This took more time to do than was strictly necessary.
The Man With The Glass Heart
1933-1941: Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic)
1932 PE (with John Nance Garner) def. Herbert Hoover (Republican)
1932 SE (Majority) def. Joseph Watson (Republican), Henrik Shipstead (Farmer-Labor)
1932 HE (Majority) def. Bertrand Snell (Republican), Paul John Kvale (Farmer-Labor)
1934 SE (Majority) def. Charles McNary (Republican), Henrik Shipstead (Farmer-Labor), Robert M. LaFollette, Jr. (Progressive)
1934 HE (Majority) def. Bertrand Snell (Republican), Merlin Hull (Progressive), Paul John Kvale (Farmer-Labor)
1936 PE (with John Nance Garner) def. Alf Landon (Republican)
1936 SE (Majority) def. Charles McNary (Republican), Henrik Shipstead (Farmer-Labor), Robert M. LaFollette, Jr. (Progressive)
1936 HE (Majority) def. Bertrand Snell (Republican), Merlin Hull (Progressive), Paul John Kvale (Farmer-Labor)
1938 SE (Majority) def. Charles McNary (Republican), Henrik Shipstead (Farmer-Labor), Robert M. LaFollette, Jr. (Progressive)
1938 HE (Majority) def. Bertrand Snell (Republican), Merlin Hull (Progressive), Paul John Kvale (Farmer-Labor), Vito Marcantonio (American Labor)
1941-1941: Wendell Willkie (Republican)
1940 PE (with Dewey Short) def. James Farley (Democratic)
1940 SE (Minority) def. Alben Barkley (Democratic), Robert M. LaFollette, Jr. (Progressive)
1940 HE (Minority) def. Sam Rayburn (Democratic), Merlin Hull (Progressive), Vito Marcantonio (American Labor), Rich T. Buckler (Farmer-Labor)
1941-1945: Dewey Short (Republican & America First)
1942 SE (Alliance with America First) def. Alben Barkley (Democratic), Robert M. LaFollette, Jr. (Progressive)
1942 HE (Alliance with America First) def. Sam Rayburn (Democratic), Merlin Hull (Progressive), Harold Hagen (Farmer-Labor), Vito Marcantonio (American Labor)
1945-1957: Charles Lindbergh (America First)
1944 PE (with Earl Warren) def. Harry F. Byrd (Democratic), Henry A. Wallace (Progressive & American Labor)
1944 SE (Alliance with Republicans) def. Alben Barkley (Democratic), Robert M. LaFollette, Jr. (Progressive)
1944 HE (Alliance with Republicans) def. Sam Rayburn (Democratic), Vito Marcantonio (American Labor), Merlin Hull (Progressive)
1946 SE (Alliance with Republicans) def. Alben Barkley (Democratic)
1946 HE (Alliance with Republicans) def. Sam Rayburn (Democratic)
1948 PE (with Gerald P. Nye) def. James F. Byrnes (Democratic), Earl Warren (Independent Republican)
1948 SE (Alliance with Loyalist Republicans) def. Alben Barkley (Democratic), Leverett Saltonstall (Independent Republican)
1948 HE (Alliance with Loyalist Republicans) def. Sam Rayburn (Democratic), Margaret Chase Smith (Independent Republican)
1950 SE (Sole Legal Party) def. scattered Independents
1950 HE (Sole Legal Party) def. scattered Independents
1952 PE (with Gerald P. Nye) def. Douglas MacArthur (Independent)
1952 SE (Sole Legal Party) def. scattered Independents
1952 HE (Sole Legal Party) def. scattered Independents
While Germany and Japan glower at one another across the Great Eurasian Faultline that stretches from the Arctic to the Indian Ocean, America remains blissful in her own continents, having steadily succumbed to fascism over the last many years.
Willkie's untimely death opened the path for the reactionaries to seize control of the levers of government and slowly but surely restrict politics to their own narrow definition of what was 'True Americanism'. The last stand for democracy was in 1944, as Henry Wallace launched his quixotic campaign for the Presidency that even captured fistfuls of seats down the ballot. But Lindbergh soon implemented rules that banned 'socialism', wiping the Progressives and Labor off the map and steadily narrowing the field of vision for the Democrats.
By the time Earl Warren broke with America First and led his own campaign, it was all too late. The fascists had triumphed overseas and their message seemed horribly outdated. The GOP 'Loyalists' were doomed to be consumed by the now dominant America First, and soon all other political parties were banned.
Lindbergh seems immovable, and with the stories of the 'Lazarus Project' emerging, perhaps his permanence in the highest office will be all too real for generations of Americans now and forever.