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Lists of Heads of Government and Heads of State

A Realignment of the Left:
1992-1996: Neil Kinnock (Labour)

1992 (Coalition with Liberal Democrats) def: John Major (Conservative), Paddy Ashdown (Liberal Democrats)
1994 AV Referendum: Yes 46%, No 54%

1996-1999: Michael Heseltine (Conservative)
1996 (Majority) def: Neil Kinnock (Labour), Paddy Ashdown (Liberal Democrats), Jimmy Goldsmith (Referendum)
1999-2001: Michael Howard (Conservative)
2001-2009: Peter Hain (Labour)

2001 (Coalition with Liberal Democrats) def: Michael Howard (Conservative), Charles Kennedy (Liberal Democrats)
2002 MMP Referendum: Yes 57%, No 43%
2005 (‘Progressive Alliance’) def: Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative), Charles Kennedy (Liberal Democrats), Roger Knapman (UKIP), Caroline Lucas (Greens), Robert Kilroy-Silk (Veritas)

2009-2012: George Osborne (Conservative)
2009 (Coalition with Democrats) def: Peter Hain (Progressive Alliance-Labour, Liberal Democrats, Greens), Roger Knapman (UKIP), Tony Blair (Democrats), Robert Kilroy-Silk (People's), Alex Salmond (SNP)
2012-2016: Cathy Jamieson (Labour)
2012 (‘Progressive Alliance’) def: George Osborne (Conservative), Roger Knapman (UKIP), Tony Blair (Democrats), Robert Kilroy-Silk (People's), Alex Salmond (SNP), Lynne Jones (Red & Greens), George Galloway (Workers)
2015 Federal Devolution Referendum:
Yes 51%, No 49%
2016-2020: Stephen Crabb (Conservative)
2016 (Coalition with Democrats) def: Cathy Jamieson (Progressive Alliance), Diane James (UKIP), Tony Blair (Democrats), Nigel Farage (People's), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Lynne Jones-Natalie Bennett (Red & Greens), George Galloway (Workers)
2020-: John Leech (Progressive Alliance)
2020 (Majority) def: Stephen Crabb (Conservative), Chukka Umunna (Democrats), Nigel Farage (People's), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Rachel Maskell-Benali Hamdache (Red & Greens), Jared O'Mara (Workers)

After rewatching the 1992 General Election Coverage I conceived this horrifying scenario of every piece of talk about the Centre-Left joining forces to combat the Conservatives into a reality.
 
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List of Kings of Albion
1807-1810: James I (House of MacDonald) [1]
1810-1813: Lucian I (House of Bonaparte) [2]
1813: Charles Lucian I (House of Bonaparte)
1813-1814: Napoleon I (House of Bonaparte)
1814-1848: Edmund VII (House of Mortimer) [3]
1848-1850: Roger III (House of Mortimer) [4]


[1] - It is commonly said that, for all the evil he did, Napoleon Bonaparte contributed magnificently to the development of Europe to the extent that he unified the fractious principalities of Germany and Britain. In terms of the latter, it would perhaps have been possible for the Kingdom of England to have remained relatively hegemonic until the whole edifice was split asunder by the Tripartite Indenture of 1405 - the founding document of a military effort to overthrow the last accursed usurper of that ailing Kingdom. Divided into three parts, the islands of the Atlantic soon found themselves home to a panoply of polities - the most numerous of which were located in the high country of Wales, as a result of that nation's partible inheritance laws; but the over-mighty and independent-minded vassals of the up-jumped aristocrats in command of North- and Southumbria should not be ignored.

The whole of Europe, therefore, breathed a sigh of relief when Napoleon I sent a fleet bearing his Grand Army of the North against the Rose Garden Coalition and destroyed their armies at the world-renowned battles of Crawley, Chessington, Derby and Waterloo (named in jest as a result of the Grand Duke of York's ill-timed visit to the lavatory). The Emperor reorganised the British statelets into the Transmancaline Confederation (renamed as the British Confederation within weeks) with himself at the head, while the bulk of the land was accorded to the Kingdom of Albion. To keep order on the ground, Napoleon appointed as King one of his Marshals, Jacques MacDonald, who came from a Scottish family: his father had been exiled for his participation in the last of the major revolts in favour of the House of Balliol. MacDonald had been out of favour at the start of the invasion, but his turning of the cavalry of the Duke of Warwick at Kettering ultimately won him a throne.

'James I of Albion' had only a brief period of pre-eminence, largely spent in imposing a unified system of weights and measures on the Confederation and in exhausting disputes with the mediatised and secularised ex-Prince-Bishop of Durham. By 1810, he no longer had the approval of the Tuileries, and was forced to trade down to become of the monarch of Northern Lusitania.

[2] - By now, Napoleon was so dynastically-minded in his ambition that he regretted creating any throne that could not be occupied by a Bonaparte. Unfortunately, he was so successful at this point that he was seriously running out of brothers to promote - hence the rapprochement with Lucien Bonaparte. Interestingly, Lucian I was still popularly considered to be an opponent of Napoleon, and in consequence was cheered to the echo at his coronation. Of course, the populace was entirely correct in perceiving that their new King was not a lap-dog of Napoleon: he gave serious thought to joining the Sixth Coalition, and probably would have been followed by around a dozen of the Welsh Principalities and the Margraviate of Mar.

In the end, Lucian was brought down by his softness towards the Irish - the various Irish Republics of 1798 had been intended to be given to Albion, but the departure of the Grand Army made this basically unenforceable, and the Irish enjoyed a distinct level of freedom from Customs inspections. This meant two things: firstly, they were able to trade with Ancien Regime exiles in what is now Canada; secondly, Napoleon was cut off from a source of revenue. Lucian gave his apologies for his inability to comply with an Imperial request to bring the Irish to heel, and abdicated in favour of his young son. The reign of Charles Lucian I lasted only a fortnight before the garrisons openly sided with the Emperor, who now accepted another throne for himself.

[3] - Napoleon, of course, didn't have the upper hand in Britain for long, being crushed by a Russo-Prussian ambush at Amboise. Stepping into the breach in Albion was Edmund 'VII', son of the former King of Southumbria, who had been leading a paltry court in exile in Newfoundland since the invasion. Edmund persuaded the Congress of Vienna that Napoleon's redrawing of the borders of Britain had been essentially well-intentioned, and nabbed the primacy of the archipelago for himself. His reign is remembered nowadays as one of immense technological progress, but also one in which the clash between the Ancien Regime and the Napoleonic constitutional innovations of the last few years caused an equally massive hindrance to human happiness. London became home to endemic riots and petty revolutions, while dangerous radicals laid low in lawless locales like the Principalities of Durham and Mann.

Finally, after decades of enervating controversy over matters such as the emancipation of the Protestants and the creation of a Parliament, demands for a Constitution reached fever pitch in the midst of a general European cri-de-coeur in 1848. Edmund VII was forced by a baying mob to abdicate in favour of his slightly less unpopular son - and returned to a Canadian exile.

[4] - Roger III gave the people a Constitution - but it turned out to give the vast majority of the power to the King, and before long the royal family had been dispatched (either to the guillotine or to Newfoundland: most of them had no firm preference) and replaced with a Republican mode of governance. The British Republic (save for the small monarchist outpost of Margate) joined the Irish Republics in the Confederated States of Albion, which soon came to encompass the whole of Britain. And, save for a distinctly unwise experiment in Imperial government in the 1940s, these islands have ever since been whole and entire of themselves - and free from the taint of monarchism.
 
Standing For Something...

1990-1991: Michael Heseltine (Conservative)
1991-1997: Neil Kinnock (Labour)

1991 (Majority) def: Michael Heseltine (Conservative), Paddy Ashdown (Liberal Democrats), Rosie Barnes (*SDP)
1995 (Majority) def: Michael Howard (Conservative), Paddy Ashdown (Liberal Democrats)

1997-1999: Margaret Beckett (Labour)
1999-2009: Michael Portillo (Conservative)

1999 (Coalition with Liberal Democrats) def: Margaret Beckett (Labour), Malcolm Bruce (Liberal Democrats)
2003 (Majority) def: John Hutton (Labour), Mark Oaten (Liberal Democrats), Tony Blair (Change 03')
2008 (Majority) def: John Hutton (Labour), Lynne Featherstone (Liberal Democrats), Tony Blair (Change), Alex Neil (SNP)

2009-2012: Alan Duncan (Conservative)
2012-: Mark Seddon (Labour)

2012 (Coalition with Liberal Democrats) def: Alan Duncan (Conservative), Lynne Featherstone (Liberal Democrats), Stephen Dorrell (Change UK), Alex Neil (SNP)
2014 DevoMax Referendum: Yes 60%, No 40%
2016 (Majority) def:
Andrea Leadsom (Conservative), Lynne Featherstone (Liberal Democrats), Amber Rudd (Alliance for Change!)

Can Seddon Do It Again?

23 April 2020

"It seems that Mark Seddon is planning to have a snap election in May and given how the polls are looking for him, this is understandable. With the main opposition the Conservatives divided on the EU with there Leader Tobias Ellwood seeming unable to cope and the Alliance lurching around under Andrew Adonis, it’s less Seddon’s to win and more his to lose.

That being said to two parties do offer a potential challenge. The Liberal Democrat’s maybe be able to make gains under new leader John Leech, who seems to appeal to the young voters who have grown up with Seddon and want change but not more Toryism. His attacks on Labour’s arms length relationship with the EU and a strong lack of electoral reform beyond the regional assemblies.

The other is the Workers Party, started by Chris Williamson following his ousting due to Anti-Semitic statements. An odd combination of Soft Left cranks, Blue Labour folks and John Spellar this party seems like it could maybe make some cut through in the Labour Heartlands if the polls are to be believed. Much of this has been attributed to raising new comer Rosie Duffield who’s politics seem to change depending one the room she is in (a part from a constant layer of Trans/Homophobia).

Only time will tell if Seddon has managed to gain another majority."



The Seddon-Featherstone Ministry (2012-2016):

Prime Minister:
Mark Seddon
Deputy Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Education: Lynne Featherstone
Chancellor of the Exchequer: Alan Simpson
Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs: Jeremy Corbyn (res. 2013), Hilary Benn
Secretary of State for Home Affairs: Michael Meacher (res. 2014), Andrew Smith
Secretary of State for Defence: John Healey
Leader of the House of Commons: Nick Brown/Mike Williams
Secretary of State for Trade and Industry: Andrew Smith (res. 2014), Lisa Nandy
Secretary of State for Energy: John Thurso (res. 2013), John Leech
Secretary of State for Health: Bob Ainsworth (res. 2014), Debbie Abrahams
Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs: Lynne Jones
Secretary of State for Employment: David Howarth
Secretary of State for Transport: Tom Brake
Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport: Natashcha Engel (res. 2014), Andy Burnham
Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government: Julia Goldsworthy
Chief Secretary to the Treasury: Ed Miliband
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster: Jenny Willott


The Second Seddon Ministry (2016-):
Prime Minister:
Mark Seddon
Deputy Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Employment: Jon Cruddas
Chancellor of the Exchequer: Alan Simpson (res. 2019), Ed Miliband
Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs: Lynne Jones
Secretary of State for Home Affairs: Lisa Nandy
Secretary of State for Defence: John Healey (res. 2018), Clive Lewis
Leader of the House of Commons: Nick Brown
Secretary of State for Trade and Industry: Ed Miliband (res. 2019), Cat Smith
Secretary of State for Energy: Andrew Gwynne
Secretary of State for Education: Owen Smith
Secretary of State for Health: Debbie Abrahams
Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs: Rachel Maskell
Secretary of State for Transport: Andy MacDonald
Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport: Andy Burnham (res. 2017) Tom Watson
Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government: Jon Trickett
Chief Secretary to the Treasury: Cat Smith (res. 2019), Rebecca Long Bailey
Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster: John McDonnell
 
The World Policeman

1929-1937: Herbert Hoover (Republican)
def 1929: (with Charles Curtis) Al Smith (Democratic)
def 1932: (with Oliver Gardner) Al Smith (Democratic), Huey Long (Share The Wealth), James Heflin (Independent Democrats)

1937-1949: Henry J. Kaiser (Democratic)
def 1936: (with Eurith Rivers) Huey Long (Share The Wealth), Bruce Barton (Republican)
def 1940: (with Eurith Rivers) Robert E. Wood (Republican), Burton K. Wheeler (Share The Wealth)
def 1944: (with Paul V. McNutt) Burton K. Wheeler and James W. Wadsworth (United Opposition Ticket)

1949-1957: Brien McMahon (Democratic)
def 1948: (with J. William Fulbright) George Bender (United Opposition), Russell Long ("True" Share The Wealth)
def 1952: (with J. William Fulbright) Hamilton Fish III (United)

1957-1965: Nile Kinnick (United)
def 1956: (with Otto Passman) J. William Fulbright (Democratic)
def 1960: (with Otto Passman) W. Averell Harriman (Democratic)

1965-1969: Lucius D. Clay (Democratic)
def 1964: (with Richard Ichord) Otto Passman (United)
1969-1973: Mac Mathias (United)
def 1968: (with John S. Cooper) Lucius D. Clay (Democratic)
1973-1981: Henry Jackson (Democratic)
def 1972: (with Farris Bryant) Mac Mathias (United)
def 1976: (with Farris Bryant) Donald Duncan (United)

1981-1985x: Dixy Lee Ray (Democratic)
def 1980: (with David Kennedy) Pete Stark (United)
1985-xxxx: Ron Dellums (United)
def 1984: (with John W. Gardner) Dixy Lee Ray (Democratic), Helen Chenoworth (American Patriots)
 
Inspired by a recent thread on here, I've dug out one I was going to use for an HoS list challenge on Manifest Destiny but never quite finished.

Tippecanoe and Article II

Presidents of the United States

1837 - 1841: Martin Van Buren (Democratic)
1836 (with Richard Mentor Johnson) def. William Harrison (Whig), Hugh White (Whig), Daniel Webster (Whig), Willie Mangum (Whig)
1841 (Mar-Apr): William Henry Harrison (Whig)
1840 (with John Tyler) def. Martin Van Buren (Democratic)
1841 - 1842 (Acting (disputed)): John Tyler (Whig, then Independent)
1842
(June) (Acting): Samuel L. Southard (Whig)
April 1842: Impeachment of John Tyler
1842 - 1843 (Acting): John White (Whig)
1843
(Mar-May) (Acting): John Davis (Whig)
1842 special election, presidential: Henry Clay (Whig) [135] def. Martin van Buren (Free-Soil Democratic) [75], Richard Mentor Johnson ("Mule" or "Jackass" Democratic) [52], John Tyler (New Democratic-Republican) [9], Samuel Ward King (Law and Order) [4]
1842 special election, vice-presidential: John Davis (Whig) [139] def. George Dallas (Free-Soil Democratic) [75], Preserved Fish ("Mule" Democratic) [52], John Calhoun (New Democratic-Republican) [9]
1843 contingent election, first ballot: Henry Clay [11] def. Martin Van Buren [6], Richard M. Johnson [6], deadlocked [3]
Ballots 2 through 104:
no resolution
1843 - 0000: Martin Van Buren (Free-Soil Democratic)
1843 contingent election, ballot 105: Martin Van Buren [14] def. Henry Clay [6], Richard M. Johnson [6]

Really, John Tyler should have seen it coming. His fellow Whigs were uneasy about the newly-minted Vice-President's eagerness to step into Harrison's shoes scarcely a month into his term, but they might have accepted Tyler's accidental leadership if he'd presented himself as a reluctant caretaker and just stuck to the Party line.

Instead, he insisted on being called "President" (which made it very awkward when Congress found its notification of availability, addressed to the "Vice-President", returned unopened), told Henry Clay to go hang, and vetoed the National Bank and the Whigs' tariff proposals in an open declaration of war.

After Clay engineered the resignation of the entire Cabinet and left his ally, the president pro tempore of the Senate, first in line to the (Acting) Presidency, articles of impeachment were drafted and bitterly debated through the fall and winter of 1841. Lured by the prospect of catching the Whigs in disarray in the inevitable special election, enough Democratic Senators swung behind the vote to convict, and His Accidency became the first President Vice-President to be removed from office. Henry Clay had won.

And then Samuel L. Southard went and goddamn well died.

One President dying was unfortunate; his successor being impeached by his own party was an embarrassment; his successor dropping dead, to be replaced by the third Acting President in the space of fourteen months, was a humiliation.

The 1842 presidential vote looked uncomfortably close for the Whigs, especially with Tyler's revenge campaign messing with the numbers, but still very winnable. The Speaker of the House was very quietly riding out his four months to the November special elections and happily signed off on the tariff, the National Bank Bill was waiting to enter Congress, and the Democrats were splitting six ways from Sunday over the slavery issue.

And then Rhode Island tipped the pisspot into the soup bowl, as Clay was shut out by the state elders' quixotic campaign to protest at the Federal government's refusal (inability, really) to intervene in the Dorr Rebellion. After the Electoral College deadlocked on the Presidency, the election went to a deadlocked House for an equally deadlocked contingent election, and come March 4 the United States had its fourth Acting President in two years.

It was ironic, really, that Henry Clay would be on the receiving end of a Corrupt Bargain. But after the Connecticut and Virginia delegations flipped in their late elections, the Whigs had a clear message that they were being held responsible for the chaos of the last two years. The trickle of votes sloshing around between ballots would turn into a flood towards the least appalling compromise candidate, sweeping the man who had been blamed for the depression of 1837 back into the Oval Office as the one entrusted to lead America back to prosperity. Martin Van Buren was back, and nobody was particularly happy about it.

Outside the United States, the world has not stood still. Texas, waiting anxiously to find out whether it did or didn't have a friend it could depend on, has thrown its lot in with the British. Abolition is a high price to pay for a guarantee of independence, but Mexico is right there and getting its shit together with unpleasant speed. This has frustrated the Southern Democrats, who are demanding Van Buren do something about it, even as the Northern Democrats get hot under the collar about Oregon. As the President - who has pledged to honour the two-term precedent to make way for a "real" President - desperately tries to stitch the Party of Jackson back together in time for the 1846 election, tensions are at fever pitch.

Meanwhile, in the farthest reaches of Mexico, an American immigrant building a sawmill in the Sierra Nevada is about to notice something in a river that might just manage to make the whole situation even worse.
 
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List of British Prime Ministers
1945-1955: Clement Attlee (Labour)

1945 def: Winston Churchill (Conservative), Archibald Sinclair (Liberal), Ernest Brown (Liberal National), Malcolm MacDonald (National Labour), Bob Edwards (ILP), Harry Pollitt (Communist), C. A. Smith (Common Wealth)
1950 def: Winston Churchill (Conservative), Gwilym Lloyd-George (Liberal), Malcolm MacDonald (National Labour)
1954 def: Winston Churchill (Conservative), Gwilym Lloyd George (Liberal), Stephen King-Hall (National Labour)

1955: Herbert Morrison (Labour)
1955-1959: Hugh Gaitskell (Labour)

1959-1964: Harold Macmillan (Progressive Conservative)

1959 def: Hugh Gaitskell (Labour), Nigel Nicolson (Centre), Richard Acland (Coalition for a New Democracy)
1964-1965: Patrick Gordon Walker (Labour)
1964 def: Harold Macmillan (Progressive Conservative), Frederic Bennett (Centre), Bertrand Russell (New Democracy)
1965: George Brown (Labour)
1965-1975: James Callaghan (Labour)

1968 def: Selwyn Lloyd (Progressive Conservative), Frederic Bennett (Centre), A. J. P. Taylor (New Democracy)
1972 def: Charles Hill (Progressive Conservative), Gwynfor Evans (New Democracy), Frederic Bennett (Centre), Desmond Donnelly (Reform)

1975-1977: Anthony Crosland (Labour)
1977: Denis Healey (Labour)

1977-1978: Keith Joseph (Progressive Conservative-Centre coalition)

1977 def: Denis Healey (Labour), Jeremy Thorpe (Centre), Gerry Fitt (New Democracy)
 
My guy

1960-1963:Tony Benn(Labour)
1960:Harold Macmillan(Conservative),Jo Grimond(Liberal)
1963-1968:Patrick Gordon Walker(Labour)
1964:Enoch Powell(Conservative),Jo Grimond(Liberal)
1968-1969:Roy Jenkins(Labour)
1969-1974:Reginald Mauding(Conservative)
1969:Roy Jenkins(Labour),Eric Lubbock(Liberal)
1973:John Silkin(Labour),Eric Lubbock(Liberal)

1974-1977:Jim Prior(Conservative)
1977-1981:Ron Brown(Labour)
1977:Jim Prior(Conservative),John Pardoe(Liberal)
1981-1989:Maurice Joseph Micklewhite Jr.(Conservative)
1981:Ron Brown(Labour),John Pardoe(Liberal)
1985:Denis Healey(Labour),Alan Beith(Liberal)

1989-1990:Douglas Hurd(Conservative)
1990-2000:Gordon Brown(Labour)
1990:Douglas Hurd(Conservative),James Goldsmith(Reform)
1995:Ted Heath(Conservative),James Goldsmith(Reform)

2000-2008:Nick Hurd(Conservative)

2000:Jack Straw(Labour),Peter Tatchell(Green)
2004:Paddy Ashdown(Labour),Peter Tatchell(Green)
2008-2017:Sadiq Khan(Labour)
2008:Ken Clarke(Conservative),Peter Tatchell(Green)
2012:Jeremy Hunt(Conservative),David Campbell Bannerman(Reform)

2017-2021:Jeremy Clarkson(Conservative)
2017:Sarah Brown(Labour),David Campbell Bannerman(Reform)
2021-202?:Neil Kinnock(Labour)
2021:Jeremy Clarkson(Conservative)


do you get it ?
 
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im imagining some utterly chaotic version of 1964 as lbj still faces goldwater but theres a bobby kennedy 'yankeecrat' splitter ticket, and maybe some Chicano movement type thing in the southwest

1961 - 1966: John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1960 (with Lyndon B. Johnson): Richard Nixon (Republican), unpledged electors (States' Rights)
1964 (with George Smathers): Jim Rhodes (Republican), Ross Barnett (States' Rights)

1966 - 1969: George Smathers (Democratic)
1969 - 1977: Barry Goldwater (Republican)
1968 (with Gerald Ford): Robert F. Kennedy (Yankeecrat), George Smathers (Democratic)
1972 (with Gerald Ford): George Wallace (Democratic), Kevin White (Yankeecrat), Hector P. Garcia (La Raza Unida)

1977 - 0000: Robert F. Kennedy (Yankeecrat)
1976 (with Cesar Chavez): James Buckley (Republican), George Wallace (Democratic)
 
Tippecanoe and Article II

Absolutely golden. Thank you for this information and this list.

Outside the United States, the world has not stood still. Texas, waiting anxiously to find out whether it did or didn't have a friend it could depend on, has thrown its lot in with the British. Abolition is a high price to pay for a guarantee of independence, but Mexico is right there and getting its shit together with unpleasant speed. This has frustrated the Southern Democrats, who are demanding Van Buren do something about it, even as the Northern Democrats get hot under the collar about Oregon. As the President - who has pledged to honour the two-term precedent to make way for a "real" President - desperately tries to stitch the Party of Jackson back together in time for the 1846 election, tensions are at fever pitch.

Amazing. How do the Southern Democrats (and John Tyler) approach Texas becoming an abolitionist state?

Meanwhile, in the farthest reaches of Mexico, an American immigrant building a sawmill in the Sierra Nevada is about to notice something in a river that might just manage to make the whole situation even worse.

California is in for interesting times.

In the Chinese sense, of course.

1961 - 1966: John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1960 (with Lyndon B. Johnson): Richard Nixon (Republican), unpledged electors (States' Rights)
1964 (with George Smathers): Jim Rhodes (Republican), Ross Barnett (States' Rights)

1966 - 1969: George Smathers (Democratic)
1969 - 1977: Barry Goldwater (Republican)
1968 (with Gerald Ford): Robert F. Kennedy (Yankeecrat), George Smathers (Democratic)
1972 (with Gerald Ford): George Wallace (Democratic), Kevin White (Yankeecrat), Hector P. Garcia (La Raza Unida)

1977 - 0000: Robert F. Kennedy (Yankeecrat)
1976 (with Cesar Chavez): James Buckley (Republican), George Wallace (Democratic)

gib continuation
 
Now time to celebrate the “‘dearly’” departed President Trump’s best moment as President...
At a rally later that month Trump read out sections from the interview claiming Lynch as a supporter (though he misspoke, saying, "David Lynch could go down as one of the greatest presidents in history"[212]).
1989-1993: Donald Trump (Republican)
1989 (With Jack Kemp) def: Michael Dukakis (Democratic)
1993-1995: Paul Tsongas (Democratic)
1992 (With Dianne Feinstein) def: George Bush Sr. (Republican), Jerry Brown (Independent)
1995-1997: Dianne Feinstein (Democratic)
1997-1998: John Hagelin (Reform)

1996 (With David Lynch) def: Bob Kerry (Democratic), Bob Dole (Republican)
1998-2001: David Lynch (Reform)
2001-2005: David Lynch (Reform-Democratic)

2000 (With Russ Feingold) def: John McCain (Republican), Pat Buchanan (Conservative)
2005-: Russ Feingold (Democratic)
2004 (With Carol Moseley Braun) def: Gary Bauer (Republican), Mike Gavel (Write In)


2008 Presidential Election:
Democratic: Russ Feingold/Carol Moseley Braun
Republican: Donald Trump/William Scranton III
Reform: Drew Carey/Jesse Ventura


@Tom Colton and @Ares96 beats me with a ‘Best of David Lynch’ boxset.
 
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