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AndrewH's Test Thread

Ranking of American Presidents since 1961, Gallup polling (2019)
1. Harry P. Cain
2. Molly Ivins
3. Bill Browder
4. Richard Riley
5. Judd Gregg
6. Robert Rubin
7. George Romney
8. Nelson Rockefeller
9.
10. Dave Rubin
11. Alexander Haig
12. Hillary Clinton
 
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Ranking of American Presidents since 1961, Gallup polling (2019)
1. Harry P. Cain
2. Molly Ivins
3. Bill Browder
4. Richard Riley
5. Judd Gregg
6. Robert Rubin
7. George Romney
8. Nelson Rockefeller
9. George McGovern
10. Dave Rubin
11. Alexander Haig
12. Hillary Clinton
 
In spite of President Eisenhower's residual popularity and the growing economy, many Democrats were rather confident that they would beat the Republican ticket handily in November. Why? Because Richard Nixon was the Republican nominee.

The controversial Vice-President and liberal bogeyman had sleepwalked to the nomination on a


And then J. Edgar Hoover had to ruin everything.

The shadowy FBI Director had long been a thorn in the side of the Democratic Party – FDR had considered dismissing him on a couple of occasions, but feared Hoover’s ability to retaliate with damaging information during an election campaign. Eleanor, however, had decided to be a bright, short flame in office, and when the FBI began investigating unions, civil rights groups, and even the old Rosie Brigades under the “COINTELPRO” program, the President made use of J. Howard McGrath’s new Division of Constitutional Enforcement (“the Dice”), (ironically created as a Republican compromise against her desired Department of Education), to shut down COINTELPRO and subsequently dismissed Hoover.

Hoover’s subsequent charge that the Dice was riddled with Communist infiltrators and his announcement of a Presidential campaign to root out same is popularly viewed as an act of spite against the administration that cost him his job. (Although in his memoirs conservative commentator and former Chief of Staff Thomas Hadley paints the decision as one made out of legitimate fear of a socialist coup, and points out that there did turn out to be some former members of the Communist Party in the DCE, though almost certainly not the vast KGB spy network he might have indicated.)

Regardless, Hoover touched a nerve with the Republicans’ base, conservatives who believed that the country had been lurching towards a socialist economy ever since the New Deal (the Byrd interregnum, in their view, having done little to reverse the trend) and Eleanor Roosevelt was the harbinger of a left-wing New World Order that they wanted no part of. Hoover did well in the primaries, and soon commanded a block of convention delegates that seemed unwilling to support anyone else.

Republicans, convinced that Hoover was unelectable (leaving aside the persistent rumors about his sexuality, Hoover’s blunt, interrogatory style of speaking didn’t translate well to electoral politics), scrambling to find any elected official who could peel off Hoover delegates without alienating the rest of the party, finally settled on young Senator Richard Nixon, who had become known as “the Red Hunter” in his single term in office, and who had implied, at least, that he’d reappoint Hoover if elected. Nathaniel Goldstein, a political protégé of Thomas Dewey and the first Jew to be placed on a major ticket, was chosen as his running mate as a sop to the Eastern establishment and Progressive Republicans (though progressive Senator “Wild Bill” Langer would still go rogue and co-opt the Prohibition Party)*.

Democrats, meanwhile, had somewhat surprisingly nominated Senator Estes Kefauver – while the charismatic populist had largely swept the primaries, his aggressive support of civil rights and his quixotic crusades against political corruption had made him unpopular with the party elite – however, in the end the Democrats were unable to unite around anyone capable of stopping him. In addition, most Democrats felt that they might be forced to run against Hoover, which would end any chance of bringing Victory back into the fold anyway; Kefauver had already bested Hoover once as chair of the Organized Crime Committee; and, it was whispered, he at least had relatively little dirt that Hoover could use against him. To placate the Democratic machine, political dynast John F. Kennedy of Massachusetts was selected to go with him.

Meanwhile, the Victory Party would once again run its own ticket, facing two ostensibly pro-civil rights tickets (not to mention two tickets with a non-Protestant on them). While Nixon was somewhat sympathetic to the idea of “moderating the judicial overreach” of the Supreme Court, he decided against open coordination with Victory, feeling that working openly with what was clearly the party of Southern segregationism (despite Owen Brewster’s increasingly awkward posturing) would damage his own image, and besides, Victory would only take states the Republicans didn’t compete in anyway. While this was largely true, it meant that the Republican parties in the south continued to campaign – to little effect in most states, but in others, most notably Texas, it may have split the anti-Kefauver vote.

Nixon instead focused on attacking Kefauver as another out-of-control Rooseveltian liberal, and Kennedy as a corrupt playboy who wasn’t ready for office. Immediately after the conventions, polls had Nixon leading the three-way race.

And then the wheels fell off. First, the Democrats responded to inquiries into Kennedy’s finances by bringing up Senator Nixon’s own political fund, an expense fund maintained by his political backers. While not illegal at the time, the fund, combined with Nixon’s own youth and selection as a ‘compromise’ by the convention allowed Democrats to paint him as a puppet of big Republican donors. Nixon attempted to put the scandal to rest in a televised speech in which he defended himself as a “man of modest means… my wife doesn’t own a mink coat, just a plain Republican cloth coat” and insisted that the only gift he’d kept for his family was a cocker spaniel named Checkers. The “Checkers speech” was widely derided in the press, with the New York Times calling it “an emotional appeal unbefitting of a would-be Commander-in-Chief” and Kefauver retorting that “My means are as modest as his are, but I got my own pet dogs. Some folks say I am a pet dog. But I’m not J. Edgar Hoover’s dog”.

Before he could recover from the Checkers scandal, the suicide of Clyde Tolson and the DCE report on illegal FBI activities brought Hoover back into the news. While the cause of Tolson’s suicide remains officially unknown, and the DCE report made no reference the rumored relationship between him and Hoover, the news brought the old rumors out in force, even as the DOJ recommended charges against Hoover for violation of 1st Amendment Rights and the press began hounding Nixon on whether he still thought that Hoover should be reinstated. Making matters worse, Nathaniel Goldstein, no friend of Hoover, was quoted as stating that “while Hoover has dome some good in his time, he is not above the law and must answer these charges” before Nixon had publically determined to accept the DCE’s findings – while he eventually agreed with the position it led to charges that Goldstein had taken control of the issue and that the ticket was “upside down”. (Indeed, all that most people remember now about the ’56 campaign is Goldstein’s quip about John F. Kennedy, when the latter had pointed out that he was a little older than Harold Stassen in 1944 – “Trust me, I’ve worked with them both, and Mr. Kennedy is no Harold Stassen.”)

Republicans tried desperately to turn the race back to ideology, but the Democrats simply floated above the fray, running on “Kefauver, the man you can trust”. Only in the South was liberalism – specifically racial liberalism – an issue; but while this proved a boon for Victory, the GOP would have the worst result since 1936 – though narrow victories in Ohio and New York would at least prevent a complete electoral blowout.


genusmap.png

165 EV's - 46.69% - 32,135,821 votes
354 EV's - 50.86% - 35,006,824 votes
18 EV's - 1.31% - 825,990 votes
 
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2017 - 2022: Donald Trump / Mike Pence (Republican)
defeated, 2020: Joe Biden / Beto O’Rourke (Democratic)
2022 - 2025: Mike Pence / Dan Crenshaw (Republican)
2025 - 2027: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez / Sara Nelson (Democratic)

defeated, 2024: Mike Pence / Dan Crenshaw (Republican), J.B. Pritzker / Stephanie Murphy (Independent Democratic)
2027 - 2033: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez / Sara Nelson (Democratic Socialist)
defeated, 2028: Kelli Ward / Tom Cotton (Republican), Kyrsten Sinema / Lauren Underwood (Democratic)
2033 - present: Sara Nelson / Austin Strassle (Democratic Socialist)
defeated, 2032: Tucker Carlson / John Guandolo (ACT!), Gavin Newsom / Tim Keller (Democratic)
 
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Humphrey
Morgenthau
Johnson
Don Yarborough
Symington
Proxmire
John W. King
George Wallace

Maybe: Frank Clement

Possibly: Ryan DeGraffenried

68: John Hoellen
James “Justice Jim” Johnson
 
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Presidents of the United States, 1919 - present:
1919 - 1921: Thomas Marshall / vacant (Democratic)
1921 - 1924: Thomas Marshall / Peter Gerry (Democratic)

defeated, 1920: Leonard Wood / Ben Hooper (Republican), Hiram Johnson / William Randolph Hearst (Farmer-Labor)
1924 - 1925: Peter Gerry / vacant (Democratic)
1925 - 1933: John Pershing / Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. (Republican)

defeated, 1924: Charles Bryan / Joseph Robinson (Democratic), Robert LaFollette / C.C. Young (Farmer-Labor), William Randolph Hearst / Henry Ford (Progressive)
defeated, 1928: Al Smith / J. Hamilton Lewis (Democratic), Sidney Catts / Alma Bridwell White (Prohibition), Floyd Olson / Burton Wheeler (Farmer-Labor)

1933 - 1935: Charles Bryan / Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic)
defeated, 1932: Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. / Herbert Hoover (Republican), John Brinkely / William Harvey (Liberty), Upton Sinclair / Norman Thomas (Workers')
1935 - present: Franklin D. Roosevelt / vacant (Democratic)
 
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WIP

Ranking of Presidents of the United States 1961 - present, Siena College:

1. Gerald Ford - 'Not a Lincoln, but close enough - the President who ended the wars in Vietnam and Laos, rolled back Wallace's segregationist dogma, repaired American standing on the world stage, negotiated peace in Israel and Brazil, and brought the nation together after the turbulent Sixties. Despite the economic woes caused by the chaotic situation in the Middle East, Ford's ability to keep the nation's consumers confident in the economy is a testament to Ford's ability to connect with the average citizen. For those who can remember it, the 1976 Bicentennial was America's peak.'
2. Birch Bayh - 'While most schoolchildren are taught that James Madison was the primary author of the Constitution, Birch Bayh, born over 175 years after Madison, is almost as influential. Authoring amendments that lowered the voting age to 18 and cleared up the Presidential line of succession, Bayh's work in securing the passage of the ERA and D.C. Voting Rights permanently changed America's political make-up, and while he would not live to see it, the passage of the Puerto Rico Voting Rights Amendment in 2015 and the abolition of the Electoral College in 2018 are indebted to his legacy.'
3. T. Boone Pickens - 'His celebrity molded by his high-profile battles with the regulatory Askew Administration and his aggressive wheeling-and-dealing in the corporate world, Pickens was drafted in a bid to resurrect a Republican brand damaged by years of controversy and obstruction. Pickens played his part well, playing up his outsider appeal and promising to kickstart a stagnating economy by weaning American energy off the OPEC cartel. Beginning his inaugural address by announcing that America was "open for business," the energy boom of the 90's created (literally) millions of jobs and expanded the middle-class in a way not seen since the 1940's and 50's.'
4. Paul Soglin - 'The most hated and revered modern President in equal parts, Soglin is a man who believed his duty was to not go away. His career his marked by numerous failures; an inability to win the Democratic gubernatorial nomination for Wisconsin forced him into the House, where he built a brand as a left-wing maverick culminating in an independent run for President that, predictably, ended in disaster. However, Soglin refused to let the Democratic Party move on without him, catapulting to an insurgent victory in 2008 in the aftermath of the Gas Crash in 2007. While the nationalization of Boeing, the subsidies towards green energies and the normalization of socialist politics are typically cited as reasons for his loss in 2012, Soglin's enduring popularity with young voters and transformative legacy led to his return to the White House in 2016.'
5. Richard Nixon
6. Bob Dornan
7. Reubin Askew - 'Askew has been typecast as the stodgy Democratic elder statesman, the firm moderate fighting against the excesses of the left and right ever since his first (and only) term in the White House. However, Askew became nationally known for his "radical" tendencies - making waves as the first successful Southern politician to break with the Wallacite establishment and fight tooth-and-nail against his segregationist policies through state-level executive action (being the youngest Governor in Florida's history helped things, too). Wallace's use of the National Guard to occupy and forcibly segregate Miami would be his downfall, and Askew would leverage his newfound reputation as a liberal hero to move from Tallahassee to Washington, D.C. in 1976, and would win the Presidency in his own right in 1984. Years in the Beltway had worn down Askew's populist tendencies, and his tenure in the White House garnered him the nickname "President No" - could America afford a national healthcare program? No, it would be far too costly. Should the Administration block federal funding for abortion procedures? Despite being personally pro-life, it would infringe on a women's right to choose (and prevent his renomination), so no. While the economy was doing well and the President was quite popular with the general public, Askew would be brought down by his complacency as a candidate with a radical platform of change swept him out in 1988.'
8. Jim McDermott
9. Joe Biden
10. Carmen Yulín Cruz - 'What if? The trailblazer, the inspiration, the leading light of America in the 2020's - horrifically gunned down by far-right terrorists in Portland, Oregon just weeks into her term.'
11. Mike Pence - 'While it is too early to tell whether Speaker Pence will become a truly great President, his frosty relationship with the Senate leadership, his arch-conservative social views and the ongoing Recession has already led to a standstill early in his Administration (his only major accomplishment being the creation of a Department of National Security, which has gone over well even with the most ardent of socialists in the aftermath of the Portland attacks).'
12. Jeff Bell
13. George Wallace
 
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1961 - 1965: Richard Nixon / Henry Cabot Lodge (Republican)
defeated, 1960: John F. Kennedy / Lyndon B. Johnson (Democratic)
1965 - 1969: George Wallace / Frank Lausche (Democratic)
defeated, 1964: Richard Nixon / Henry Cabot Lodge (Republican)
1969 - 1977: Gerald Ford / Howard Baker (Republican)
defeated, 1968: Frank Church / Ryan DeGraffenreid (Democratic), George Wallace / Frank Lausche ('American' Independent), Robert Scheer / Bill Moyer (People's Front)
defeated, 1972: Jesse Unruh / Bill Proxmire (Democratic), George Wallace / Jim Johnson (American)

1977 - 1985: Birch Bayh / Reubin Askew (Democratic)
defeated, 1976: Bud Wilkinson / Melvin Laird (Republican)
defeated, 1980: Eliot Richardson / Nelson Gross (Republican)

1985 - 1989: Reubin Askew / John Brademas (Democratic)
defeated, 1984: Jack Kemp / Bill Saxbe (Republican)
1989 - 1993: Bob Dornan / Connie Marshner (Republican)
defeated, 1988: Reubin Askew / John Brademas (Democratic)
1993 - 1997: Jim McDermott / Bob Armstrong (Democratic)
defeated, 1992: Bob Dornan / Connie Marshner (Republican)
1997 - 2005: T. Boone Pickens / George Voinovich (Republican)
defeated, 1996: Jim McDermott / Bob Armstrong (Democratic)
defeated, 2000: Evelyn Murphy / Dave McCurdy (Democratic)

2005 - 2009: Jeff Bell / Tom Davis (Republican)
defeated, 2004: Eliot Spitzer / Evan Bayh (Democratic), Paul Soglin / Noam Chomsky (Independent)
2009 - 2013: Paul Soglin / Gloria Tristani (Democratic)
defeated, 2008: Mike Bloomberg / various (Independent), Jeff Bell / Tom Davis (Republican)
2013 - 2017: Joe Biden / Charlie Crist (National Unity)
defeated, 2012: Andrew Napolitano / Matt Bevin (Republican), Paul Soglin / Gloria Tristani (Independent Democratic)
2017 - 2021: Paul Soglin / Carmen Yulín Cruz (Democratic)
defeated, 2016: Matt Bevin / Joe Heck (Republican), Joe Biden / Charlie Crist (National Unity)
2021 - 2021: Carmen Yulín Cruz / Eric Garcetti (Democratic)
defeated, 2020: Ken Paxton / Carly Fiorina (Republican), Joe Biden / Phil Gordon (Unity)
2021 - present: Mike Pence / vacant (Republican)
 
WIP

1968 - 1972: Pierre Trudeau (Liberal)
defeated, 1968: Robert Stanfield (Progressive Conservative), Tommy Douglas (New Democratic), Réal Caouette (RC)
1972 - 1977: Robert Stanfield (Progressive Conservative)
defeated, 1972: Pierre Trudeau (Liberal), David Lewis (New Democratic), Réal Caouette (Social Credit)
1977 - 1983: Ed Broadbent (New Democratic)
defeated, 1977: Robert Stanfield (Progressive Conservative), John Turner (Liberal), Réal Caouette (Social Credit)
defeated, 1981 (Minority): Robert Stanfield (Progressive Conservative), John Turner (Liberal)

1983 - 1984: Robert Stanfield (Progressive Conservative)
defeated, 1983 (Minority): Ed Broadbent (New Democratic), John Turner (Liberal)
1984 - 1987: Ed Broadbent (New Democratic)
defeated, 1984 (Coalition): Robert Stanfield (Progressive Conservative), John Turner (Liberal)
1987 Quebec Independence Referendum: 50.3% (YES), 49.7% (NO)
1987 - 1999: John Crosbie (Progressive Conservative)
defeated, 1987 (Coalition): John Turner (Liberal), Bob Clark (Social Credit), Ed Broadbent (New Democratic)
defeated, 1990: Lloyd Axworthy (Liberal), Dave Barrett (New Democratic), Bob Clark (Social Credit), Paul Hellyer (Canadian Action), Adriane Carr (Green)
defeated, 1994: Lloyd Axworthy (Liberal), Svend Robinson (New Democratic), Bob Clark (Social Credit), Adriane Carr (Green)
defeated, 1998: Svend Robinson (New Democratic), Brian Tobin (Liberal), Art Hanger (Social Credit), Adriane Carr (Green)

1999 - 2000: Perrin Beatty (Progressive Conservative)
2000 - 2008: Gordon Wilson (Alliance)

defeated, 2000: Perrin Beatty (Progressive Conservative), Art Hanger (Social Reform), Adriane Carr (Green)
defeated, 2005: Jan Brown (Social Reform), Nancy MacBeth (Progressive Conservative), David Suzuki (Green)

2008 - 2015: Jan Brown (Social Reform)
defeated, 2008: Gordon Wilson (Alliance), Nancy MacBeth (Progressive Conservative), Frank de Jong (Green)
defeated, 2010: Dominic Cardy (Alliance), Nancy MacBeth (Progressive Conservative), Frank de Jong (Green)
defeated, 2013: Dominic Cardy (Alliance), Jane Sterk (Green), Nancy MacBeth (Progressive Conservative)

2015 - present: Guy Caron (Alliance)
defeated, 2015: Jan Brown (Social Reform), Jane Sterk (Green)

Presidents of France, 1969 - present:
1969 - 1974: Georges Pompidou (UDR)
1974 - 1981: François Mitterand (PS)
1981 - 1988: Michel Debré (UDR)
1988 - 2002: Henri Emmanuelli (PSE)
2002 - 2009: Jean-Pierre Chevènement (PSE)

defeated, 2002: Gérard Longuet (AR), Dominique de Villepin (UDR), Bernard Bosson (C-LR)
2009 - 2014:
2014 - 2019:
Nicolas Sarkozy (AR)

defeated, 2014: Christiane Taubira (C),
2019 - present: Martine Billard (PSE)
defeated, 2019: Nicolas Sarkozy (AR), Florian Philippot (BN), Emmanuel Macron (C),

Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom, 1969 - present:
1969 - 1974: Harold Wilson (Labour)
1974 - 1975: Roy Jenkins (Labour)
1975 - 1980: Edward du Cann (Conservative)
1980 - 1990: Michael Foot (Labour)
1990 - 1998: John Moore (Conservative)

defeated, 1990:
defeated, 1993:

1998 - 2003: Chris Mullin (Labour)
2003 - 2006: Robert Kilroy-Silk (Conservative)

2006 - 2009: Alex Salmond (Labour)
2009 - 2014: David Willetts (Conservative)
2014 - 2016: Esther McVey (Conservative)
2016 - present: David Lammy (Labour)


Presidents of Syria, 1971 - present:

Presidents of South Africa, 1969 - present:

Chairmen and General Secretaries of the Communist Party of China, 1969 - present:
 
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Mitterand victory in 1974 is definitely under utilized POD. Fate of the Programme commun, Union de la Gauche, and the trajectory of the French left as a whole could be wildly different. Loving the left, eurosceptic alternate PS we got here.
 
Mitterand victory in 1974 is definitely under utilized POD. Fate of the Programme commun, Union de la Gauche, and the trajectory of the French left as a whole could be wildly different. Loving the left, eurosceptic alternate PS we got here.
Thank you! It's set in the same universe as the Crashing the Party list in the OP, and while it's still very loose at this point, but the general trajectory of the Socialists (later the Socialist-Ecology Party) bends towards souverainist (despite Emmanuelli's own pro-EU leanings), populist and green policies.

Debre's participation in the multi-national force that invaded Syria in the mid-80's is broadly responsible for that turn to the left, but Mitterand's close relations with the PCF and the Programme commun play a big part in it.
 
0XNkEL5.png
MP's elected at the United Kingdom General Election, 2018 (January):
Conservatives (Esther McVey):
277
Labour (Christine Blower): 246
SNP (Duncan Ross): 41
Renewal (Michael Gove): 32
DUP (Sammy Wilson): 11
Greens (Sian Berry): 8
Sinn Fein (Gerry Adams): 6
Liberals (David Laws): 5
Alliance (Naomi Long): 1
 
‘The Would-be Revolution’
1981 - 1981: Ronald Reagan / George H.W. Bush (Republican)
defeated, 1980: Jimmy Carter / Walter Mondale (Democratic)

‘The Man Who Sold the World’
1981 - 1989: George H.W. Bush / Howard Baker (Republican)
defeated, 1984: Mario Cuomo / Gary Hart (Democratic)

‘A New Jerusalem’
1989 - 1993: Pat Schroeder / Tom Harkin (Democratic)
defeated, 1988: Lowell Weicker / Steve Gunderson (Ind. Republican), Pat Robertson / Woody Jenkins (Republican)

‘Death and Glory’
1993 - present: Ted Turner / Jim Mattox (Independent)
defeated, 1992: Pat Robertson / Slade Gorton (Republican), Pat Schroeder/ Tom Harkin (Democratic)
 
‘The Would-be Revolution’
1981 - 1981: Ronald Reagan / George H.W. Bush (Republican)
defeated, 1980: Jimmy Carter / Walter Mondale (Democratic)

‘The Man Who Sold the World’
1981 - 1989: George H.W. Bush / Howard Baker (Republican)
defeated, 1984: Mario Cuomo / Gary Hart (Democratic)

‘A New Jerusalem’
1989 - 1993: Pat Schroeder / Tom Harkin (Democratic)
defeated, 1988: Lowell Weicker / Steve Gunderson (Ind. Republican), Pat Robertson / Woody Jenkins (Republican)

‘Death and Glory’
1993 - present: Ted Turner / Jim Mattox (Independent)
defeated, 1992: Pat Robertson / Slade Gorton (Republican), Pat Schroeder/ Tom Harkin (Democratic)


I’m sorry
 
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland
1964-1973: Harold Wilson (Labour)

defeated, 1964: (Majority) def. Alec Douglas-Home (Conservative), Jo Grimond (Liberal)
defeated, 1966: (Majority) def. Edward Heath (Conservative), Jo Grimond (Liberal)
defeated, 1970: (Majority) def. Edward Heath (Conservative), Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)

1973-1975: Roy Jenkins (Labour)
1975-1980: Keith Joseph (Conservative)

defeated, 1975: (Majority) def. Roy Jenkins (Labour), Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
defeated, 1978: (Minority, with SDP confidence and supply) def. Tony Benn (Labour), Roy Jenkins (Social Democratic), William Wolfe (Scottish National), David Steel (Liberal)

1980 - 1982: Airey Neave (Conservative minority, with SDP confidence and supply)
1982 - 1992: Tony Benn (Labour)
1990 - 1999: John Moore (Conservative)
1999 - 2004: Frank Dobson (Labour)
2004 - 2010: Theresa May (Conservative)
2010 - 2014: Theresa May (Conservative minority, with Renewal confidence and supply)
2014 - 2014: Duncan Bannatyne (Renewal minority)
2014 - present: Len McCluskey (Labour)



President of the United States of America
1969 - 1973: Ronald Reagan / Walter Reuther (Republican)

defeated, 1968: George McGovern / Walter Reuther (Democratic), Ronald Reagan / Norris Cotton (Republican), George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1973: Ronald Reagan / Spiro Agnew (Republican)
defeated, 1972: Walter Reuther/Frank Church (Democratic)
1973 - 1977: Ronald Reagan / Howard Baker (Republican)
1977 - 1981: Bronson La Follette / Mo Udall (Democratic)

defeated, 1976: Nelson Rockefeller/Kit Bond (Republican)
1981 - 1985: Bronson La Follette / Ed Muskie (Democratic)
defeated, 1980: Malcolm Wilson / Paul Laxalt (Republican)
1985 - 1989: Lamar Alexander / Jeff Bell (Republican)
1989 - 1997: Julian Bond / Dick Gephardt (Democratic)
1997 - 2005: Pete Wilson / Ander Crenshaw (Republican)
2009 - 2013: John Sharp / George Papandreou (Democratic)
2013 - 2015: Burl Cain / Peter Pace (Republican)
2015 - 2017: Peter Pace / John Thune (Republican)
2017 - present: Bill de Blasio / Dow Constantine (Democratic)
 
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