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Cabbage
DatGOTTho
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« Reply #525 on: April 30, 2020, 08:52:31 PM »
« edited: April 30, 2020, 09:25:50 PM by Entropy In Action »


US Governors map; shading looks like FRIST governors are lighter colors, with swing states not being considered FRIST even if the opposing party won them in 2016.

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CookieDamage
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« Reply #526 on: May 01, 2020, 07:02:04 PM »


US Governors map; shading looks like FRIST governors are lighter colors, with swing states not being considered FRIST even if the opposing party won them in 2016.



Not sure what FRIST means but basically

Light red - Dem gov in safe R state on the presidential level

Light blue - Rep gov in safe D state on the presidential level
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Unconditional Surrender Truman
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« Reply #527 on: May 04, 2020, 03:10:15 PM »

1872

Chief Justice Salmon Portland Chase (Liberal Republican, Ohio) / Senator Thomas Andrews Hendricks (Democratic, Indiana) 201 electors, 53.1% popular votes
President Ulysses S. Grant (Republican, Ohio) / Vice President Schuyler Colfax (Republican, Indiana) 151 electors, 46.9% popular votes
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morgankingsley
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« Reply #528 on: May 06, 2020, 02:42:09 PM »



1992 thrown to the house
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CookieDamage
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« Reply #529 on: May 07, 2020, 05:12:45 AM »
« Edited: May 07, 2020, 05:24:27 AM by Councilor CookieDamage (L-NJ) »


Coca-Cola - 306 EVs

Ariana Grande - 232 EVs

From Google Trends. So whacky how similar this looks to election maps. Idaho was surprisingly close (Grande 48 - Cola 52). I feel like Georgia was such a blowout win for Sen. Cola due to Ariana being beat the  out in Atlanta. Thank u, next!

EDIT: Added insurgent 3rd party candidate Dua Lipa. She did not change the EV results.

EDIT: Actually Coca-Cola won DC, so it would be 229 EVs to 309 EVs.
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bagelman
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« Reply #530 on: May 07, 2020, 05:37:48 PM »


Coca-Cola - 306 EVs

Ariana Grande - 232 EVs

From Google Trends. So whacky how similar this looks to election maps. Idaho was surprisingly close (Grande 48 - Cola 52). I feel like Georgia was such a blowout win for Sen. Cola due to Ariana being beat the  out in Atlanta. Thank u, next!

EDIT: Added insurgent 3rd party candidate Dua Lipa. She did not change the EV results.

EDIT: Actually Coca-Cola won DC, so it would be 229 EVs to 309 EVs.

As long as you keep DC Dem and ignore some of the out there margins, it's a semi-realistic map for 2024. NM voting R (especially while AZ votes D again) and VA voting R are surprises, but stranger things have happened. The Republican is a polite big business Romney sort of nominee who is nonetheless able to hold on to most Trumpists, perhaps a Georgia Senator. Maybe David Perdue if he's willing to go down that route, or whoever replaces Loeffler in the primaries this year. The Democrat is a weak candidate, like Krystan Sinema (R-AZ) or some moderate and hopelessly dull Florida Democrat.
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Unconditional Surrender Truman
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« Reply #531 on: May 07, 2020, 06:41:04 PM »
« Edited: May 07, 2020, 08:19:35 PM by Unconditional Surrender Truman »

1888

President Stephen Grover Cleveland (Democratic, New York) / Senator Allen Granbury Thurman (Democratic, Ohio) 204 electors, 49.2% popular votes
Former Senator Benjamin Harrison (Republican, Indiana) / former Representative Levi Parsons Morton (Republican, New York) 197 electors, 47.2% popular votes
Brigadier General Clinton Bowen Fisk (Prohibition, New Jersey) / Pastor John Anderson Brooks (Prohibition, Missouri) 0 electors, 2.2% votes
State Senator Alson Jenness Streeter (Union Labor, Illinois) / Mr. Charles E. Cunningham (Union Labor, Arkansas) 0 electors, 1.3% votes

1892

Governor William McKinley (Republican, Ohio) / Representative Henry Clay Evans (Republican, Tennessee) 287 electors, 44.2% popular votes
President Grover Cleveland (Democratic, New York) / former Representative Adlai Ewing Stevenson (Democratic, Illinois) 123 electors, 43.5% popular votes
Former Representative James Baird Weaver (People's, Iowa) / former State Attorney General James Gaven Field (People's, Virginia) 34 electors, 9.4% popular votes
Former Representative John Bidwell (Prohibition, California) / Pastor James Britton Cranfill (Prohibition, Texas) 0 electors, 2.24% popular votes

1896

Former Representative Richard Parks Bland (Democratic—People'sSilver, Missouri) / former Representative William Jennings Bryan (Democratic—People'sSilver, Nebraska) 284 electors, 49.9% popular votes
President William McKinley (Republican, Ohio) / Vice President Henry Clay Evans (Republican, Tennessee) 163 electors, 45.0% popular votes
Mr. Joshua Levering (Prohibition, Maryland) / former Mayor Hale Johnson (Prohibition, Illinois) 0 electors, 2.0% popular votes
Former Governor John McAuley Palmer (National Democratic, Illinois) / former Governor Simon Bolivar Buckner (National Democratic, Kentucky) 0 electors, 1.4% popular votes
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bagelman
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« Reply #532 on: May 08, 2020, 05:47:42 PM »
« Edited: January 21, 2022, 05:01:36 PM by bagelman »

F you Donny Boy

Alternate Title: My wildest dreams



452-86
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President Johnson
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« Reply #533 on: May 09, 2020, 11:40:54 AM »

1952 United States presidential election



✓ General Dwight D. Eisenhower (D-PA)/Senator Estes Kefeauver (D-TN): 381 EV. (52.44%)
Senator Robert Taft (R-OH)/Senator Richard Nixon (R-CA): 150 EV. (45.78%)


1956 United States presidential election



✓ President Dwight D. Eisenhower (D-PA)/Vice President Estes Kefeauver (D-TN): 325 EV. (51.03%)
Senator Richard Nixon (R-CA)/Representative Kenneth Keating (R-NY): 206 EV. (47.23%)


1960 United States presidential election



✓ Governor Goodwin J. Knight (R-CA)/Former Senator Henry Cabot Lodge (R-ME): 394 EV. (52.87%)
Senator John F. Kennedy (D-MA)/Senator Lyndon B. Johnson (D-TX): 143 EV. (45.11%)


1964 United States presidential election



✓ President Goodwin J. Knight (R-CA)/Vice President Henry Cabot Lodge (R-ME): 453 EV. (58.69%)
Senator Stuart Symington (D-MO)/Senator Thomas Dodd (D-CT): 86 EV. (40.27%)
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HomestarSB9
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« Reply #534 on: May 09, 2020, 12:26:54 PM »


1872


[✓] Pres. Ulysses S. Grant (Conservative, Ohio) / Sen. Henry Wilson (Conservative, Mass.) - 222 electoral votes
Sen. Thomas McCreery (New Democrat, Kentucky) / Former Rep. John Fox (New Democrat, N. York) - 99 electoral votes
Sen. Henry Davis (Liberal, W. Virginia) / Rep. Bill Barnum (Liberal, Conn.) - 31 electoral votes

1876: First Ballot


Gov. Samuel J. Tilden (New Democrat, N. York) / Thomas J. Hendricks (New Democrat, Ind.) - 144 electoral votes
Gov. Rutherford B. Hayes (Conservative, Ohio) / Sen. James G. Blaine (Conservative, Maine) - 121 electoral votes

Former Gov. Andrew G. Magrath (Liberal, S. Carolina) / Sen. James Shields (Liberal, Missouri) - 81 electoral votes
Sen. Lyman Trumball (Progressive, Ill.) / Sen. Henry Teller (Progressive, Col.) - 23 electoral votes

1876: Second Ballot


[✓] Gov. Samuel J. Tilden (New Democrat, N. York) / Thomas J. Hendricks (New Democrat, Ind.) - 237 electoral votes
Gov. Rutherford B. Hayes (Conservative, Ohio) / Sen. James G. Blaine (Conservative, Maine) - 132 electoral votes

1880: First Ballot


Sen. John Warfield Johnston (Liberal, Virginia) / Former Rep. John R. Goodin (Liberal, Kansas) - 143 electoral votes
Sen. James G. Blaine (Conservative, Maine) / Sen. S. J. Renwick McMillan (Conservative, Minn.) - 117 electoral votes

Vice Pres. Thomas G. Hendricks (New Democrat, Ind.) / Sen. Z. Baird Vance (New Democrat, N. Carolina) - 109 electoral votes

1880: Second Ballot


[✓] Sen. James G. Blaine (Conservative, Maine) / Sen. S. J. Renwick McMillan (Conservative, Minn.) - 193 electoral votes
Sen. John Warfield Johnston (Liberal, Virginia) / Former Rep. John R. Goodin (Liberal, Kansas) - 176 electoral votes
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Cabbage
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« Reply #535 on: May 09, 2020, 12:58:34 PM »


US Governors map; shading looks like FRIST governors are lighter colors, with swing states not being considered FRIST even if the opposing party won them in 2016.



Not sure what FRIST means but basically

Light red - Dem gov in safe R state on the presidential level

Light blue - Rep gov in safe D state on the presidential level

That is what FRIST means.
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HomestarSB9
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« Reply #536 on: May 09, 2020, 04:33:38 PM »

1884


[✓] Gov. Grover Cleveland (Liberal, N. York) / Rep. Samuel W. Moulton (Liberal, Ill.) - 237 electoral votes
Pres. James G. Blaine (Conservative, Maine) / Vice Pres. S. J. Renwick McMillan (Conservative, Minn.) - 87 electoral votes
Former Gov. Thomas A. Osborn (Progressive - Farmer, Kansas) / Rep. L. Hamlin Weller (Progressive - Farmer, Iowa) - 44 electoral votes
Rep. Martin L. Clardy (New Democrat, Missouri) / Gov. George C. Ludlow (New Democrat, N. Jersey) - 33 electoral votes

1888


[✓] Pres. Grover Cleveland (Liberal, N. York) / Vice Pres. Samuel W. Moulton (Liberal, Ill.) - 235 electoral votes
Fomer Pres. James G. Blaine (Conservative, Maine) / Sen. Nelson W. Aldrich (Conservative, Rhode Isl.) - 143 electoral votes
Sen. James H. Berry (New Democrat, Ark.) / Gov. A. Pickett Morehouse (New Democrat, Missouri) - 23 electoral votes

1892: First Ballot


Pres. Grover Cleveland (Liberal, N. York) / Vice Pres. Samuel W. Moulton (Liberal, Ill.) - 168 electoral votes
Sen. James Cameron (Conservative, Penn.) / Rep. S. Merritt Stevenson (Conservative, Mich.) - 127 electoral votes
Sen. John Palmer (New Democrat, Ill.) / Rep. R. Alexander Price (New Democrat, Tenn.) - 82 electoral votes
Former Gov. Thomas A. Osborn (Progressive - Farmer, Kansas) / Rep. Jason B. Brown (Progressive - Farmer, Ind.) - 67 electoral votes

1892: Second Ballot


[✓] Sen. James Cameron (Conservative, Penn.) / Rep. S. Merritt Stevenson (Conservative, Mich.) - 235 electoral votes
Pres. Grover Cleveland (Liberal, N. York) / Vice Pres. Samuel W. Moulton (Liberal, Ill.) - 209 electoral votes

1896: First Ballot


Sen. G. Graham Vest (New Democrat, Missouri) / Sen. David B. Hill (New Democrat, N. York) - 175 electoral votes
Rep. William Jennings Bryan (Liberal - Populist, Neb.) / Gov. James Budd (Liberal, Calif.) - 155 electoral votes

Rep. Charles Coffin (Conservative, Maryland) / Former Gov. Andrew R. McGill (Conservative, Minn.) - 117 electoral votes

1896: Second Ballot



[✓] Rep. William Jennings Bryan (Liberal - Populist, Neb.) / Gov. James Budd (Liberal, Calif.) - 252 electoral votes
Sen. G. Graham Vest (New Democrat, Missouri) / Sen. David B. Hill (New Democrat, N. York) - 195 electoral votes
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« Reply #537 on: May 10, 2020, 11:45:25 AM »
« Edited: May 10, 2020, 08:09:03 PM by HomestarSB9 »

1900


[✓] Pres. William Jennings Bryan (Liberal, Neb.) / Vice Pres. James Budd (Liberal, Calif.) - 348 electoral votes
Former Gov. Russell Alger (Conservative, Mich.) / Former Sec. Redfield Proctor (Conservative, Ver.) - 59 electoral votes
Gov. Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive, N. York) / Gov. George Atkinson (Progressive, W. Virginia) - 40 electoral votes

1904: First Ballot


Vice Pres. James Budd (Liberal, Calif.) / Sen. Fred T. Dubois (Liberal, Idaho) - 171 electoral votes
Former Gov. Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive, N. York) / Rep. Henry R. Gibson (Progressive, Tenn.) - 110 electoral votes

Sen. W. Paul Dillingham (Conservative, Ver.) / Rep. Alvin Evans (Conservative, Penn.) - 104 electoral votes
Rep. J. Robert Lamar (New Democrat, Missouri) / Gov. J. C. Wickliffe Beckham (New Democrat, Kentucky) - 91 electoral votes

1904: Second Ballot


[✓] Former Gov. Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive, N. York) / Rep. Henry R. Gibson (Progressive, Tenn.) - 254 electoral votes
Vice Pres. James Budd (Liberal, Calif.) / Sen. Fred T. Dubois (Liberal, Idaho) - 222 electoral votes

1908: First Ballot


Pres. Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive, N. York) / Vice Pres. Henry R. Gibson (Progressive, Tenn.) - 162 electoral votes
Former Pres. William Jennings Bryan (Liberal, Neb.) / Sen. Sam McEnery (Liberal, Lousiana) - 141 electoral votes

Rep. J. Robert Lamar (New Democrat, Missouri) / Rep. E. Lincoln Fulton (New Democrat, Oklahoma) - 92 electoral votes
Sen. Jacob Gallinger (Conservative, N. Hamp.) / Sen. P. Chase Knox (Conservative, Penn.) - 88 electoral votes

1908: Second Ballot


[✓] Pres. Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive, N. York) / Vice Pres. Henry R. Gibson (Progressive, Tenn.) - 308 electoral votes
Former Pres. William Jennings Bryan (Liberal, Neb.) / Sen. Sam McEnery (Liberal, Lousiana) - 175 electoral votes

1912: First Ballot


Pres. Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive, N. York) / Gov. Hiram Johnson (Progressive, Calif.) - 229 electoral votes
Gov. Woodrow Wilson (Liberal, N. Jersey) / Rep. Lincoln Dixon (Liberal, Indiana) - 169 electoral votes

Former Rep. J. Robert Lamar (New Democrat, Missouri) / Rep. W. Atkinson Jones (New Democrat, Virginia) - 92 electoral votes
Gov. Simeon Pennewill (Conservative, Del.) / Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge (Conservative, Mass.) - 41 electoral votes

1912: Second Ballot


[✓] Pres. Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive, N. York) / Gov. Hiram Johnson (Progressive, Calif.) - 336 electoral votes
Gov. Woodrow Wilson (Liberal, N. Jersey) / Rep. Lincoln Dixon (Liberal, Indiana) - 185 electoral votes

1916: First Ballot


Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge (Conservative, Mass.) / Sen. Charles Curtis (Conservative, Kansas) - 190 electoral votes
Justice Charles Evan Hughes (Progressive, N. York) / Vice Pres. Hiram Johnson (Progressive, Calif.) - 165 electoral votes

Sen. George Chamberlain (Liberal, Oreg.) / Rep. Ashton Shallenberger (Liberal, Neb.) - 150 electoral votes
Former Rep. J. Robert Lamar (New Democrat, Missouri) / Rep. Martin Dies (New Democrat, Texas) - 26 electoral votes

1916: Second Ballot


[✓] Justice Charles Evan Hughes (Progressive, N. York) / Vice Pres. Hiram Johnson (Progressive, Calif.) - 302 electoral votes
Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge (Conservative, Mass.) / Sen. Charles Curtis (Conservative, Kansas) - 229 electoral votes

1920: First Ballot


Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge (Conservative, Mass.) / Sen. Charles Curtis (Conservative, Kansas) - 196 electoral votes
Pres. Charles Evan Hughes (Progressive, N. York) / Vice Pres. Hiram Johnson (Progressive, Calif.) - 173 electoral votes

Sen. James A. Reed (Liberal, Missouri) / Rep. William Ayres (Liberal, Kansas) - 142 electoral votes
Rep. Martin Dies (New Democrat, Texas) / Former Gov. H. Carter Stuart (New Democrat, Texas) - 20 electoral votes

1920: Second Ballot

[✓] Sen. Henry Cabot Lodge (Conservative, Mass.) / Sen. Charles Curtis (Conservative, Kansas) - 296 electoral votes
Pres. Charles Evan Hughes (Progressive, N. York) / Vice Pres. Hiram Johnson (Progressive, Calif.) - 235 electoral votes
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OBD
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« Reply #538 on: May 10, 2020, 01:08:49 PM »

2016

Businessman Donald J. Trump (D-NY) / Governor Jay Nixon (D-MO) 293 EVs 45.61%
Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) / Governor Nikki Haley (R-SC) 245 EVs 47.32%
Representative Tulsi Gabbard (I-HI) / Businessman Howard Schultz (I-WA) 0 EVs 5.01%
Closest States
New Mexico - Rubio +0.76
New Hampshire - Trump +0.98
Kentucky - Trump +1.57
Oregon - Trump +2.45

Indiana - Rubio +3.34
Washington - Trump +4.13
Colorado - Rubio +4.25
Virginia - Rubio +4.89
Nevada - Rubio +5.76

Missouri - Trump +6.21
North Carolina - Rubio +6.46
Ohio - Trump +7
Iowa - Trump +7.45

Florida - Rubio +8.24
California - Trump +8.59
Wisconsin - Trump +9.94

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Unconditional Surrender Truman
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« Reply #539 on: May 10, 2020, 01:49:06 PM »

Very interesting! Should I assume some manner of PR and/or Congress electing the president ITTL?
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« Reply #540 on: May 10, 2020, 02:37:15 PM »

Very interesting! Should I assume some manner of PR and/or Congress electing the president ITTL?
How it works is if no candidate receives a majority in the electoral college, it goes into another general election between the two candidates who received the most electoral votes on the first ballot.
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Unconditional Surrender Truman
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« Reply #541 on: May 10, 2020, 03:03:19 PM »

Very interesting! Should I assume some manner of PR and/or Congress electing the president ITTL?
How it works is if no candidate receives a majority in the electoral college, it goes into another general election between the two candidates who received the most electoral votes on the first ballot.
Ah, I see. Are EVs divided up proportionally by state, then? I notice Lodge has 190 votes in 1916 despite only 41 shown on the map, for instance.
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« Reply #542 on: May 10, 2020, 07:56:00 PM »

Very interesting! Should I assume some manner of PR and/or Congress electing the president ITTL?
How it works is if no candidate receives a majority in the electoral college, it goes into another general election between the two candidates who received the most electoral votes on the first ballot.
Ah, I see. Are EVs divided up proportionally by state, then? I notice Lodge has 190 votes in 1916 despite only 41 shown on the map, for instance.
Oh, I just now noticed that. That was a mistake, I accidentally duplicated one of the maps.
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« Reply #543 on: May 11, 2020, 03:43:02 PM »

1924


[✓] Pres. Henry Cabot Lodge (Conservative, Mass.) / Vice Pres. Charles Curtis (Conservative, Kansas) - 272 electoral votes
Sen. L. Slater Overman (New Democrat, N. Carolina) / Rep. Adolph J. Sabath (New Democrat, Ill.) - 104 electoral votes
Sen. Ed S. Broussard (Liberal, Louisiana) / Rep. J. Harris Smithwick (Liberal, Flo.) - 103 electoral votes
Former Vice Pres. Hiram Johnson (Progressive, Calif.) / Sen. Robert M. La Follette (Progressive, Wis.) - 52 electoral votes

1928: First Ballot


Pres. Charles Curtis (Conservative, Kansas) / Rep. J. Thomas Begg (Conservative, Ohio) - 202 electoral votes
Gov. Al Smith (New Democrat, N. York) / Former Gov. Edward F. Dunne  (New Democrat, Ill.) - 200 electoral votes

Gov. John W. Martin (Liberal, Flo.) / Former Gov. Fred W. Plaisted (Liberal, Maine) - 129 electoral votes

1928: Second Ballot


[✓] Pres. Charles Curtis (Conservative, Kansas) / Rep. J. Thomas Begg (Conservative, Ohio) - 271 electoral votes
Gov. Al Smith (New Democrat, N. York) / Former Gov. Edward F. Dunne  (New Democrat, Ill.) - 260 electoral votes

1932


[✓] Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt (New Democrat, N. York) / Speaker of the House John Nance Garner  (New Democrat, Texas) - 376 electoral votes
Pres. Charles Curtis (Conservative, Kansas) / Vice Pres. J. Thomas Begg (Conservative, Ohio) - 155 electoral votes

1936


[✓] Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt (New Democrat, N. York) / Vice Pres. John Nance Garner  (New Democrat, Texas) - 498 electoral votes
Father Charles Coughlin (Populist, Mich.) / Rep. J. Clarence Taylor (Populist, S. Carolina) - 30 electoral votes
Gov. Stanley C. Wilson (Conservative, Ver.) / Rep. Richard J. Welsh (Conservative, Calif.) - 3 electoral votes

1940: First Ballot


Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt (New Democrat, N. York) / Judge Walter Huxman (New Democrat, Kansas) - 260 electoral votes
Former Gov. Alf Landon (Conservative, Kansas) / District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey (Conservative, N. York) - 159 electoral votes

Vice Pres. John Nance Garner (Liberal, Texas) / Sen. Burton K. Wheeler (Liberal, Montana) - 112 electoral votes

1940: Second Ballot


[✓] Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt (New Democrat, N. York) / Judge Walter Huxman (New Democrat, Kansas) - 383 electoral votes
Former Gov. Alf Landon (Conservative, Kansas) / District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey (Conservative, N. York) - 148 electoral votes

1944: First Ballot


Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt (New Democrat, N. York) / Sen. Harry S. Truman (New Democrat, Missouri) - 215 electoral votes
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey (Conservative, N. York) / Rep. Homer D. Angell (Conservative, Oreg.) - 148 electoral votes

Rep. Absalom Robertson (Liberal, Virg.) / Gov. John J. Dempsey (Liberal, N. Mex.) - 131 electoral votes
Former Sec. Henry A. Wallace (Progressive, Iowa) / Sen. Robert M. La Follette Jr. (Progressive, Wis.) - 37 electoral votes

1944: Second Ballot


[✓] Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt (New Democrat, N. York) / Sen. Harry S. Truman (New Democrat, Missouri) - 346 electoral votes
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey (Conservative, N. York) / Rep. Homer D. Angell (Conservative, Oreg.) - 185 electoral votes

1948: First Ballot


Gov. Thomas E. Dewey (Conservative, N. York) / Gov. Earl Warren (Conservative, Calif.) - 193 electoral votes
Pres. Harry S. Truman (New Democrat, Missouri) / Mayor Hubert H. Humphrey (New Democrat, Minn.) - 129 electoral votes

Former Sec. Henry A. Wallace (Progressive, Iowa) / Sen. Wayne L. Morse (Progressive, Oreg.) - 87 electoral votes
Former Sec. Harry Hines Woodring (Liberal, Kansas) / Gov. J. Nance McCord (Liberal, Tenn.) - 64 electoral votes
Gov. Strom Thurmond (States Rights, S. Carolina) / Sen. Richard Russell (States Rights, Georgia) - 58 electoral votes

1948: Second Ballot


[✓] Pres. Harry S. Truman (New Democrat, Missouri) / Mayor Hubert H. Humphrey (New Democrat, Minn.) - 275 electoral votes
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey (Conservative, N. York) / Gov. Earl Warren (Conservative, Calif.) - 247 electoral votes
Gov. Strom Thurmond (States Rights, S. Carolina) / Sen. Richard Russell (States Rights, Georgia) - 9 electoral votes

1952: First Ballot


Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower (Conservative, N. York) / Gen. Douglas MacArthur (Conservative, Wis.) - 229 electoral votes
Sen. Estes Kefauver (Liberal, Tenn.) / Sen. Paul Douglas (Liberal, Ill.) - 190 electoral votes

Vice Pres. Hubert H. Humphrey (New Democrat, Minn.) / Rep. Thaddeus M. Machrowicz (New Democrat, Mich.) - 112 electoral votes

1952: Second Ballot


[✓] Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower (Conservative, N. York) / Gen. Douglas MacArthur (Conservative, Wis.) - 274 electoral votes
Sen. Estes Kefauver (Liberal, Tenn.) / Sen. Paul Douglas (Liberal, Ill.) - 257 electoral votes
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« Reply #544 on: May 11, 2020, 07:32:10 PM »

We need a continuation of that all the way through 2020!
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« Reply #545 on: May 11, 2020, 09:06:29 PM »

We need a continuation of that all the way through 2020!

I'm working on it. Smiley
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Unconditional Surrender Truman
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« Reply #546 on: May 11, 2020, 11:26:53 PM »

1912
Former President Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive, New York) / Governor Hiram Warren Johnson (Progressive, California) 290 electoral votes, 41.4% popular votes
Governor Thomas Woodrow Wilson (Democratic, New Jersey) / Governor Thomas Riley Marshall (Democratic, Indiana) 237 electoral votes, 40.8% popular votes
President William Howard Taft (Republican, Ohio) / Vice President James Schoolcraft Sherman (Republican, New York) 4 electoral votes, 9.2% popular votes
Former State Representative Eugene Victor Debs (Socialist, Indiana) / former Mayor Emil Seidel (Socialist, Wisconsin) 0 electoral votes, 7.0% popular votes
Eugene Wilder Chafin (Prohibition, Arizona) / Reverend Aaron Sherman Watkins (Prohibition, Ohio) 0 electoral votes, 1.4% popular votes
Mr. Arthur Elmer Reimer (Socialist Labor, Massachusetts) / Mr. August Gillhaus (Socialist, New York) 0 electoral votes, 0.2% popular votes

1916
President Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive, New York) / Vice President Hiram Warren Johnson (Progressive, California) 339 electoral votes, 46.4% popular votes
Speaker of the House of Representatives James Beauchamp Clark (Democratic, Missouri) / former Representative John William Davis (Democratic, West Virginia) 188 electoral votes, 41.8% popular votes
Mr. Nicholas Murray Butler (Republican, New York) / former Vice President Charles Warren Fairbanks (Republican, Indiana) 4 electoral votes, 8.5% popular votes
Mr. Allan Louis Benson (Socialist, New York) / Mr. George Ross Kirkpatrick (Socialist, New Jersey) 0 electoral votes, 3.2% popular votes
Mr. Arthur Elmer Reimer (Socialist Labor, Massachusetts) / Mr. Caleb Harrison (Socialist Labor, Illinois) 0 electoral votes, 0.1% popular votes

1920
Senator William Gibbs McAdoo (Democratic, California) / Governor Franklin Delano Roosevelt (Democratic, New York) 326 electoral votes, 44.1% popular votes
President Hiram Warren Johnson (Progressive, California) / Governor James Franklin Hanly (Progressive, Indiana) 171 electoral votes, 36.3% popular votes
Governor John Calvin Coolidge (Republican, Massachusetts) / Mr. Henry Justin Allen (Republican, Kansas) 34 electoral votes, 15.7% popular votes
Former State Representative Eugene Victor Debs (Socialist, Indiana) / Mr. Seymour Stedman (Socialist, Illinois) 0 electoral votes, 3.4% popular votes
Former Governor James Edward Furgeson (American, Texas) / Mr. William J. Hough (American, New York) 0 electoral votes, 0.2% popular votes
Mr. William Wesley Cox (Socialist Labor, Missouri) / Mr. August Gillhaus (Socialist Labor, New York) 0 electoral vote, 0.1% popular votes

1924
President William Gibbs McAdoo (Democratic, California) / Senator Kenneth Douglas McKellar (Democratic, Tennessee) 375 electoral votes, 50.8% popular votes
Philanthropist Herbert Clark Hoover (Progressive, California) / Senator Gifford Pinchot (Progressive, Pennsylvania) 119 electoral votes, 32.0% popular votes
Senator William Morgan Butler (Republican, Massachusetts) / Colonel Charles Gates Dawes (Republican, Illinois) 37 electoral votes, 15.7% popular votes
Mayor Daniel Webster Hoan (Socialist, Wisconsin) / Mr. Theodore Debs (Socialist, Indiana) 0 electoral votes, 1.2% popular votes
Mr. William Z. Foster (Communist, Massachusetts) / Mr. Benjamin Gitlow (Communist, New York) 0 electoral votes, 0.1% popular votes
Mr. Frank Tetes Johns (Socialist Labor, Oregon) / Mr. Verne L. Reynolds (Socialist Labor, New York) 0 electoral votes, 0.1% popular votes
Judge Gilbert Owen Nations (American, District of Columbia) / former Representative Charles Hiram Randall (American, California) 0 electoral votes, 0.1% popular votes
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HomestarSB9
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« Reply #547 on: May 12, 2020, 01:31:58 PM »

1956: First Ballot


Pres. Dwight D. Eisenhower (Conservative, Penn.) / Sen. Richard M. Nixon (Conservative, Calif.) - 209 electoral votes
Former Vice Pres. Hubert H. Humphrey (New Democrat, Minn.) / Sen. John F. Kennedy (New Democrat, Mass.) - 207 electoral votes

Sen. Estes Kefauver (Liberal, Tenn.) / Gov. William C. Marland (Liberal, W. Virginia) - 115 electoral votes

1956: Second Ballot


[✓] Pres. Dwight D. Eisenhower (Conservative, Penn.) / Sen. Richard M. Nixon (Conservative, Calif.) - 279 electoral votes
Former Vice Pres. Hubert H. Humphrey (New Democrat, Minn.) / Sen. John F. Kennedy (New Democrat, Mass.) - 252 electoral votes

1960: First Ballot


Vice Pres. Richard M. Nixon (Conservative, Calif.) / Former Sec. Philip Wilkie (Conservative, Ind.) - 230 electoral votes
Sen. John F. Kennedy (New Democrat, Mass.) / Former Vice Pres. Hubert H. Humphrey (New Democrat, Minn.) - 207 electoral votes

Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson (Liberal, Texas) / Judge Leif Erickson (Liberal, Montana) - 63 electoral votes
Sen. Harry F. Byrd (States Rights, Virg.) / Sen. Strom Thurmond (States Rights, S. Carolina) - 37 electoral votes

1960: Second Ballot


[✓] Sen. John F. Kennedy (New Democrat, Mass.) / Former Vice Pres. Hubert H. Humphrey (New Democrat, Minn.) - 333 electoral votes
Vice Pres. Richard M. Nixon (Conservative, Calif.) / Former Sec. Philip Wilkie (Conservative, Ind.) - 196 electoral votes
Sen. Harry F. Byrd (States Rights, Virg.) / Sen. Strom Thurmond (States Rights, S. Carolina) - 8 electoral votes

1964


[✓] Pres. Hubert H. Humphrey (New Democrat, Minn.) / Sen. Mike Mansfield (New Democrat, Montana) - 499 electoral votes
Sen. Barry M. Goldwater (Conservative, Ariz.) / Former Amb. Donald R. Heath (Conservative, Kansas) - 39 electoral votes

1968


[✓] Former Vice Pres. Richard M. Nixon (Conservative, Calif.) / Gov. George Romney (Conservative, Mich.) - 270 electoral votes
Pres. Hubert H. Humphrey (New Democrat, Minn.) / Sen. Edmund Muskie (New Democrat, Maine) - 223 electoral votes
Former Gov. George Wallace (American Independent, Ala.) / Gen. Curtis LeMay (American Independent, Ohio) - 45 electoral votes

1972


[✓] Pres. Richard M. Nixon (Conservative, Calif.) / Vice Pres. George Romney (Conservative, Mich.) - 294 electoral votes
Gov. George Wallace (Liberal, Ala.) / Sen. Robert Byrd (Liberal, W. Virg.) - 113 electoral votes
Former Mayor John Lindsay (Progressive, N. York) / Sen. Mark Hatfield (Progressive, Oreg.) - 75 electoral votes
Rep. Shirley Chisholm (New Democrat, N. York) / Sen. Mike Gravel (New Democrat, Alaska) - 56 electoral votes

1976: First Ballot


Pres. George Romney (Conservative, Mich.) / Sen. Richard Schweiker (Conservative, Penn.) - 221 electoral votes
Former Gov. Jimmy Carter (Liberal, Georgia) / Gov. Jerry Brown (Liberal, Calif.) - 172 electoral votes

Rep. Mo Udall (New Democrat, Ariz.) / Sen. Walter Mondale (New Democrat, Minn.) - 145 electoral votes

1976: Second Ballot


[✓] Former Gov. Jimmy Carter (Liberal, Georgia) / Gov. Jerry Brown (Liberal, Calif.) - 435 electoral votes
Pres. George Romney (Conservative, Mich.) / Sen. Richard Schweiker (Conservative, Penn.) - 103 electoral votes

1980


[✓] Former Gov. Ronald Reagan (Conservative, Calif.) / Former CIA Director George H. W. Bush (Conservative, Texas) - 355 electoral votes
Sen. Walter Mondale (New Democrat, Minn.) / Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan (New Democrat, N. York) - 102 electoral votes
Pres. Jimmy Carter (Liberal, Georgia) / Vice Pres. Jerry Brown (Liberal, Calif.) - 63 electoral votes
Rep. John B. Anderson (Progressive, Ill.) / Former Amb. Patrick J. Lucey (Progressive, Wis.) - 18 electoral votes

1984


[✓] Pres. Ronald Reagan (Conservative, Calif.) / Vice Pres. George H. W. Bush (Conservative, Texas) - 313 electoral votes
Sen. John Glenn (Liberal, Ohio) / Gov. Chuck Robb (Liberal, Virg.) - 164 electoral votes
Former Sen. George McGovern (New Democrat, S. Dakota) / Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan (New Democrat, N. York) - 61 electoral votes
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Unconditional Surrender Truman
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« Reply #548 on: May 12, 2020, 05:41:43 PM »
« Edited: May 12, 2020, 10:54:39 PM by Unconditional Surrender Truman »

1928
Philanthropist Herbert Clark Hoover (Progressive, California) / Governor Henry Agard Wallace (Progressive, Iowa) 394 electoral votes, 41.2% popular votes
Governor Alfred Emmanuel Smith (Democratic, New York) / former Governor Charles Warren Bryan (Democratic, Nebraska) 86 electoral votes, 28.8% popular votes
Mr. Henry Ford (American, Michigan) / Representative William David Upshaw (American, Georgia) 51 electoral votes, 22.6% popular votes
Former Senator Charles Curtis (National Republican, Kansas) / former Senator George Higgins Moses (National Republican, New Hampshire) 0 electoral votes, 6.4% popular votes
Mr. Norman Mattoon Thomas (Socialist, New York) / Mr. James Hudson Mauer (Socialist, Pennsylvania) 0 electoral votes, 0.7% popular votes
Mr. William Z. Foster (Communist, Massachusetts) / Mr. Benjamin Gitlow (Communist, New York) 0 electoral votes, 0.1% popular votes
Mr. Verne L. Reynolds (Socialist Labor, Michigan) / Mr. Jeremiah D. Crowley (Socialist Labor, New York) 0 electoral votes, 0.1% popular votes

1932
Senator Huey Pierce Long (Democratic, Louisiana) / Senator Burton Kendall Wheeler (Democratic, Montana) 328 electoral votes, 39.4% popular votes
Mr. Henry Ford (American, Michigan) / former Representative Leander L. Pickett (American, Kentucky) 119 electoral votes, 35.2% popular votes
President Herbert Clark Hoover (Progressive, California) / Vice President Henry Agard Wallace (Progressive, Iowa) 84 electoral votes, 24.7% popular votes
Mr. Norman Mattoon Thomas (Socialist, New York) / Mr. James Hudson Mauer (Socialist, Pennsylvania) 0 electoral votes, 2.2% popular votes
Mr. William Z. Foster (Communist, Illinois) / Mr. James W. Ford (Communist, Alabama) 0 electoral votes, 0.3% popular votes
Mr. William Hope Harvey (Liberty, Arkansas) / Mr. Frank Hemenway (Liberty, Washington) 0 electoral votes, 0.1% popular votes
Mr. Verne L. Reynolds (Socialist Labor, Michigan) / Mr. John William Aiken (Socialist Labor, Massachusetts) 0 electoral votes, 0.1% popular votes
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Wikipedia delenda est
HenryWallaceVP
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« Reply #549 on: May 12, 2020, 05:50:33 PM »

^So my namesake was a Norse god? Tongue
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