jon Tester/Andrew Cuomo (Democratic) 2017-
          def. Jeb Bush/Paul Ryan (Federalist) and Newt Gingrich/Michelle Bachman (Patriots) and Rand Paul/Justin Amash (Jeffersonian)




1 Vice President Daniel D. Tompkins died in 1825. Madison nominated John C. Calhoun to fill the vacancy.
2 President John Marshall died in office in July, 1835 and was succeeded by his Vice President, John Quincy Adams.
3 President Andrew Jackson died in office in 1845, and was succeeded by Vice President William Wilkins.
4 President Webster died in office in 1852, and was succeeded by Vice President Charles F. Adams.
5 President Charles F. Adams was re-elected in 1852 despite failing to appear on any ballots. Federalist surrogates continued to campaign for Webster, and his electors then voted for Adams for President and Scott for Vice President (who had been confirmed in that position by the senate to serve with Adams).
6 The Unionist Party was essentially an alliance between the Federalist party and anti-slavery Democrats from the North that was formed at the height of the Civil War and was dissolved after Reconstruction had ended.
7 President Horace Greeley died in November, 1852, just several days after being defeated in his bid for re-election. His successor, Schuyler Colfax, did not nominate a Vice President and served out the remained of Greeley's term.
8 Cleveland (a Democrat) and McKinley (a Federalist) were nominated on a joint pro-gold standard "unity ticket" against the bimetallists who had managed to seize the Democratic nomination. It was a fraught administration, but it succeeded in defending against populist currents in the country. The group dissolved when Cleveland sought a third term as the Democratic nominee for President.
9 The Federalist and Democratic parties voted to nominate a joint ticket, with Democrat James Farley heading the ticket and Federalist Frank Knox as Vice President. The alliance would continue until the end of the Second World War and the election of 1948.
Logged
HomestarSB9
Jr. Member
***
Posts: 471
United States


P P
Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #942 on: May 22, 2020, 02:55:20 PM »

NameParty
Term
From
1.
George Washington
(1732 - 1799)
Nonpartisan
1789
-
1797
Virginia
2.
John Adams
(1735 - 1826)
Federalist
1797
-
1801
Massachusetts
3.
Thomas Jefferson
(1743 - 1826)
Democratic-Republican
1801
-
1809
Virginia
4.
James Madison
(1751 - 1836)
Democratic-Republican
1809
-
1813
Virginia
5.
DeWitt Clinton
(1769 - 1828)
Democratic-Republican
1813
-
1817
New York
6.
James Monroe
(1758 - 1831)
Democratic-Republican
1817
-
1825
Virginia
7.
Andrew Jackson
(1767 - 1845)
Democratic-Republican
Democratic
1825
-
1837
Tennessee
8.
Martin Van Buren
(1782 - 1862)
Democratic
1837
-
1841
New York
9.
Henry Clay
(1777 - 1852)
Whig
1841
-
1845
Kentucky
10.
James K. Polk
(1795 - 1849)
Democratic
1845
-
1849
Tennessee
11.
Lewis Cass
(1782 - 1866)
Democratic
1849
-
1853
Michigan
12.
Millard Fillmore
(1800 - 1874)
Whig
American
1853
-
1857
New York
13.
James Buchanan
(1791 - 1868)
Democratic
1857
-
1861
Pennsylvania
14.
Abraham Lincoln
(1809 - 1865)
Republican
National Union
1861
-
1865†
Illinois
15.
Andrew Johnson
(1808 - 1875)
National Union
Democratic
1865
-
1869
Tennessee
16.
Ulysses S. Grant
(1822 - 1885)
Republican
Conservative
1869
-
1877
Ohio
17.
Samuel J. Tilden
(1814 - 1886)
New Democratic
1877
-
1881
New York
18.
James A. Garfield
(1831 - 1881)
Conservative
1881†
Ohio
19.
James G. Blaine
(1830 - 1893)
Conservative
1881
-
1885
Maine
20.
Grover Cleveland
(1837 - 1908)
Liberal
1885
-
1897
New York
21.
William Jennings Byran
(1860 - 1925)
Populist
Liberal
1897
-
1905
Nebraska
22.
Theodore Roosevelt
(1858 - 1919)
Progressive
1905
-
1917
New York
23.
Charles Evan Hughes
(1862 - 1948)
Progressive
1917
-
1921
New York
24.
Henry Cabot Lodge
(1850 - 1924)
Conservative
1921
-
1924†
Massachusetts
25.
Charles Curtis
(1860 - 1936)
Conservative
1924
-
1933
Kansas
26.
Franklin D. Roosevelt
(1882 - 1945)
New Democratic
1933
-
1945†
New York
27.
Harry S. Truman
(1884 - 1972)
New Democratic
1945
-
1949
Missouri
28.
Thomas E. Dewey
(1902 - 1971)
Progressive
1949
-
1953
New York
29.
Dwight D. Eisenhower
(1890 - 1969)
Conservative
1953
-
1961
Kansas
30.
John F. Kennedy
(1917 - 1963)
New Democratic
1961
-
1963†
Massachusetts
31.
Hubert H. Humphrey
(1911 - 1978)
New Democratic
1963
-
1969
Minnesota
32.
Richard M. Nixon
(1913 - 1994)
Conservative
1969
-
19741
California
33.
John B. Connally
(1917 - 1993)
Conservative
1974
-
1977
Texas
34.
Jimmy Carter
(born 1924)
Liberal
1977
-
1981
Georgia
35.
Ronald Reagan
(1911 - 2004)
Conservative
1981
-
1989
California
36.
George H. W. Bush
(1924 - 2018)
Conservative
1989
-
1993
Texas
37.
Bill Clinton
(born 1946)
Liberal
1993
-
2001
Arkansas
38.
Al Gore
(born 1946)
Liberal
2001
-
2005
Tennessee
39.
Mitt Romney
(born 1947)
Conservative
2005
-
2009
Massachusetts
40.
Barack Obama
(born 1961)
New Democratic
2009
-
2017
Illinois
41.
Paul Ryan
(born 1970)
Conservative
2017
-
Wisconsin

† denotes died in office
1 denotes resigned
All images from Wikimedia Commons
Logged
Unconditional Surrender Truman
Harry S Truman
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 14,139


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #943 on: May 27, 2020, 12:12:25 PM »

Fewest presidents using only OTL candidates

PRESIDENTS of the UNITED STATES
1. George Washington (Unaffiliated, Virginia) 1789–1797
2. Thomas Jefferson (Republican, Virginia) 1797–1809
3. James Madison (Republican, Virginia) 1809–1817
4. James Monroe (Republican, Virginia) 1817–1825

5. Andrew Jackson (Republican→Democratic, Tennessee) 1825–1837
6. Martin Van Buren (Democratic→Free Soil, New York) 1837–1853
7. Stephen Douglas (Democratic, Illinois) 1853–1861
8. Salmon Portland Chase (Republican→Democratic, Ohio) 1861–1873 †
9. Thomas Andrews Hendricks (Democratic, Indiana) 1873–1885
10. Stephen Grover Cleveland (Democratic, New York) 1885–1897

11. Eugene Victor Debs (Socialist, Indiana) 1897–1917
12. Henry Ford (Republican, Michigan) 1917–1921
–. Eugene Victor Debs (Socialist, Indiana) 1921–1925
–. Henry Ford (Democratic, Michigan) 1925–1929
13. Norman Mattoon Thomas (Socialist, New York) 1929–1953
14. Adlai Ewing Stevenson (Democratic, Illinois) 1953–1965
15. George Corley Wallace (Democratic, Alabama) 1965–1981

16. Ronald Wilson Reagan (Republican, California) 1981–1989
17. George Herbert Walker Bush (Republican, Texas) 1989–1997
18. Ralph Nader (Green→Unaffiliated, Connecticut) 1997–2013
19. Vermin Love Supreme (Unaffiliated→Libertarian) 2013–2025
Logged
Unconditional Surrender Truman
Harry S Truman
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 14,139


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #944 on: May 28, 2020, 11:40:21 AM »

PRESIDENTS of the UNITED STATES
1. George Washington (Unaffiliated, Virginia) 1789–1796
2. John Adams (Federalist, Massachusetts) 1796–1803
3. Thomas Jefferson (Republican, Virginia) 1803–1810
4. James Madison (Republican, Virginia) 1810–1817
5. James Monroe (Republican, Virginia) 1817–1824
6. John Quincy Adams (Republican, Massachusetts) 1824–1831

7. Henry Clay (National, Kentucky) 1831–1838
8. Thomas Hart Benton (Democratic, Missouri) 1838–1845
9. James Knox Polk (Democratic, Tennessee) 1845–1849 †
10. George Mifflin Dallas (Democratic, Pennsylvania) 1849–1852

11. Daniel Webster (National, Massachusetts) 1852–1852 †
12. William Alexander Graham (National, North Carolina) 1852–1859

13. William Henry Seward (Republican, New York) 1859–1866
14. Ulysses S. Grant (Republican, Ohio) 1866–1873
15. James Gillespie Blaine (Republican, Maine) 1873–1880

16. Winfield Scott Hancock (Democratic, Pennsylvania) 1880–1886 †
17. William Hayden English (Democratic, Indiana) 1886–1887

18. Benjamin Harrison (Republican, Indiana) 1887–1894
19. Stephen Grover Cleveland (Democratic, New York) 1894–1901
20. Theodore Roosevelt (Republican, New York) 1901–1908
21. William Howard Taft (Republican, Ohio) 1908–1915

22. Thomas Woodrow Wilson (Democratic, New Jersey) 1915–1920 †
23. Thomas Riley Marshall (Democratic, Indiana) 1920–1922

24. John Calvin Coolidge (Republican, Massachusetts) 1922–1929
23. Herbert Clark Hoover (Republican, California) 1929–1936

24. Franklin Delano Roosevelt (Democratic, New York) 1936–1943
25. Cordell Hull (Democratic, Tennessee) 1943–1950

36. Dwight David Eisenhower (Republican, Pennsylvania) 1950–1957
37. Richard Milhous Nixon (Republican, California) 1957–1964

38. Hubert Horatio Humphrey (Democratic, Minnesota) 1964–1971
39. George Wilcken Romney (Republican, Michigan) 1971–1978
40. Walter Frederick Mondale (Democratic, Minnesota) 1978–1985
41. Gary Warren Hart (Democratic, Colorado) 1985–1992

42. Robert Joseph Dole (Republican, Kansas) 1992–1999
43. Albert Arnold Gore (Democratic, Tennessee) 1999–2006
44. John Sidney McCain (Republican, Arizona) 2006–2013
45. Barack Hussein Obama (Democratic, Illinois) 2013–2020
46. Joseph Robinette Biden (Democratic, Delaware) 2020–present
Logged
President of the great nation of 🏳️‍⚧️
Peebs
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 16,036
United States



Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #945 on: May 28, 2020, 11:00:03 PM »

Based on Truman's post, the most amount of presidents using OTL candidates. In part a reboot of my old "all the assassinations" list. If you take this realistically, then don't.

PRESIDENTS of the UNITED STATES
1. John Hancock (Federalist, Massachusetts) 1789–1793
2. George Clinton (Republican, New York) 1793–1797
3. Thomas Jefferson (Republican, Virginia) 1797–1801
4. Aaron Burr, Jr. (Republican, New York) 1801–1805

5. Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (Federalist, South Carolina) 1805–1809
6. James Madison, Jr. (Republican, Virginia) 1809–1813
7. DeWitt Clinton (Republican, New York) 1813–1817

8. Rufus King (Federalist, New York) 1817–1825
9. James Monroe (Republican, Virginia) 1821–1825
10. John Quincy Adams (Republican, Massachusetts) 1825–1829

11. Andrew Jackson (Democratic, Tennessee) 1829–1833
12. Henry Clay (National, Kentucky) 1833–1837
13. Martin Van Buren (Democratic, New York) 1837–1841
14. William Henry Harrison (Whig, Ohio) 1841–1841 †
15. John Tyler (Whig→Unaffiliated, Virginia) 1841–1843 *
16. Willie Person Mangum (Whig, North Carolina) 1843–1844
17. James Knox Polk (Democratic, Tennessee) 1844–1848
18. Zachary Taylor (Whig, Louisiana) 1848–1850 †
19. Millard Fillmore (Whig, New York) 1850–1852

20. Franklin Pierce (Democratic, New Hampshire) 1852–1856
21. James Buchanan (Democratic, Pennsylvania) 1856–1859 *
22. John Cabell Breckinridge (Democratic, Kentucky) 1859–1860
23. Stephen Arnold Douglas (Democratic, Illinois) 1860–1861 †

24. Solomon Foot (Republican, Vermont) 1861–1862
25. Abraham Lincoln (Republican, Illinois) 1862–1864 ‡
26. Hannibal Hamlin (Republican, Maine) 1864–1865 ‡
27. Lafayette Sabine Foster (Republican, Connecticut) 1865–1866
28. John Charles Frιmont (Republican, California) 1866–1870
29. Ulysses S. Grant (Republican, Illinois) 1870–1874
30. Charles Francis Adams Sr. (Republican, Massachusetts) 1874–1878

31. Samuel Jones Tilden (Democratic, New York) 1878–1882
32. James Abram Garfield (Republican, Ohio) 1882–1882 ‡
33. Chester A. Arthur (Republican, New York) 1882–1886

–. Thomas Andrews Hendricks (Democratic, Indiana) elect 1885–1885 †
34. Samuel Jackson Randall (Democratic, Pennsylvania) 1886–1890

35. James Gillespie Blaine (Republican, Maine) 1890–1893 †
36. Blanche Kelso Bruce (Republican, Mississippi) 1893–1894

37. Horace Boies (Democratic, Iowa) 1894–1898
38. William McKinley (Republican, Ohio) 1898–1901 ‡
39. John Milton Hay (Republican, District of Columbia) 1901–1902
40. Marcus Alonzo Hanna (Republican, Ohio) 1902–1904 †
41. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. (Republican, New York) 1904–1904 **
–. John Milton Hay (Republican, District of Columbia) 1904–1905
–. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. (Republican, New York) 1905–1909
42. William Howard Taft (Republican, Ohio) 1909–1909 ‡
43. James Schoolcraft Sherman (Republican, New York) 1909–1912 †
44. Philander Chase Knox (Republican, Pennsylvania) 1912–1913

45. James Beauchamp Clark (Democratic, Missouri) 1913–1917
46. Charles Evans Hughes (Republican, New York) 1917–1921
47. Thomas Woodrow Wilson (Democratic, New Jersey) 1921–1924 †
48. Bainbridge Colby (Democratic, New York) 1924–1925

49. Robert Marion La Follette Sr. (Progressive, Wisconsin) 1925–1925 †
50. Burton Kendall Wheeler (Progressive, Montana) 1925–1929

51. Herbert Clark Hoover (Republican, California) 1929–1933
–. Franklin Delano Roosevelt (Democratic, New York) elect 1932–1933 ‡
52. John Nance Garner (Democratic, Texas) 1933–1937
53. Henry Skillman Breckinridge (Democratic, New York) 1937–1941

54. Wendell Lewis Willkie (Republican, New York) 1941–1944 †
55. Arthur Hendrick Vandenberg (Republican, Michigan) 1944–1945
56. Thomas Edmund Dewey (Republican, New York) 1945–1947 ‡
57. John William Bricker (Republican, Ohio) 1947–1949

58. Claude Denson Pepper (Democratic, Florida) 1949–1950 ‡
59. Harry S. Truman (Democratic, Missouri) 1950–1952 *
60. Samuel Taliaferro Rayburn (Democratic, Texas) 1952–1953

61. Dwight David Eisenhower (Republican, New York) 1953–1955 †
62. Richard Milhous Nixon (Republican, California) 1955–1957

63. Carey Estes Kefauver (Democratic, Tennessee) 1957–1961
–. Richard Milhous Nixon (Republican, California) elect 1960–1960 ‡
64. George Harrison Bender (Republican, Ohio) 1961–1961 †

65. John William McCormack (Democratic, Massahcusetts) 1961–1962
66. John Fitzgerald Kennedy (Democratic, Massachusetts) 1962–1963 ‡
67. Lyndon Baines Johnson (Democratic, Texas) 1963–1963 ‡
68. Carl Bert Albert (Democratic, Oklahoma) 1963–1965

69. Margaret Madeline Chase Smith (Republican, Maine) 1965–1969
70. Hubert Horatio Humphrey (Democratic, Minnesota) 1969–1972 ‡
71. Edmund Sixtus Muskie (Democratic, Maine) 1972–1974 ‡
72. Maurice Robert Gravel (Democratic, Alaska) 1974–1975 ‡
73. Birch Evans Bayh (Democratic, Indiana) 1975–1975 ‡
74. Thomas Hale Boggs Sr. (Democratic, Louisiana) 1975–1977

75. Ronald Wilson Reagan (Republican, California) 1977–1979 ‡
76. Richard Schultz Schweiker (Republican, Pennsylvania) 1979–1981

77. Edward Moore Kennedy (Democratic, Massachusetts) 1981–1981 ‡
78. Walter Frederick Mondale (Democratic, Minnesota) 1981–1989

79. Robert Joseph Dole (Republican, Kansas) 1989–1993
80. Joseph Robert Kerrey (Democratic, Nebraska) 1993–1994 ‡
81. Albert Arnold Gore, Jr. (Democratic, Tennessee) 1994–1994 ‡
82. Thomas Richard Harkin (Democratic, Iowa) 1994–1994 ‡
83. Thomas Stephen Foley (Democratic, Washington) 1994–1996 ‡
84. Paul Efthemios Tsongas (Democratic, Massachusetts) 1996–1997 †

85. Newton Leroy Gingrich (Republican, Georgia) 1997–1997
86. William Jefferson Clinton (Democratic, Arkansas) 1997–1999 *
87. William Warren Bradley (Democratic, New Jersey) 1999–2001

88. John Sidney McCain III (Republican, Arizona) 2001–2001 ‡
89. George Walker Bush (Republican, Texas) 2001–2002 †
90. Richard Bruce Cheney (Republican, Texas) 2002–2005

91. John Forbes Kerry (Democratic, Massachusetts) 2005–2005 ‡
92. Johnny Reid Edwards (Democratic, North Carolina) 2005–2005 ‡

93. John Dennis Hastert (Republican, Illinois) 2005–2006 *
94. Rudolph William Louis Giuliani (Republican, New York) 2006–2009

95. Barack Hussein Obama II (Democratic, Illinois) 2009–2009 ‡
96. Joseph Robinette Biden (Democratic, Delaware) 2009–2011 ‡
97. Hillary Diane Rodham Clinton (Democratic, New York) 2011–2013

98. Willard Mitt Romney (Republican, Massachusetts) 2013–2013 ‡
99. Paul Davis Ryan (Republican, Wisconsin) 2013–2016 ‡
100. Rafael Edward Cruz (Republican, Texas) 2016–2017

101. Bernard Sanders (Democratic, Vermont) 2017–2017 ‡
102. Juliαn Castro (Democratic, Texas) 2017–2018 ‡
103. Elizabeth Ann Herring Warren (Democratic, Massachusetts) 2018–2021

104. Marshall Clement Sanford Jr. (Republican, South Carolina) 2021–present
Logged
Continential
The Op
Atlas Politician
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 10,564
Political Matrix
E: 1.10, S: -5.30

P P P

Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #946 on: June 01, 2020, 08:10:23 AM »

The Progressive Era

28. Theodore Roosevelt/Robert La Follette (Progressive/Republican) 1913-1920
29. Robert La Follette/Herbert Hoover (Progressive) 1920-1929
30. Charles Curtis/Hiram Johnson (Progressive) 1929-1933
31. Al Smith/Alben Barkley 1933-1941 (Democratic)
32. Huey Long/Franklin Roosevelt 1941-1949 (National Union)
33. Harold Stassen/Wayne Morse 1949-1957 (Progressive)
34. John Kennedy/Coke Stevenson 1957-1965 (Democratic
35. Coke Stevenson/Bobby Kennedy 1965-1971 (Democratic)
36. Bobby Kennedy/Nelson Rockefeller 1971-1981 (Democratic)
37. Edward Kennedy/George Wallace 1981-1989 (Democratic)
38. Gary Hart/Bob Strauss 1989-1997 (Democratic)
39. Ralph Nader/Andrew Cuomo 1997-2005 (Progressive)
40. Andrew Cuomo/Bill Clinton 2005-2009 (Progressive)
41. John Bush/Joe Kennedy II 2009-2013 (Democratic)
42. Hillary Rodham/Russ Feingold 2013- (Progressive)
Logged
LabourJersey
Sr. Member
****
Posts: 3,189
United States


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #947 on: June 01, 2020, 07:21:17 PM »

The Progressive Era

28. Theodore Roosevelt/Robert La Follette (Progressive/Republican) 1913-1920
29. Robert La Follette/Herbert Hoover (Progressive) 1920-1929
30. Charles Curtis/Hiram Johnson (Progressive) 1929-1933
31. Al Smith/Alben Barkley 1933-1941 (Democratic)
32. Huey Long/Franklin Roosevelt 1941-1949 (National Union)
33. Harold Stassen/Wayne Morse 1949-1957 (Progressive)
34. John Kennedy/Coke Stevenson 1957-1965 (Democratic
35. Coke Stevenson/Bobby Kennedy 1965-1971 (Democratic)
36. Bobby Kennedy/Nelson Rockefeller 1971-1981 (Democratic)
37. Edward Kennedy/George Wallace 1981-1989 (Democratic)
38. Gary Hart/Bob Strauss 1989-1997 (Democratic)
39. Ralph Nader/Andrew Cuomo 1997-2005 (Progressive)
40. Andrew Cuomo/Bill Clinton 2005-2009 (Progressive)
41. John Bush/Joe Kennedy II 2009-2013 (Democratic)
42. Hillary Rodham/Russ Feingold 2013- (Progressive)

World War II America under President Long would have been quite a time
Logged
Continential
The Op
Atlas Politician
Atlas Icon
*****
Posts: 10,564
Political Matrix
E: 1.10, S: -5.30

P P P

Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #948 on: June 02, 2020, 08:09:27 AM »

The Progressive Era

28. Theodore Roosevelt/Robert La Follette (Progressive/Republican) 1913-1920
29. Robert La Follette/Herbert Hoover (Progressive) 1920-1929
30. Charles Curtis/Hiram Johnson (Progressive) 1929-1933
31. Al Smith/Alben Barkley 1933-1941 (Democratic)
32. Huey Long/Franklin Roosevelt 1941-1949 (National Union)
33. Harold Stassen/Wayne Morse 1949-1957 (Progressive)
34. John Kennedy/Coke Stevenson 1957-1965 (Democratic
35. Coke Stevenson/Bobby Kennedy 1965-1971 (Democratic)
36. Bobby Kennedy/Nelson Rockefeller 1971-1981 (Democratic)
37. Edward Kennedy/George Wallace 1981-1989 (Democratic)
38. Gary Hart/Bob Strauss 1989-1997 (Democratic)
39. Ralph Nader/Andrew Cuomo 1997-2005 (Progressive)
40. Andrew Cuomo/Bill Clinton 2005-2009 (Progressive)
41. John Bush/Joe Kennedy II 2009-2013 (Democratic)
42. Hillary Rodham/Russ Feingold 2013- (Progressive)

World War II America under President Long would have been quite a time
WW2 was between a Communist Germany and with there being a rebellion in America.
Logged
P. Clodius Pulcher did nothing wrong
razze
Junior Chimp
*****
Posts: 5,084
Cuba


Political Matrix
E: -6.52, S: -4.96


Show only this user's posts in this thread
« Reply #949 on: June 03, 2020, 11:12:44 AM »

44. Barack Obama (D-IL), 2009-2017
45. Donald Trump (R-NY), 2017-2021Died
46. Mike Pence (R-IN), 2021
47. Joe Biden (D-DE), 2021-2024Rsigned
48. Val Demings (D-FL), 2024-2033
49. Tom Cotton (R-AR), 2033-2035Impeached
50. Nikki Haley (R-SC), 2035-2037
51. Cyrus Habib, S.J. (D-WA), 2037-present
Logged
Pages: 1 ... 33 34 35 36 37 [38] 39 40 41 42 43 ... 57  
« previous next »
Jump to:  


Login with username, password and session length

Terms of Service - DMCA Agent and Policy - Privacy Policy and Cookies

Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Page created in 0.206 seconds with 12 queries.