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April 26, 2024, 11:51:44 AM
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)
  Post Random Maps Here 3.0 (search mode)
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Author Topic: Post Random Maps Here 3.0  (Read 169962 times)
Brother Jonathan
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« on: May 23, 2020, 03:24:01 PM »

1980 Presidential Election

Frm. Governor John Connally (TX)/Frm. President Richard Nixon (CA), 329 EVs
President Jimmy Carter (GA)/Vice President Walter Mondale (MN), 209 EVs

1984 Presidential Election


President Richard Nixon (CA)/Vice President Howard Baker (TN), 347 EVs
Frm. Vice President Walter Mondale (MN)/Senator John Glenn (OH), 191 EVs

1988 Presidential Election


President Richard Nixon (CA)/Congressman Lee Atwater (SC), 478 EVs
Governor Michael Dukakis (MA)/Jesse Jackson (IL), 60 EVs

1992 National Plebiscite
Do You Approve of President Nixon and Vice President Cheney?

YES- 67.9%
NO-  32.1%

1996 Presidential Election

Governor Bill Clinton (AR)/Senator Arlen Specter (PA), 411 EVs
President Dick Cheney (WY)/Vice President Donald Rumsfeld, 127 EVs(MI)
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Brother Jonathan
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« Reply #1 on: May 29, 2020, 03:53:19 PM »

Not really sure if this is the right thread for International Maps, but at any rate this certainly fits the "random" part of the title.

2007 General Election
December 6th, 2007


Party                     Leader                  Vote Share Seats    
LabourGordon Brown36.5%329
ConservativeDavid Cameron35%261
Liberal DemocratsVince Cable15.5%35
OthersVarious13%26


Labour Majority of 7


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Brother Jonathan
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Posts: 1,030


« Reply #2 on: July 14, 2020, 08:19:09 PM »

New York City Council Elections 2017, leading minor party in every seat (including parties that ran fusion tickets with major parties)

The Working Families really stands out here, which makes sense as they often endorsed the Democratic candidate and gave them their ballot line.



Basemap is from Wikipedia
MrPenguin20, party strength created by DrRandomFactor / CC BY-SA (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0) and can be found here:
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c5/New_York_City_Council_Election_2013_-_Party_Strength_By_District.svg
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Brother Jonathan
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« Reply #3 on: July 15, 2020, 08:07:21 PM »

The 2012 Congressional Elections in New York's  28th District, which in this alternate universe continues to exist. Hamlin lawyer Adam Bergerhoff was nominated by the Democrats in an unopposed primary. State Senator John J. Flanagan was expected to easily win the Republican primary, but was soundly defeated in an upset by former State Assemblymen, volunteer sheriff, farmer, unlicensed lawyer, and Mayor of the small hamlet of Knowlesville, the octogenarian Willis Bradley Brentford. Brentford did especially well in his home county, Orleans.


Brentford (83) went on to easily defeat Bergerhoff (36) in the general election.


Brentford passed the office of Mayor to former Sheriff and local hunting tour organizer Franklin Gabbot "Buster" Whitlock Smith-Fyfe.
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Brother Jonathan
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Posts: 1,030


« Reply #4 on: November 27, 2020, 11:36:06 AM »

The Rise and Fall of President Hiram Johnson
(From The Grand Old (Federalist) Party timeline)
1932:

1936:


1940:

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Brother Jonathan
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« Reply #5 on: November 28, 2020, 06:14:26 PM »

More maps from the Grand Old (Federalist) Party timeline

1960:



1964:




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Brother Jonathan
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« Reply #6 on: December 22, 2021, 06:36:51 PM »

1992 Federal Election

Liberal Party (Bill Clinton, Little Rock)- 376 Seats
Southern Bloc (George Wallace, South East Alabama)- 83 Seats
Reform Party (Phil Gramm, Ellis—Navarro)- 45 Seats
New Democratic Party (Tom Harkin, Council Bluffs—Cass)- 17 Seats
Progressive Conservative Party (George Bush, Dallas Garland)- 17 Seats

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Brother Jonathan
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Posts: 1,030


« Reply #7 on: January 12, 2022, 09:33:56 PM »

The first in a series of maps:

2016 Presidential Election-Republican Primaries
As President Stephen Harper (R-TX) ended his second term as President, he enjoyed only middling approval ratings and Democratic majorities in both the House and the Senate. Vice President Rona Ambrose (R-ID) declined to seek the Republican Nomination, leaving the Republican primaries wide open.

Candidates

House Minority Leader Andrew Scheer, Representative for Kansas's 2nd District
Senator Max Bernier of Pennsylvania
Senator Joe Oliver of Virginia
Senator Erin O'Toole of Ohio
Representative Brad Trost, Representative for Nebraska's 2nd District
Representative Lisa Raitt, Representative for Pennsylvania's 1st District (Vice Presidential nominee)

Declined
Vice President Rona Ambrose of Idaho
Governor Brad Wall of North Dakota (running for re-election)
Former Senator Peter MacKay of New Hampshire
Senator Jason Kenney of Utah (running for re-election)

 
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Brother Jonathan
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Posts: 1,030


« Reply #8 on: January 16, 2022, 08:23:10 PM »



President John Quincy Adams entered office in 1835, following the death of President John Marshall in his second term. Adams faced Democrat Andrew Jackson, who ran on a populist platform that critiqued the pro-business attitudes of the Federalists as well as the elitist tendencies within the Constitutionalist party. The Constitutionalist party, founded in 1832 when the Democratic-Republicans split on the question of nominating Andrew Jackson over former Vice President John C. Calhoun, was now much weaker than it once had been, drawing most of its support from the planter class and ardent regionalists in the south. The split between the Constitutionalists, with their emphasis on strict constructionism and classical republicanism, and the Democrats, with their populist, pro-democracy and anti-elitist campaign, helped to hand President Adams a narrow victory driven by northern support.
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Brother Jonathan
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« Reply #9 on: August 20, 2022, 08:43:50 AM »



Low effort Texas 1995 Referendum. The more interesting idea in hindsight would have been to imagine Texas with a Spanish speaking majority and go from there, so I might do that at some point.
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Brother Jonathan
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« Reply #10 on: August 21, 2022, 08:11:38 AM »

[snip]

Low effort Texas 1995 Referendum. The more interesting idea in hindsight would have been to imagine Texas with a Spanish speaking majority and go from there, so I might do that at some point.

Seems highly correlated with OTL 2020 election results, minus the RGV drift of course.

That was mostly the baseline, strong no from most urban/suburban areas which ran just a bit north of Biden's vote in those places, coupled with a strong showing for no in areas with a large number of Spanish speakers.
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Brother Jonathan
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Posts: 1,030


« Reply #11 on: May 23, 2023, 10:04:00 AM »

It Can't Happen Here, based on what I remember of the book:

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Brother Jonathan
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« Reply #12 on: March 09, 2024, 10:58:19 PM »

1976 Presidential Election
Sen. Thomas Eagleton/Sen. Edmund Muskie (D)- 50.3%, 286 EVs
VP Spiro Agnew/Rep. Phil Crane (R)- 48.6%, 252 EVs
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Brother Jonathan
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Posts: 1,030


« Reply #13 on: March 10, 2024, 01:13:37 PM »

A Vermont Yankee in the White House

1968 Presidential Election
Gov. Philip H. Hoff/Sen. George Smathers (D)- 50.9%, 445 EVs
Frm. Gov. William Scranton/Gov. Ronald Reagan (R)- 44.08%, 83 EVs
Frm. Gov. George Wallace/Gen. Curtis LeMay (AI)- 4.99%, 10 EVs



1972 Presidential Election
Pres. Philip H. Hoff/Vice Pres. George Smathers (D)- 54.8%, 422 EVs
Gov. Ronald Reagan/Gov. Jim Rhodes (R)- 44.89%, 116 EVs
Mayor John Lindsay/Rep. Pete McCloskey (IR)- .24%, 0 EVS


1976 Presidential Election
Sen. Ernest "Fritz" Hollings/Sen. Walter Modale (D)- 45.6%, 377 EVs
Sen. Howard Baker/Sen. James Buckley (R)- 42.76%, 161 EVs
Gov. George Wallace/Rep. Phil Crane (AI)- 11.6%, 0 EVs



1980 Presidential Election
Sen. Howard Baker/Rep. Jack Kemp (R)- 58.3%, 517 EVs
Pres. Ernest "Fritz" Hollings/Vice Pres. Walter Mondale (D)- 41.65%, 21 EVs



1984 Presidential Election
Pres. Howard Baker/Vice Pres. Jack Kemp (R)- 57.5%, 518 EVs
Sen. Ted Kennedy/Frm. Gov. Jerry Brown (D)- 42.4%, 20 EVs



I did all this by running it through President Elect-1988 Edition, which proved a fun experiment.
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Brother Jonathan
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« Reply #14 on: March 25, 2024, 08:24:22 PM »

1920
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