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Lists of Heads of Government and Heads of State

So here's a slightly-insane mini-project from the Other Place.

A while ago, @Anarcho-Occultist made this post where the main premise was - for some reason - AOCxCrenshaw.

Here's that, but gayer and British. With fictional characters, because I'm not nearly as competent or confident.

***
The Grosvenor Letters

Major frontbench members of His Majesty's Government, First Starmer ministry (as of January 1, 2024)
Prime Minister, Leader of the Labour Party, First Lord of the Treasury and Minister for the Civil Service - Sir Keir Starmer, MP for Holborn and Bloomsbury
Deputy Prime Minister,
Deputy Leader of the Labour Party and Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster - Angela Rayner, MP for Ashton-under-Lyne
Chancellor of the Exchequer - Rachel Reeves, MP for Leeds West
Secretary of State for the Home Department
and Deputy Leader of the Labour Party - Lucas Bainbridge, MP for Blackburn
Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs - David Lammy, MP for Tottenham
Secretary of State for Defense - Luke Pollard, MP for Plymouth Sutton and Stonehouse
Secretary of State for Justice / Lord Chancellor - Shabana Mahmood, MP for Birmingham Ladywood
Secretary of State for Education - Bridget Phillipson, MP for Houghton and Sunderland
Leader of the House of Commons - Thangam Debbonaire, MP for Bristol West
Chief Whip of the House of Commons
and Minister without Portfolio - Lilian Greenwood, MP for Nottingham South

Major frontbench members of His Majesty's Most Loyal Opposition, Mercer shadow ministry (as of January 1, 2024)
Leader of the Opposition and Leader of the Conservative Party - Johnny Mercer, MP for Plymouth Moor View
Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer - Penny Mordaunt, MP for Portsmouth North
Shadow Secretary of State for the Home Department
and Chairman of the Conservative Party - Grant Clarke, MP for Sevenoaks
Shadow Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs - Robert Jenrick, MP for Newark
Shadow Secretary of State for Defense - Tom Tugendhat, MP for Tonbridge and Malling
Shadow Secretary of State for Justice / Lord Chancellor - Michael Gove, MP for Surrey Heath
Shadow Secretary of State for Education - Kelly Tolhurst, MP for Rochester and Strood
Shadow Leader of the House of Commons
and Deputy Leader of the Opposition - Bim Afolami, MP for Hitchin and Harpenden

Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom:
2019-2022: Boris Johnson [1] (Conservative)
'19 (Majority of 80): def. Jeremy Corbyn (Labour), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Jo Swinson [defeated] (Liberal Democrats)
2022-2023: Liz Truss [2] (Conservative)
'22 vote of confidence in the Truss ministry: Succeeded
2023-2033: Sir Keir Starmer [3] (Labour)
'23 (Majority of 130): def. Liz Truss (Conservative), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats)
'23 Conservative leadership election: Johnny Mercer def. Kemi Badenoch, Grant Clarke, James Cleverly, etc
'25 Scottish independence referendum: NO 52.4%, YES 47.6%
'26 MMPR [1a] referendum: YES 56.7%, NO 43.3%
'27 (Majority of 84): def. Johnny Mercer (Conservative), Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats), Humza Yousaf (SNP), Carla Denyer (Green)
'27 Conservative leadership election: Tom Tugendhat def. Dehenna Davison, Elena Bunbury, Craig Liddell, etc
'28 House of Lords reform [1b] referendum: YES 54.9%, NO 45.1%
'31 (Majority of 40): def. Tom Tugendhat (Conservative), Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats), Humza Yousaf (SNP), Carla Denyer (Green)
'31 Conservative leadership election: Rishi Sunak def. Suella Braverman, Peter Fortune, Bim Afolami, etc
'33 Labour leadership election: Angela Rayner def. Zarah Sultana, Dan Carden, Florence Eshalomi, Steve Race, etc
2033-2034: Angela Rayner (Labour, then Labour minority)
'34 (C&S with Green, LibDems; 49 seats from majority): def. Rishi Sunak (Conservative), Zack Polanski (Green), Layla Moran (Liberal Democrats), Mhairi Black (SNP)
'34 "Breturn" European Union membership campaign: YES 57.3%, NO 42.7%
May '34 Conservative leadership election: Grant Clarke def. Dehenna Davison, Siobhan Baillie, Peter Fortune, etc
July '34 Labour leadership election: Lucas Bainbridge def. Lara McNeill, Jimmy Sergi, etc
2034-2034: Lucas Bainbridge [4] (Labour minority)
2034-2034: Sir Keir Starmer, Baron Starmer of Reigate
[5] (Labour minority leading caretaker government)
September '34 Labour leadership election: Bridget Phillipson def. Eli Aldridge, Nabeela Mowlana, Vaughan Gething, Alex Sobel, etc
September '34 Conservative leadership election: Siobhan Baillie def. Lewis Brackpool, Jack Rydeheard, Olivia Lever, etc
2034-20__: Bridget Phillipson (Labour minority)

[1] Elevated to the House of Lords as Baron Johnson of Uxbridge in 2023 dissolution honors.
[2] Elevated to the House of Lords as Baroness Truss of Renfrewshire in 2023 dissolution honors.
[3] Elevated to the House of Lords as Baron Starmer of Reigate in 2034 dissolution honors.
[4] "The Grosvenor letters" would be leaked just eleven days after his election as Labour leader, revealing a ... lengthy affair between him and LOTO Clarke; facing dual VONCs in his leadership and his government, Bainbridge (and Clarke) would resign within days of the leak on August 15, 2034.
[5] PM Bainbridge would ask that King Charles III send for now-Lord Starmer as the leader of a caretaker government; Charles would oblige.


[1a] Expands the House of Commons by 200 seats, with said seats filled based on the popular vote percentages of each party.
[1b] Abolishes hereditary peerages, establishes elected members ("Lords Electoral") based on county groupings of roughly-equivalent population.
 
Twenty Years Later (As of December 31, 2042)

PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES:
46. Joe Biden/Kamala Harris (D): January 20, 2021-January 20, 2025 'Off The Unbeaten Path'

2020: def Donald Trump/Mike Pence (R), 306-232 EV/51.3%-46.9% PV
47. Ron DeSantis/Kristi Noem (R): January 20, 2025-January 20, 2029 'The DeStabilizer'
2024: def Kamala Harris/Gary Peters (D), 278-260 EV/47.9%-49.5% PV
48. Jared Polis/Stacey Abrams (D): January 20, 2029-January 20, 2037 'Greatness Unleashed'
2028: def Ron DeSantis/Kristi Noem (R): 326-212 EV/52.0%-46.3% PV
2032: def Josh Hawley/Tulsi Gabbard (R): 524-14 EV/59.7%-36.2% PV
49. Stacey Abrams/Jason Kander (D): January 20, 2037-January 20, 2041 'Legacy Trailblazer'
2036: def Laura Loomer/Jackson Hinkle (R): 489-49 EV/57.0%-41.5% PV
50. Benjamin Backer/Erin Stewart (R): January 20, 2041-Present 'A New Hope'
2040: def. Stacey Abrams/Jason Kander (D): 273-265 EV/ 48.2%-48.0% PV

RANKINGS:
JOE BIDEN: 17/49
RON DESANTIS: 34/49
JARED POLIS: 3/49
STACEY ABRAMS: 27/49

HDI:
0.955 (+0.029)

PRESIDENTS OF MEXICO:
65. Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador: December 1, 2018-December 1, 2024
66. Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo: December 1, 2024-December 1, 2030
67. Adan Augusto Lopez: December 1, 2030-December 1, 2036
68. Luisa Maria Alcalde Lujan: December 1, 2036-December 1, 2042

69. Damian Zepeda Vidales: December 1, 2042-Present


HDI: 0.799 (+0.037)

PRIME MINISTERS OF THE UNITED KINGDOM:
Liz Truss (C): September 6, 2022-November 12, 2022
'The Worst'
Jeremy Hunt (C): November 12, 2022-December 17, 2022 'Take That Back'
Kemi Badenoch (C): December 17, 2022-March 13, 2024 'Owning The Libs To Pay Your Mortgage'
Ben Wallace (C): March 13, 2024-August 3, 2024 'A Dashed Hope'
Rishi Sunak (C): August 3, 2024-September 5, 2024 'His Accidency'
Boris Johnson (C): September 5, 2024-January 24, 2025 'Boris Is Back'

Keir Starmer (L): January 24, 2025-May 11, 2032 'A Beacon Of Hope'
2025 (400 Seats) def. Boris Johnson (Conservative), Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats), Ian Blackford (SNP), Charlotte Lucas (Green)
2030 (339 Seats) def. Tom Tugendhat (Conservative), Mhairi Black (SNP), Charlotte Lucas (Green), Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats)
Zara Sultana (L): May 11, 2032-October 5, 2033 'The Terrible Sequel: Socialism Edition'
Zac Goldsmith (C-G): October 5, 2033-June 8, 2040 'Cutting Emissions And Concern For The Poor By 100%'
2033 (345 Seats) def. Zara Sultana (Labour), Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats), Mhairi Black (SNP)
2037 (391 Seats) def. Rebecca Long-Bailey (Labour), Mhairi Black (SNP), Jo Swinson (Liberal Democrats)
Alan Mak (C-G): June 8, 2040-Present 'H.W. Mak'
2041 (350 Seats) def. David Lammy (Labour), Mhairi Black (SNP), Jo Swinson (Liberal Democrats)

HDI: 0.950 (+0.018)

FIRST MINISTERS OF SCOTLAND:
Nicola Sturgeon (SNP): November 20, 2014-October 19, 2028

2016: 63 Seats
2021: 65 Seats
2026: 60 Seats
Anas Sarwar (Labour): October 19, 2028-May 15, 2030
2028: 59 Seats
Keith Brown (SNP): May 15, 2030-September 19, 2035
2030: 64 Seats
2034: 59 Seats
Humza Yousaf (SNP): September 19, 2035-June 30, 2036
Shirley-Anne Somerville (SNP): June 30, 2036-March 30, 2038

2036: 60 Seats
Michael Matheson (SNP): March 30, 2038-October 10, 2038
Douglas Ross (Conservative-Green): October 10, 2038-November 15, 2042

2038: 61 Seats
2039: 63 Seats
Mhairi Black (SNP): November 15, 2042-Present
2042: 63 Seat3

Elizabeth II: 1952-2022
Charles III: 2022-2029
William V: 2029-Present


PRESIDENTS OF FRANCE:
Emmanuel Macron (EM): May 14, 2017-May 7, 2022
'Last Stand Of The Neoliberals'
2017: def Marine Le Pen, 66.1%-33.9%
Yael Braun-Pivet (EM): May 7, 2022-May 17, 2027 'Actual Last Stand Of The Neoliberals'
2022: def. Marine Le Pen, 59.0%-41.0%
Gerard Larcher (TR): May 17, 2027-June 8, 2027
Marion Marechal (RN): June 8, 2027-May 16, 2037
'Female And Fascist Justin Trudeau'
2027: def. Yael Braun-Pivet, 50.1%-49.9%
2032: def. Elisabeth Borne, 51.9%-48.1%
Jean-Hugues Ratenon (NU): May 16, 2037-May 20, 2042 'Ratenon, Destroyer Of Leftism'
2037: def. Eric Zemmour, 50.3%-49.7%
Alexandre Goldstein-Levy (RN): May 20, 2042-Present* 'Fascist And Cat Loving Justin Trudeau'
2042: def. Ska Keller, 54.9%-45.1%

HDI: 0.919 (+0.020)

PRESIDENTS OF UKRAINE:
Volodymyr Zelenskyy (SP): May 20, 2019-May 20, 2029

2019: def. Petro Poroshenko, 73.2%-24.5%
2024: def. Yulia Tymoshenko, 90.9%-7.8%
Olha Stefanishyna (SP): May 20, 2029-May 20, 2039
2029: def. Yuriy Boyko, 80.4%-18.8%
2034: def. Pavlo Petrenko, 70.4%-25.6%
Oleksii Reznikov (SP): May 20, 2039-Present
2039: def. Pavlo Petrenko, 69.2%-29.6%

HDI: 0.880 (+0.101)

PRESIDENTS OF RUSSIA:
Vladimir Putin (UR): May 7, 2012-December 31, 2042

2012: def. Gennady Zyuganov, 64.4%-17.4%
2018: def. Pavel Grudinin, 77.5%-11.9%
2024: def. Alexei Navalny, 62.0%-37.2%
2026 Referendum: 74.5% YES-25.5% NO (Would expand the powers of the President to deal with internal unrest)
2030: def. UNOPPOSED
2036: def. UNOPPOSED
2042: def. UNOPPOSED
Dmitry Patrushev (UR): December 31, 2042-Present

HDI:
0.826 (+0.002)

PRIME MINISTERS OF CANADA:
Justin Trudeau (L): November 4, 2015-November 11, 2025

2015 (184 Seats) def. Stephen Harper (Conservative), Tom Mulcair (NDP), Giles Duceppe (Bloc), Elizabeth May (Green)
2019 (157 Seats) def. Andrew Scheer (Conservative), Yves-Francois Blanchet (Bloc), Jagmeet Singh (NDP), Elizabeth May (Green)
2021 (159 Seats) def. Erin O'Toole (Conservative), Jagmeet Singh (NDP), Yves-Francois Blanchet (Bloc), Annamie Paul (Green)
Pierre Poilievre (C): November 11, 2025-March 23, 2031
2025 (165 Seats) def. Justin Trudeau (Liberal), Jagmeet Singh (NDP), Yves-Francois Blanchet (Bloc), Elizabeth May (Green)
2028 (165 Seats) def. Chrystia Freeland (Liberal), Jagmeet Singh (NDP), Annamie Paul (Green), Yves-Francois Blanchet (Bloc)
Tim Uppal (C): March 23, 2031-June 18, 2041
2032 (179 Seats) def. Melanie Joly (Liberal), Annamie Paul (Green), Laurin Liu (NDP), Yves-Francois Blanchet (Bloc)
2036 (190 Seats) def. Annamie Paul (GDP), Maryam Mosef (Liberal), Yves-Francois Blanchet (Bloc)
2040 (154 Seats) def. Annamie Paul (GDP), Steven Guilbeault (Liberal)
Annamie Paul (GDP): June 18, 2041-Present
2041 (152 Seats) def. Tim Uppal (Conservative), Steven Guilbeault (Liberal)

HDI: 0.946 (+0.016)

PRESIDENTS OF BRAZIL:
Jair Bolsonaro: January 1, 2019-January 1, 2023

2018: def. Fernando Haddad, 55.1%-44.9%
Lula da Silva: January 1, 2023-January 1, 2027
2022: def. Jair Bolsonaro, 53.1%-46.9%
Marina Silva: January 1, 2027-January 1, 2035
2026: def. Jair Bolsonaro, 55.0%-45.0%
2030: def. Bragga Netto, 73.4%-26.6%
Fernando Haddad: January 1, 2035-March 14, 2037
2034: def. Flavio Bolsonaro, 61.5%-38.5%
Paula Rousseff: March 14, 2037-Present
2038: def. Aecio Neves, 53.0%-47.0%

HDI: 0.867 (+0.102)

PRIME MINISTERS OF ISRAEL:
Yair Lapid: July 1, 2022-October 18, 2023

2022: 51 (26+13+7+5) Plus 12 in Confidence
2023 (Mar): 50 (24+12+9+5) Plus 12 in Confidence
Benjamin Netanyahu: October 18, 2023-June 30, 2024
2023 (Sep): 61 (34+12+9+6)
Yair Lapid: June 30, 2024-July 1, 2027
2024: 59 (27+14+11+7) Plus 10 in Confidence
2025: 61 (26+15+13+7)
Benny Gantz: July 1, 2027-December 11, 2027
Ayelet Shaked: December 11, 2027-April 5, 2029

2027: 62 (29+18+10+4)
2029 (Jan): 60 (28+18+9+5)
Yonatan Netanyahu: April 5, 2029-April 25, 2029
Benny Gantz: April 25, 2029-November 4, 2029

2029 (Apr): 56 (22+20+14) Plus 14 in Confidence
Hili Tropper: November 4, 2029-October 24, 2030
2030: 62 (23+23+16)
Pnina Tamano-Shata: October 24, 2030-September 10, 2037
2033: 62 (24+21+17)
2036: 64 (24+23+17)
Yair Golan: September 10, 2037-March 18, 2042
2039: 63 (21+21+21)
2041: 63 (23+21+19)
Yifat Shasha-Biton: March 18, 2042-Present
2042: 59 (30+20+9)

Isaac Herzog 2021-2028
Benjamin Netanyahu 2028-2030
Yair Lapid 2030-2035
Merav Michaeli 2035-2042
Yoni Bennett 2042-Present


HDI: 0.949 (+0.030)

PRIME MINISTERS OF AUSTRALIA:
Anthony Albanese (L): May 23, 2022-September 5, 2027

2022: 77 Seats
2025: 74 Seats (+7 Greens)
2026 Referendum: 55.5% YES-44.5% NO (Would make Australia a republic)
Penny Wong (L): September 5, 2027-May 27, 2028
Josh Frydenberg (C): May 27, 2028-June 4, 2040

2028: 76 Seats
2031: 78 Seats
2034: 77 Seats
2037: 80 Seats
Max Chandler-Mather (G): June 4, 2040-Present
2040: 45 Seats (+33 Labour)

PRESIDENTS OF AUSTRALIA:
Anthony Albanese (L): September 19, 2029-January 1, 2034

2029: def. Peter Dutton, 51.0%-49.0%
Scott Morrison (C): January 1, 2034-January 1, 2039
2033: def. Anthony Albanese, 53.1%-46.9%
Julia Gillard (L): January 1, 2039-September 29, 2041
2038: def. Scott Morrison, 52.4%-47.6%
Bridget McKenzie (C): September 29, 2041-Present
2041: def. Julia Gillard, 52.2%-47.8%

HDI: 0.959 (+0.015)

PRIME MINISTERS OF NORWAY:
Jonas Gahr Store: October 14, 2021-March 2, 2023

2021: 64 Seats (36+28)
Anniken Huifeldt: March 2, 2023-September 2, 2025
Jonas Gahr Store: September 2, 2025-October 20, 2025
Erna Solberg: October 20, 2025-October 1, 2033

2025: 78 Seats (59+8+6+5)
2029: 82 Seats (60+12+5+5)
Borge Brende: October 1, 2033-October 22, 2037
2033: 82 Seats (61+13+6+2)
Espen Barth Eide: October 22, 2037-June 7, 2040
2037: 71 Seats (40+31)
Hadia Tajik: June 7, 2040-October 15, 2041
Ava Larsen: October 15, 2041-Present*

2041: 93 Seats (61+22+10)

HDI: 0.971 (+0.014)

PRIME MINISTERS OF SWEDEN:
Ulf Kristersson: October 18, 2022-January 1, 2029

2022: 176 (73+68+24+19)
2026: 180 (64+60+39+17)
Ebba Busch: January 1, 2029-October 11, 2030
Mikael Damberg: October 11, 2030-June 19, 2032

2030: 178 (100+39+28+11)
Max Elger: June 19, 2032-April 5, 2036
2034: 185 (101+49+20+15)
Mikael Damberg: April 5, 2036-January 28, 2037
Lena Hallengren: January 28, 2037-October 26, 2042

2038: 178 (90+50+21+17)
Romina Pourmokhtari: October 26, 2042-Present
2042: 183 (77+57+49)

HDI: 0.968 (+0.023)

PRIME MINISTERS OF FINLAND:
Sanna Marin: December 10, 2019-May 17, 2033

2023: 111 (49+28+18+16)
2027: 104 (54+30+20)
2031: 102 (53+27+22)
Ville Skinnari: May 17, 2033-September 12, 2034
Katri Kulmuni: September 12, 2034-April 27, 2039

2035: 104 (50+30+24)
Sinuhe Wallinheimo: April 27, 2039-Present
2039: 106 (61+35+10)

HDI: 0.964 (+0.026)

PRESIDENTS OF PALESTINE**:
Mahmoud Abbas: January 15, 2005-November 25, 2026

2005: def. Mustafa Barghouti, 67.4%-21.0%
Yasser Abed Rabbo: November 25, 2026-January 31, 2028
Mustafa Barghouti: January 31, 2028-January 31, 2032

2027: def. Yasser Abed Rabbo, 52.4%-46.2%
Mohammed Dahlan: January 31, 2032-January 31, 2040
2031: def. Ismail Haniyeh, 60.8%-35.4%
2035: def. Ismail Haniyeh, 78.4%-18.2%
Khouloud Daibes: January 31, 2040-Present
2039: def. Atef Abu Saif, 55.0%-42.3%

HDI: 0.839 (+0.115)

PRIME MINISTERS OF INDIA:
Narendra Modi: May 26, 2014-December 18, 2030

2014: 282 Seats
2019: 303 Seats
2024: 297 Seats
2029: 289 Seats
Yogi Adityanath: December 18, 2030-June 15, 2034
Shashi Tharoor: June 15, 2034-December 29, 2034

2034: 269 Seats
Sushmita Dev: December 29, 2034-March 14, 2040
2037: 270 Seats
Ashok Tanwar: March 14, 2040-June 3, 2042
Jyotiraditya Scindia: June 3, 2042-Present
2042: 277 Seats

Droupadi Murmu: 2022-2027
Jagdeep Dhankhar: 2027-2032
Narendra Modi: 2032-2034
Nirmala Sitharaman: 2034-2037
Rahul Gandhi: 2037-2042
Arjun Munda: 2042-Present


HDI: 0.727 (+0.094)

LEADERS OF MYANMAR:
Aung San Suu Kyi: April 6, 2016-February 1, 2021

2015: 255+135
2020: 258+138 (Voided before swearing-in)
Min Aung Hlaing: February 1, 2021-August 25, 2023
Aung San Suu Kyi (Party won 2023 Elections, appointment voided due to jail sentence)
2023: 239+107 (Voided before swearing-in)
Min Aung Hlaing: August 25, 2023-November 22, 2024
Aung San Suu Kyi (Party won 2024 Elections, appointment voided due to jail sentence)
2024: 245+105 (Voided before swearing-in)
Min Aung Hlaing: November 22, 2024-Present

HDI: 0.602 (+0.019)

PRESIDENTS OF SOUTH KOREA:
Yoon Suk-yeol: May 10, 2022-May 9, 2027

2022: def. Lee Jae-myung, 48.6%-47.8%
Hwang Kyo-ahn: May 10, 2027-May 9, 2032
2027: def.

*=Fake person
**=The West Bank, Gaza is still under Hamas
 
Last edited:
1946-1949: Anthony Eden (Conservative)
1946 ('Anti-Socialist Pact') def: Herbert Morrison (Labour), Oliver Baldwin (Democratic Labour), Ernest Brown (Liberal)
1949-1953: Anthony Eden (Union)
1951 (Majority) def: Philip Noel-Baker (Labour), Oliver Baldwin (Democratic Labour)
1953-1959: Patrick Buchanan-Hepburn (Union)
1955 (Majority) def. Philip Noel-Baker (Labour), Emrys Hughes (Democratic Labour)
1959-1965: Douglas Jay (Labour)
1959 (Majority) def: Patrick Buchanan-Hepburn (Union), Emrys Hughes (New Democratic)
1963 (Majority) def. Selwyn Lloyd (Union), Emrys Hughes (New Democratic)

1965-1968: Herbert Bowden (Labour Majority)
1969-1972: Peter Thorneycroft (Union)
1969 (Majority) def. Herbert Bowden (Labour), Allan Horsfall (New Democratic)
1973-: John Davies (Union)
1974 (Majority) def. John Freeman (Labour), Allan Horsfall (New Democratic), Ludovic Kennedy (Progressive)

As Britain has entered the 70s the emergence of a new fourth party has certainly changed the dynamic of Britain since the Aftermath of Morrisonism and the Second World War. Indeed the raise of Anthony Eden correlated with the beginnings of a ‘Anti-Socialist’ pact that began being discussed in the immediate aftermath of World War 2 as Morrison called his snap election that hit wildly off the mark and landed him a minority government.

Whilst discussions were delayed due to the untimely stroke of Archibald Sinclair, they would be merrily reignited and would under the tenure of Brown and Eden be used to devastating effect in the 1946 election. Not long afterwards the pact would become the basis of the new Union party, a ‘wholly Progressive Conservative outlet to battle Socialist tyranny’ the book on the unification trumpeted.

Meanwhile Labour, cast into the wilderness found itself baffled upon where to go. Philip Noel-Baker was chosen as being one of the few cabinet ministers left who was tainted with the brush of Morrison’s petty autocratic leadership. Baker would rapidly try and shift the party towards a ‘European’ style of Social Democratic Party, though hotly contested by the Unions, by that point politically neutered and muzzled by Morrison’s policies.

The Fifties would see the consolidation of the existence of the Democratic Labour Party, soon to be renamed the New Democratic Party in an attempt to divorce the party from any remaining connection to the Labour Party. The party had a difficult start as Oliver Baldwin resigned for health reasons and several MPs would rejoin the Labour Party, swayed by Noel-Baker’s vision.

Emrys Hughes would step into the fold, his vision of a sort of Federalist, Pacifistic, Democratic Socialism would endear the party to those who weren’t swayed by Labour Social Democratic Centralisation. The New Democrats would in time become the party of both the inner cities, the nationalistic industrial areas of Scotland and Wales and of the University Constituencies.

The dawn of the Sixties would see a renewed interested in Labour, Douglas Jay was one of the many technocrats who would infest Labour during the Morrison years and the immediate aftermath. Jay would oust the increasingly out of touch Union Government under Bunchnan-Hepburn on a message of Technocratic Social Democracy.

As Union became the party of the City of London as many said, then Labour became the party of Whitehall as it became the main party of technocratic governance. The Sixties initially started off as the good times, and Jay would easily defeat Selwyn Lloyd in 63’ but by 65’ the where were starting to fall off. A push for Britain to integrate more with European Markets over the traditional Commonwealth ones would anger and frustrate Jay who decided to resign instead of overseeing the push for further integration.

Herbert Bowden, a seemingly safe pair of hands would oversee the decline of the Corporatist model his predecessor had seen as the economy became incredibly inflated and wildcat strikes by increasing militant Trade Unionists deflated the promises of Labour. Meanwhile the far more youthful Alan Horsfall of the New Democrats found himself the centre of the New Left movements that popped up across the country that railed against the perceived Conservative nature of Labour.

1969 would see radical change as Peter Thorneycroft oversaw the Liberalisation of the British Economy, a harsher series of austerity measures, easing up on money trading, industries were let go and actively joining the European Economic Community. Whilst this would see Britain’s economy to deflate by 1973, the Union party was increasingly unpopular. Thorneycroft stepped down and his successor John Davies would continue the business friendly policies but with a softer edge and balancing it out with support for the welfare state.

As the New Democrats gained votes from Labour, the Union party would find it’s more Left Wing faction seeing a breakage as Ludovic Kennedy formed the Progressive party, a party of ‘Progressive Liberal’ ideas who found itself appealing to those who thought the Union party was becoming increasingly out of touch from it’s original aims, even if Kennedy was a passionate Social Liberal who had always been ill at ease with the Union and Labour dominance.

As the Seventies marched on, the previous almost two party system of Britain found itself being stressed like it had never seen before…
 
PRESIDENTS OF RUSSIA:
Vladimir Putin (UR): May 7, 2012-December 31, 2042

2012: def. Gennady Zyuganov, 64.4%-17.4%
2018: def. Pavel Grudinin, 77.5%-11.9%
2024: def. Alexei Navalny, 62.0%-37.2%
2026 Referendum: 74.5% YES-25.5% NO (Would expand the powers of the President to deal with internal unrest)
2030: def. UNOPPOSED
2036: def. UNOPPOSED
2042: def. UNOPPOSED
Dmitry Patrushev (UR): December 31, 2042-Present

hellworld

other than that I wonder what the hell is going on in France
 
Twenty Years Later (As of December 31, 2042)

PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES:
46. Joe Biden/Kamala Harris (D): January 20, 2021-January 20, 2025 'Off The Unbeaten Path'

2020: def Donald Trump/Mike Pence (R), 306-232 EV/51.3%-46.9% PV
47. Ron DeSantis/Kristi Noem (R): January 20, 2025-January 20, 2029 'The DeStabilizer'
2024: def Kamala Harris/Gary Peters (D), 278-260 EV/47.9%-49.5% PV
48. Jared Polis/Stacey Abrams (D): January 20, 2029-January 20, 2037 'Greatness Unleashed'
2028: def Ron DeSantis/Kristi Noem (R): 326-212 EV/52.0%-46.3% PV
2032: def Josh Hawley/Tulsi Gabbard (R): 524-14 EV/59.7%-36.2% PV

PRESIDENTS OF FRANCE:
Marion Marechal (RN): June 8, 2027-May 16, 2037
'Female And Fascist Justin Trudeau'
2027: def. Yael Braun-Pivet, 50.1%-49.9%
2032: def. Elisabeth Borne, 51.9%-48.1%
Jean-Hugues Ratenon (NU): May 16, 2037-May 20, 2042 'Ratenon, Destroyer Of Leftism'
2037: def. Eric Zemmour, 50.3%-49.7%
Alexandre Goldstein-Levy (RN): May 20, 2042-Present* 'Fascist And Cat Loving Justin Trudeau'
2042: def. Ska Keller, 54.9%-45.1%

PRESIDENTS OF RUSSIA:
Vladimir Putin (UR): May 7, 2012-December 31, 2042

2012: def. Gennady Zyuganov, 64.4%-17.4%
2018: def. Pavel Grudinin, 77.5%-11.9%
2024: def. Alexei Navalny, 62.0%-37.2%
2026 Referendum: 74.5% YES-25.5% NO (Would expand the powers of the President to deal with internal unrest)
2030: def. UNOPPOSED
2036: def. UNOPPOSED
2042: def. UNOPPOSED
Dmitry Patrushev (UR): December 31, 2042-Present

PRIME MINISTERS OF ISRAEL:

Benjamin Netanyahu: October 18, 2023-June 30, 2024
2023 (Sep): 61 (34+12+9+6)

PRESIDENTS OF AUSTRALIA:
Scott Morrison (C): January 1, 2034-January 1, 2039

2033: def. Anthony Albanese, 53.1%-46.9%
This has a 80% chance of happening and I hate it
 
Untenable

Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom since September 2022

2022-2022: Foreign Secretary Liz Truss | South West Norfolk (Conservative majority)
Sep. 2022 Conservative leadership election (57.4%) def. Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak | Richmond, Yorks. (42.6%)
09/2022: Death of HM Elizabeth II at Balmoral Castle, aged 96.
09/2022—10/2022: The publication of HM Government's mini budget results in significant market turmoil, the collapse of Conservative party poll numbers, the dismissal of Kwasi Kwarteng as Chancellor of the Exchequer, the appointment of Jeremy Hunt as his replacement, "the biggest U-turn in British economic history" as Hunt abandons virtually all of the mini budget, and the ousting of the prime minister.
2022-2022: Prime Minister Liz Truss | South West Norfolk [de jure]; Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt | South West Surrey [de facto] (Conservative majority)
2022-2023: Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson | Uxbridge and South Ruislip [2022]; then none (Conservative majority)
Oct. 2022 Conservative leadership election (56.2%) def. Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak | Richmond, Yorks. (43.8%)
01/2023: The Committee of Privileges suspends the prime minister from the House of Commons after finding that he misled MPs in relation to Partygate. A recall petition quickly succeeds, and the seat of Uxbridge and South Ruislip is vacated ahead of a by-election that Johnson chooses not to contest. Instead, Culture Secretary Nadine Dorries is elevated to the House of Lords, opening up a by-election in a safer seat.
03/2023: Labour wins a hard-fought by-election in Mid Bedfordshire, preventing the prime minister from returning to the House of Commons. The victory sparks a constitutional crisis and severe political turmoil in the government and Conservative party, culminating in ministerial resignations, moves to oust the prime minister, and the attempted calling of a snap general election for May 2023 - which the King declines, on the advice of Graham Brady. In the face of a considerable polling deficit and amidst continual political crisis (reports emerge that over a third of the party have written to Brady to demand Johnson's resignation - again), the government effectively ceases to function as a political entity. Brady pays the third visit to a sitting prime minister within a year to tell them that the game is up. Johnson refuses to go, and the 1922 Committee votes to change the rules to permit a extraordinary vote of confidence.
2023 Conservative leadership vote of confidence: No Confidence (56.0%) def. Confidence (41.0%), abstentions (3%)
2023-20__: Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt | South West Surrey (Conservative majority [de jure]; Caretaker Government [de facto])
2023 Conservative leadership election: Unopposed
04/2023: Calls for a general election are near-insurmountable as the Johnson wing descends into outright parliamentary revolt. The party agrees it needs to be a full 2003-style coronation, vetoing Sunak, and Mordaunt doesn't want anything to do with the mess. Wallace declines to run and, finally, Jeremy Hunt agrees to stand for the leadership "in the national interest and for the good of the party." The King, bewildered by it all, quietly implies to the new prime minister that perhaps the public and the opposition have a point. Hunt convenes the cabinet and, in the face of extinction, they agree to weather the storm. There will be no quick execution. The 2022-2023 United Kingdom political crisis drags on, pulling the Conservative party down with it, as Labour tops 60 percent in the polls for the first time since the 1990s.
 
Last edited:
Based on this poll found by True Grit who came up with the original idea and list in his test thread. Here's my version of the same idea.

Lester B. Pearson 1963-1970 (Liberal)
1963 Def: OTL
1965 Def: OTL
1967 Def: Tommy Douglas (NDP) John Diefenbaker (Progressive Conservative) R.N Thompson (Social Credit) Réal Caouette (Ralliement Crediste)

Paul Hellyer 1970-1974 (Liberal)
1971 Def: Tommy Douglas (NDP) Dufferin Robin (Progressive Conservative) Réal Caouette (Social Credit)
1973 Def: John Paul Harney (NDP) Paul Gargladi (Social Credit) Flora MacDonald (Progressive Conservative)

Claude Wagner 1974-1978 (Liberal)
1975 Def: John Paul Harney (NDP) Paul Gargladi (Social Credit) Jack Horner (Progressive Conservative)
John Paul Harney 1978-1982 (NDP)
1978 Def: Claude Wagner (Liberal) Paul Gargladi (Social Conservative)
Francis Fox 1982-1990 (Liberal)
1982 Def: John Paul Harney (NDP) Roch La Salle (Social Conservative)
1986 Def: Edward Schreyer (NDP) Roch La Salle (Social Conservative)
1989 Def: Edward Schreyer (NDP) Preston Manning (Social Conservative)

Bill Vander Zalm 1990-1993 (Liberal)
Allan Blakeney 1993- (NDP)
1993 Def: Preston Manning (Social Conservative) Bill Vander Zalm (Liberal) Frank Stronach (Forward Canada)

Snip

America in this post from my test thread

37. Eugene McCarthy 1969-1971 (Democratic)
(With John Connally) Def: Ronald Reagan/Edward Brooke (Republican) George Wallace/John Bell Williams (American)
38. John Connally 1971-1973 (Democratic/Independent)
39. Richard B. Ogilive 1973-1981 (Republican)
(With Paul Laxalt) Def: Robert Kennedy/Henry Jackson (Democratic) George Wallace/James Henderson (American) John Connally/David Kennedy (Independent)
(With Paul Laxalt) Def: Jock Yablonski/Wendell Anderson (Democratic) Albert Parsons/

40. Gary Hart 1981-1989 (Democratic)
(With William Spong) Def: Paul Laxalt/George Lodge
(With William Spong) Def: Earl Butz/Anne Gorsuch Zolton Ferency/Bernie Sanders (Freak Power!)

41. Tonie Nathan 1989-1993 (Republican)
(With Bob Dornan) Def: Lester Thurow/Bob Graham Hunter S. Thompson/Niilo Koponen (Freak Power!)
42. Booth Gardner 1993- (Democratic)
(With Lawton Chiles) Def: Tonie Nathan/Bob Dornan (Republican) Niilo Koponen/Paul Wellstone (Freak Power!)
 
The Aftermath
Bill Clinton/Al Gore 1993-2001

1992: Def. George HW Bush/Dan Quayle, Ross Perot/James Stockdale
1996: Def. Bob Dole/Jack Kemp, Ross Perot/Pat Choate
Clinton went into the last two years of his term expecting to be remembered for a small number of things. His success in triangulating on welfare and crime, the economic boom and averting genocide in the Balkans, he was sure, would outweigh the infidelity and failed impeachment that followed in 1998. As it turned out, he was right about people forgetting about Lewinsky, but he was wrong about the reasons. In late 1999, California Governor Jane Harman revealed that humanity had, for decades, been the target of a race of alien infiltrators known as the Yeerks. Through a front organization known as The Sharing, they had taken numerous hosts, especially within California. Initial dismissal of this warning was quickly proven wrong when, in rapid succession, a team of teenagers whom had been tasked with fighting the Yeerks revealed themselves and their ability to morph into animals, two alien races previously subjected to the Yeerks revealed their existence, the Yeerks themselves launched open warfare in Southern California and the Yeerks’ rivals the Andalites made contact with Earth. The war with the Yeerks was, from a governmental perspective, over quite quickly. Clinton tasked General Sam Doubleday with heading US military forces in the war against the Yeerks which officially ended in 2000, with the surrender of the Yeerk leader Esplin 9466. Clinton proclaimed victory over the invaders in March of 2000. In the remaining months of his term, Clinton would formally sign the Alien Refuge Act, creating a reservation for the Hork-Bajir in Yellowstone National Park, and established diplomatic relations with the Andalites. The long-term consequences of the war with the Yeerks and first contact with the Andalites would not be something that Clinton would preside over, however.

Al Gore/Jane Harman 2001-2005
2000: Def. John McCain/Tommy Thompson, Pat Buchanan/Dick Lamm
The war with the Yeerks and its relative brevity in the eyes of the public would most readily benefit the Democratic Party and Vice President Gore, aided by picking Governor Harman as his running mate, would win by a comfortable margin over McCain and Buchanan. Gore would be the President to most directly handle the aftermath of the war. Negotiations between the American government and the Andalites allowed the US to gain access to Andalite morphing technology which was put to use in counterterrorism efforts. Gore additionally was able to make trade deals with the Andalites to push the US energy system to renewables over fossil fuels, a major initiative in combatting climate change. In exchange, Gore facilitated tourism for Andalites to Earth and made it easier for US-based companies to operate on the Andalite homeworld. The economic boom enjoyed under Clinton thus continued. In September 2001, Gore’s CIA announced they had successfully averted an attempted terrorist attack by Al-Qaeda on the US, with the mastermind being Osama Bin Laden, a terrorist based in Afghanistan. The Taliban government of Afghanistan, intimidated by the growing Andalite military supplies in American hands, would comply with US orders to hand over Bin Laden into American custody. Gore did have to contend with a rise in far-right domestic terrorism, however, as groups like the Human Liberation Front and the Kingdom Builders staged a number of attacks aimed at the supposed ‘surrender’ of the US to Andalites, as well as classic anti-government, racist and anti-Semitic causes. Gore would in 2003 sign into law a bill called the Homeland Security Act, which beefed up the surveillance capabilities of the NSA to deter these groups, which drew criticism from civil liberties groups. Gore, while successful in passing this, setting up new offices to manage relations with the Andalites and Hork-Bajir, combat climate change and maintain a government surplus until 2004, was in 2004 viewed as vulnerable. Rumors of a second Yeerk invasion being imminent pervaded, despite both American and Andalite sources doubting such a thing. On the Republican side, meanwhile, this proved a key motivator and ultimately enabled the controversial outcome of 2004’s election.

Rudy Giuliani/Rick Santorum 2005-2009
2004: Def. Al Gore/Jane Harman
Giuliani had proven the first and most ready to adapt to the changing post-2000 political landscape, where the Andalites, Yeerk and Hork-Bajir were all key issues alongside the mainstays of national security, fiscal policy and social policy. Giuliani’s own more liberal streak on abortion and LGBT rights was belied by an aggressive xenophobia aimed both at other countries and other species. Giuliani argued the Andalites were harming American interests by withholding how to produce certain technologies from the US, such as the Escafil device that enabled them and what humans were permitted access to it to morph into different forms. Giuliani also seized upon the rumors of a second Yeerk invasion, accusing the Gore administration of covering up a ‘second wave’ of Yeerks. Giuliani also vowed to repeal the Alien Refuge Act, which would dissolve the Hork-Bajir reservation and strip the species of US citizenship. Giuliani did not win the popular vote, but thanks to a narrow victory in Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania was able to triumph in the electoral college. Giuliani, on taking office, pursued many of these goals. He threatened to bar Andalite tourism to the US unless the technology needed to traverse Z-Space and build an Escafil device was given to the US government. The Andalite refusal led to Giuliani issuing an executive order to bar this tourism, but the measure was struck down by the Supreme Court. While he had a GOP House and Senate, they balked from pursuing this policy legislatively, with Speaker Dennis Hastert and Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist urging a focus on traditional conservative priorities such as tax cuts, immigration restrictions and pursuing tough on crime policies. Giuliani did manage to secure a significant tax cut package, as well as a bipartisan education reform push. The repeal of the Alien Refuge Act was, however, a messy affair. The House passed it on a party-line vote, but in the Senate a number of leading Republicans, including Lincoln Chafee and Arlen Specter, opposed it. Giuliani attempted to ax the filibuster for this legislation, but the effort to do so failed when John McCain voted against it, in a surprise given McCain had supported repealing the Alien Refuge Act in his 2000 campaign. Giuliani, after this, was largely considered a lame duck as Democrats swept into Congress in the 2006 elections and especially when the economy tanked in 2008. Giuliani did pass a stimulus package with strong Democrat support, but it wasn’t enough to save his reputation or his presidency.

Jane Harman/John Edwards 2009-2013
Jane Harman/Jim Webb 2013-2017

2008: Def. Rudy Giuliani/Rick Santorum, Jesse Ventura/Buddy Roemer
2012: Def. Tim Pawlenty/Bill Haslam
Harman was the perfect foil to Giuliani, being widely respected across the country as the first political leader to take notice of the Yeerk invasion. Harman had spent her time as Vice President and from 2005 to 2009 seeking to maintain positive human-alien relations and had an approval rating of 75% before announcing her campaign for the White House. Polarization during the presidential race dipped that approval, but Harman still won in a landslide, winning over 400 electoral votes and coming to Washington with over 60 seats in the Senate. Harman thus had a broad mandate to pursue her agenda. Harman, despite a reputation focusing heavily on alien relations, surprisingly ended up more focused on terrestrial affairs. She overhauled American healthcare with the America Cares act, commonly referred to as AmeriCare, which expanded Medicare coverage and created a public option for getting health insurance through the US government. She additionally increased the minimum wage and achieved Gore’s old dream of a tax on carbon emissions. Harman also was able to reform the American immigration system to provide easier access to US citizenship. She did face some obstacles, however. Vice President Edwards’ affair would come out in 2011, forcing Harman to replace him on the ticket with Jim Webb. Harman also would have to confront an increasingly aggressive Russia, as the country under President Vladimir Putin invaded the nation of Georgia in 2009 and intervened on the ‘invitation’ of the Ukrainian and Belarusian governments during a period of major unrest in 2012. Harman responded with coordinated sanctions alongside key members of the European Union. NATO would also intervene in Iraq in 2010 following the death of Saddam Hussein as the country fell into a civil war, setting up a provisional government in Baghdad. The conflict in Iraq proved a controversial quagmire that would consume much of Harman’s term. Harman also presided over the Supreme Court legalizing same-sex marriage nationwide, though that was largely outside of her own control. Harman did begin negotiations with the Andalites to acquire the Escafil cube for use in transgender healthcare, but these negotiations did not get very far before the 2016 elections.

Gary Johnson/Nikki Haley 2017-2025
2016: Def. Evan Bayh/Ed Markey, Mike Huckabee/Tom Tancredo
2020: Def. Cory Booker/Jay Inslee, Steve King/Jim DeMint
Johnson’s upset victory in the 2016 election was a byproduct of a conscious effort to move away from the unpopular Giuliani as well as a number of unpopular social-issue stances the GOP was known for. Johnson won largely off of dissatisfaction with the tax and regulatory policies of Harman, as well as outflanking Democrat nominee Evan Bayh on several issues such as marijuana legalization, which endeared him to younger voters compared to older Republicans. Johnson came into the White House with a Democratic-majority Senate and a Republican House, somewhat limiting his agenda priorities. Johnson was able to negotiate a significant reduction in the personal income tax with revenue being made up for by an increase in the carbon tax, which helped push the US electric grid to hit 60% renewable by the time he left office. Johnson also worked with Democrats to audit the Pentagon budget, which he accompanied with a gradual withdrawal from Iraq. Johnson had the fortune to preside over a broad economic boom and the first manned landing on Mars, which helped keep him in office in 2020 despite facing a candidate generally viewed as more charismatic. Johnson’s favorable views towards LGBT rights, the Hork-Bajir and immigrants put him in conflict with a large swath of the Republican base. It was during Johnson’s term that the Humanity First Party was officially founded in the aftermath of Huckabee’s modestly successful independent bid. The Humanity First Party served as a hub of human supremacist, homophobic and racist sentiment, though its political candidates sought to put a more respectable veneer on it. Steve King’s inability to do so in 2020 is widely cited as a reason Johnson managed to hold on despite the vote-splitting. Johnson would face calls to intervene in the Syrian Civil War after Syrian President Maher al-Assad used chemical weapons in the conflict in 2022. Johnson’s reluctance to do so was widely criticized and a popular line of attack in 2024 denounced the Johnson administration for abandoning Syria. While Johnson himself remained personally popular, there was broader support for this kind of humanitarian intervention, which was supported by the Democrat in that election.

Cassandra Chambers/Martin O’Malley 2025-
2024: Def. Nikki Haley/Richard Tisei, Clay Higgins/Michael Flynn
Chambers had, in her youth, been one of the 6 so-called ‘Animorphs’ whom had been the first human group to fight the Yeerks. In the aftermath of the Yeerk War, Chambers had become a presidential advisor to Gore at the young age of 18 and had continued working for the US government until she was fired by Giuliani. Chambers had run for House of Representatives in 2006, winning 5 times and subsequently being elected as California’s junior Senator in 2016. Chambers came into office vowing to implement truly universal healthcare, convince the UN to launch a peacekeeping mission to Syria, establish a lunar colony and get the US to operating on 90% renewable energy by 2030. Chambers, however, has faced a great deal of hostility from the far-right, with many accusing her of being an alien puppet or even under direct Yeerk control to do the Andalites’ bidding (the incoherence of the theory that the Yeerks and Andalites are aligned has been pointed out, but rarely seems to make a dent in conspiracy theories). Chambers has also faced controversy for some of her Cabinet selections–namely the decision to nominate the Hork-Bajir Toby Hamee as Secretary of the Interior has been met with skepticism from many. Only time will tell how triumphant or disastrous her actual term in office will be.
 
"The Revenge of the Grey Suits" or the Central Government under Special Measures

List of Prime Ministers

2010 - 2016: David Cameron (Conservative-Liberal Democrat Coalition, Conservative)
2010: Gordon Brown (Labour), Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat), Alex Salmond (SNP).
2015: Ed Miliband (Labour), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat).

2016 - 2019: Theresa May (Conservative)
2017: Jeremy Corbyn (Labour), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Tim Farron (Liberal Democrat).
2019 - 2022: Boris Johnson (Conservative)
2019: Jeremy Corbyn (Labour), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Jo Swinson (Liberal Democrat).
2022 - 2022: Liz Truss (Conservative)
2022 - 2023: Boris Johnson (Conservative)
2023 - 2025: Lord Hague (Conservative)

2025 -: Sir Keir Starmer (Labour)
2025: Sir Ed Davey (Liberal Democrat), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Lord Hague (Conservative), Boris Johnson (GB Party).
2030: Kemi Badenoch (Conservative), Joanna Cherry (SNP), Daisy Cooper (Liberal Democrat), Suella Braverman (GB Party).


Cabinet of Lord Hague

Prime Minister: Lord Hague
Chancellor of the Exchequer and Leader of the House of Commons: Jeremy Hunt
Foreign Secretary: Rishi Sunak
Home Secretary: Penny Mordaunt
Secretary of State for Defence: Ben Wallace
Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice: Lucy Frazer
Secretary of State for International Trade: Kemi Badenoch
Secretary of State for Business, Energy, and Industrial Strategy: Matt Hancock
Secretary of State for Levelling Up, Housing, and Communities: Sajid Javid
Secretary of State for Transport: Anne-Marie Trevelyan
Secretary of State for Education: Kit Malthouse
Secretary of State for Health and Social Care: Baroness Harding
Secretary of State for Work and Pensions: Chloe Smith
Secretary of State for the Environment, Food, and Rural Affairs: Harriet Baldwin
Secretary of State for Culture, Media, and Sport: Baroness Brady
Secretary of State for Northern Ireland: Tom Tugendhat
Secretary of State for Scotland: Alistair Jack
Secretary of State for Wales: Sir Robert Buckland
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster: Lord Cameron
Chief Secretary to the Treasury: Claire Coutinho
Chief Whip: Mark Harper
Party Chairman: Grant Shapps
 
Most Consequential Leaders of the 2030s [As ranked by the TIME readers in 2046]

1. Konstantin Malofeev/"Konstantin I" (Second Russian Empire - House Malofeev - 2031-20xx)
2.
Bo Xilai (People's Republic of China | Chinese Communist Party/Reformists - 2033-2043)
3. Park Cannon (United States | Democratic Party | 2037-2045)
4. Annalena Baerbock (Federal Republic of Germany - Greens/Alliance 90' - 2030-2042)
5. Ehsan Khandozi (Islamic Republic of Iran - Moderation and Development - 2030-2040)
6. Maya Fernandez Allende (Chile - Socialist Party of Chile - 2030-2040)
7. Tamatha Paul (New Zealand and Aotearoa - NZ/A Greens - 2031-2039)
8. Johnson Nduya Muthama (Republic of Kenya - Hustlers Ideal Movement - 2032-2037)
9. Naaja Nathanielsen (Greenlandic People's Federation - Inuit Ataqatigiit - 2026-2036)
10. Besê Hozat (Autonomous Republic of Kurdistan - Kurdistan Worker's Party - 2029-2040)
 
Screenshot 2022-10-22 at 7.04.46 PM.png
Dread it, run from it, Iron Starmer still arrives

Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom:

2019-2022: Frm. Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson (Conservative | Uxbridge and South Ruislip)
'19 (Majority): def. Jeremy Corbyn (Labour | Islington North), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP | Did not stand), Jo Swinson (Liberal Democrats | East Dunbartonshire, defeated)
2022-2022: Frm. Foreign Secretary Liz Truss (Conservative | South West Norfolk)
July-September '22 leadership contest: def. Rishi Sunak (Richmond, Yorks)
2022-2023: Frm. Prime Minister Boris Johnson (Conservative | Uxbridge and South Ruislip [recalled]; then none)
October '22 leadership contest: def. Rishi Sunak (Richmond, Yorks), Penny Mordaunt (Portsmouth North), Suella Braverman (Fareham)
November '22: Committee of Privileges suspends Johnson from House of Commons following the finding that he misled MPs in relation to Partygate.
December '22: Recall petition against Johnson succeeds; Johnson does not contest by-election, instead contesting Mid Bedfordshire following resignation of Nadine Dorries
February '23 by-elections: Uxbridge and South Ruislip (Ali Milani wins; LAB GAIN); Mid Bedfordshire (Rhiannon Meades wins; LAB GAIN)
'23 Vote of No Confidence: 53.4% No Confidence
2022-2024: Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt (Conservative | South West Surrey, leading Caretaker Government [de facto])
'23 leadership election: Unopposed
'24 Vote of No Confidence: 331 MPs
2024-2038: Leader of the Opposition Sir Keir Starmer (Labour | Kentish Town and Bloomsbury, then Highgate and Bloomsbury)
'24 (Majority): def. Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats | Kingston and Surbiton), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP | Did not stand), Jeremy Hunt (Conservative | Farnham and Bordon, defeated), Carla Denyer & Adrian Ramsey (Green | Ran in Bristol Central (won) & Did not stand), Suella Braverman (Back Britain | Fareham)
'25 Scottish independence referendum: 52.4% No
'28 (Majority): def. Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats | Kingston and Surbiton), Carla Denyer (Green | Bristol Central), Humza Yousaf (SNP | Did not stand), Kemi Badenoch (Conservative | Saffron Walden), Suella Braverman (Back Britain | Fareham, defeated)
'30 Commons reform referendum: 54.5% Yes
'31 leadership challenge: def. Richard Burgon (Leeds East)
'32 (Majority): def. Ed Gemmell (Green | Chesham and Amersham), Tom Tugendhat & Daisy Cooper (Conservative-LibDem coupon | Tonbridge and Malling & St Albans), Humza Yousaf (SNP | Did not stand), Richard Burgon (PBP | Leeds East, defeated)
'36 (Majority): def. Alicia Kearns (Tory | Rutland and Harborough), Amelia Womack (Green | Caerphilly), Mhairi Black (SNP | Did not stand), Zarah Sultana (PBP | Coventry and Earlsdon)

2038-20__: Home Secretary Bridget Phillipson (Labour | Houghton and Ryhope)

2040 United Kingdom general election polling (seat count)
Labour (CC0033) — 331 geographical, 76 list
Tory (3366CC) — 208 geographical, 70 list
Green (00A885) — 61 geographical, 36 list
SNP (F7DA64) — 29 geographical, 5 list
PBP (9365B8) — 14 geographical, 12 list

Others (A38F84) — 7 geographical, 1 list

Likely outcome: Labour minority with Green / PBP confidence and supply [possible coalition]

***​
With credit to @iupius.
 
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