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theflyingmongoose's Test Thread

Kerry '04 (2012 Elections)
  • PRESIDENT
    1666898491837.png
    Sen. Hillary Clinton/Sen. Barack Obama (D): 303 EV/ 49.6% PV
    Fmr. Vice Pres. John Ashcroft/Rep. Paul Ryan (R): 235 EV/ 46.7% PV

    SENATE:
    1666898781305.png
    D: 60 (+3)
    R: 40 (-3)

    Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO), January 3, 2013-January 3, 2019
    Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT), January 3, 2013-January 3, 2019
    Sen. Tom Kean, Jr. (R-NJ), January 3, 2007-January 3, 2019
    Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN), January 3, 1977-January 3, 2019

    HOUSE:
    1666900688941.png
    D: 273 (-25)
    R: 162 (+25)

    GUBERNATORIAL:
    1666901130764.png
    D: 42 (+1)
    R: 8 (-1)

    Gov. Pat McCrory (R-NC),
    January 10, 2009-January 13, 2017
    Gov. Joel Heitkamp (D-ND), December 10, 2012-December 16, 2016
    Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. (R-UT), January 3, 2005-June 19, 2009; January 8, 2013-January 5, 2017
     

    Attachments

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    Kerry '04 (President Clinton's First Term, Part I)
  • JUSTICES:
    CJ: Merrick Garland (2005, by Kerry)
    AJ: Antonin Scalia (1986, by Reagan)
    AJ: Clarence Thomas (1991, by Bush I)
    AJ: Ruth Bader Ginsburg (1993, by Clinton)
    AJ: Stephen Breyer (1994, by Clinton)
    AJ: Sonia Sotomayor (2006, by Kerry)
    AJ: Elena Kagan (2008, by Kerry)
    AJ: Brian Sandoval (2008, by Kerry)
    AJ: Neil Gorsuch (2010, by Bush II)

    NOTABLE CASES:

    Sachs v. Jackson (2013):
    Holding:
    Parental consent notifications for abortion are fundamentally unconstitutional.

    Gray v. Sanders (2013):

    Holding: Actions by the military in countries that haven't requested presence require congressional consent.

    Jefferson v. United States (2013):

    Holding: Capital punishment is unconstitutional except for war crimes and mass murder.

    NARAL v. Alabama (2014):

    Holding: Almost all abortion restrictions are unconstitutional before 20 weeks.

    LEGISLATION:

    American Recovery Act of 2013:
    -Authorizes $355 Billion in recovery funds
    -Introduces $145 Billion one-time infrastructure program

    Health Coverage Act of 2013:
    -Expands Medicaid to cover those making up to 138% of the poverty line
    -Expands drug price negotiation to critical non-prescription medicines (saline, etc)
    -Allows 25% price discrimination against the obese
    -Expands Medicare to include dental and vision coverage
    -Introduces $15 Billion per year fund to train new medical professionals
    -Authorizes exchange subsidies for those making less than 250% FPL

    Environmental Protection Act of 2013:
    -Merges the NPS and EPA into the Department of Environmental Protection
    -Introduces a $25/MT carbon tax indexed to inflation
    -Authorizes $250 Billion in subsidies to various clean energy sources including EVs

    Tax Reform Act of 2014:
    -Increases the top tax rate from 37.5% to 40.0%
    -Introduces a 100% FPL minimum Social Security payment
     
    Kerry '04 (2014 Elections)
  • SENATE:
    1666907240999.png
    D: 61 (+1)
    R: 39 (-1)

    Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA),
    January 3, 2009-January 3, 2021
    Sen. Pete Domenici (R-NM), January 3, 1973-January 3, 2021
    Sen. Cory Gardner (R-CO), January 3, 2009-January 3, 2021
    Sen. Gordon Smith (R-OR), January 3, 1997-January 3, 2021
    Sen. John Thune (R-SD), January 3, 2009-January 3, 2021
    Sen. Elizabeth Dole (R-NC), January 3, 2003-January 3, 2021
    Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), January 3, 2015-January 3, 2021
    Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV), January 3, 2009-January 3, 2021
    Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ), January 3, 2015-January 3, 2021
    Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK), December 24, 1968-January 3, 2021

    HOUSE:
    1666912620201.png
    R: 291 (+129)
    D: 144 (-129)

    GUBERNATORIAL:
    View attachment 60954
    R: 29 (+21)
    D: 21 (-21)


    Gov. Rick Snyder (R-MI), January 1, 2015-January 1, 2019
    Gov. Scott Walker (R-WI), January 5, 2019-January 7, 2019
    Gov. Paul LePage (R-ME), January 4, 2015-January 7, 2019
    Gov. Terry Branstad (R-IA), January 14, 1983-January 15, 1999; January 10, 2015-January 14, 2019
    Gov. Alan Fung (R-RI), January 6, 2015-January 5, 2019
    Gov. Lee Fisher (D-OH), January 10, 2011-January 12, 2019
    Gov. Dina Titus (D-NV): January 7, 2011-January 23, 2015 (Remained in office under 14 day court injunction)
    Gov. Jacky Rosen (D-NV): January 23, 2015-April 4, 2015 (Held office as Lieutenant Governor of Nevada)

    Gov. Brian Sandoval (R-NV): April 4, 2015-January 6, 2019 (Election certified on March 31, 2015, sworn in formally on the morning of April 5, 2015)
    Gov. Diane Denish (D-NM): January 1, 2011-January 1, 2019
    Gov. Eliot Spitzer (D-NY): January 1, 2007-December 31, 2018
    Gov. Mary Fallin (R-OK), January 13, 2015-January 11, 2019
    Gov. Jenny Sanford (R-SC), January 21, 2015-January 25, 2019
    Gov. Kristi Noem (R-SD), January 8, 2015-January 8, 2019
    Gov. Bill Lee (R-TN): January 17, 2015-January 15, 2019
    Gov. Rita Meyer (R-WY): January 7, 2015-January 9, 2019
    Gov. Sam Brownback (R-KS): January 15, 2015-January 13, 2019
    Gov. Rick Scott (R-FL): January 2, 2015-January 8, 2019
    Gov. Tony Knowles (D-AK): December 5, 1994-December 2, 2002; December 4, 2010-December 6, 2018
    Gov. Brian Kemp (R-GA): January 25, 2015-January 23, 2019
    Gov. Bud Pierce (R-OR): January 21, 2015-January 21, 2019
     

    Attachments

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    Kerry '04 (E-Mail Gate And Clinton Resignation)
  • January 20, 2013-March 6, 2015 (775 Days)

    November 6, 2012:
    Hillary Clinton wins the 2012 Presidential Election, defeating Vice President Danforth to succeed the term-limited President Bush.
    November 21, 2012: The FBI begins an informal, private investigation into tips the Clinton campaign misused emails.
    November 30, 2012: President Bush is briefed about the investigation by Karl Rove, vetoes any attempts to publicize it before the inauguration.
    December 16, 2012: The Electoral College formally casts its votes, Clinton officially becomes President-elect.
    January 3, 2013: The 113th Congress is sworn in
    January 6, 2013: The electoral votes are certified
    January 18, 2013: The FBI upgrades the investigation level to formal, expands size to sixteen people.
    January 20, 2013: Hillary Clinton is sworn in as the 46th President of the United States of America.
    January 31, 2013: President Clinton is informed of the ongoing investigation
    April 17, 2013: The investigation is upgraded to a serious probe, with private interviews being conducted by the now 50-strong staff
    May 5, 2013: President Clinton is interviewed by the FBI
    May 25, 2013: White House Chief of Staff Terry McAuliffe and Vice President Obama are informed of the investigation
    June 25, 2013: FBI Director Robert Mueller resigns
    June 30, 2013: President Clinton nominates Christopher Wray for the term ending September 4, 2013.
    July 13, 2013: Christopher Wray is confirmed as FBI Director by a voice vote
    July 15, 2013: Christopher Wray is sworn in as FBI Director and informed of the investigation.
    August 1, 2013: The FBI establishes a 100-strong Office of the Special Counsel
    August 11, 2013: Bob Woodward begins his investigation into the new FBI special resources request
    August 20, 2013: The White House denies rumors of any ongoing FBI investigation
    October 29, 2013: Insiders leak reports of the investigation
    November 4, 2013: The White House again denies reports
    November 5, 2013: Incumbent Governor of Virginia Brian Moran is defeated by State Senator Amanda Chase in a narrow upset.
    November 16, 2013: President Clinton is informed of an impending Woodward column
    November 20, 2013: President Clinton's job approval has dropped from over 65% to under 50% in just under a month.
    November 30, 2013: 50 Republican Congresspeople sign a letter demanding President Clinton's resignation
    January 20, 2014: As President Clinton celebrates a full year in office, she has a 39% approval rating (compared to the Vice President's 68%)
    February 14, 2014: Senator Joe Manchin becomes the first Democrat to call for Clinton's resignation.
    February 23, 2014: Bob Woodward publishes a column on the scandal, says Vice President Obama and others raised concerns but were ignored.
    March 17, 2014: The FBI finally announces the investigation, says over 150 people are working on it.
    June 1, 2014: President Clinton's job approval falls to 32%, personal favorability at 24%, 61% support resignation and 52% impeachment.
    July 3, 2014: President Clinton fires several cabinet officials who were discussing invoking the 25th Amendment.
    October 13, 2014: The investigation is concluded. Director Wray announces a report is being compiled.
    October 26, 2014: President Clinton condemns the reports as a 'political hit job', cites closeness of the midterms.
    November 4, 2014: Democrats get crushed across the country in the midterms. Republicans announce impeachment as their first priority
    November 26, 2014: Over 40 House Democrats release a joint statement calling for President Clinton's resignation
    December 1, 2014: The preliminary report is finally released. It lays out several crimes committed by Clinton's staff, while she has not.
    December 5, 2014: President Clinton is made aware of the full report
    December 15, 2014: The full report comes out, shows Clinton knew about crimes and swept them under the rug in October of 2012.
    December 31, 2014: As Clinton goes into her second week at Camp David, the number of Senators calling for her removal reaches 60.
    January 3, 2015: The new (and more hostile) congress is sworn in. Speaker Ryan announces immediate impeachment hearings.
    January 19, 2015: The first impeachment hearings are held. Several staffers testify and a few anonymous sources throw Clinton under the bus
    January 20, 2015: President Clinton celebrates two years in office. She has an approval rating of 28% compared to the VP's 71%.
    January 30, 2015: The committee overwhelmingly supports the articles of impeachment.
    February 12, 2015: Congressional leadership meets with President Clinton
    February 17, 2015: President Clinton announces her resignation, effective at 'some point in the near future'
    February 28, 2015: President Clinton submits her formal letter of resignation to the Secretary of State, giving her 120 hours.
    March 5, 2015: President Clinton formally resigns from office at 11:59 PM
    March 6, 2015: Vice President Obama is sworn in at 12:02 AM
    March 7, 2015: The Clintons depart the White House after a morning ceremony. They then fly Air Force One a final time to New York City.
     
    Kerry '04 (President Obama's First Term, Part I)
  • JUSTICES:
    CJ: Merrick Garland (2005, by Kerry)
    AJ: Clarence Thomas (1991, by Bush I)
    AJ: Stephen Breyer (1994, by Clinton I)
    AJ: Sonia Sotomayor (2006, by Kerry)
    AJ: Elena Kagan (2008, by Kerry)
    AJ: Neil Gorsuch (2010, by Bush II)
    AJ: Sri Srinivasan (2014, by Clinton II)
    AJ: Lucy Koh (2015, by Obama)
    AJ: Noah Feldman (2016, by Obama)

    LEGISLATION:

    Prosperity Rebate Act of 2015:

    -Increases the Child Tax Credit from $1,000 to $2,000 per child for a maximum of two (the next two children will be $1,000 for a cap of $6,000)
    -Increases the minimum EITC from $450 to $750 and the maximum from $4,125 to $5,000
    -Requires 25% of carbon tax funds go to an annual rebate program
    -Cuts social security benefits for the top 25% of beneficiaries by 1.5% per year for 10 years.

    Drug Offenses Act of 2016:
    -Eliminates mandatory minimums for most non-violent crimes
    -Expands parole options
    -Invests in treatment and rehabilitation

    2015 Gubernatorial Elections:
    MS:
    Gov. Bennie Thompson (D) def. Rep. Tate Reeves (R), 61.8%-35.6%
    KY: Mr. Matt Bevin (R) def. Gov. Jack Conway* (D), 48.5%-48.4% (+302 Votes)
    LA: Rep. Billy Nungesser (R) def. Gov. Mitch Landrieu* (D), 50.4%-49.6%
    R: 32 (+2)
    D: 18 (-2)
     
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    Kerry '04 (2016 Elections)
  • PRESIDENT:
    1666986830064.png
    Pres. Barack Obama/Vice Pres. Joe Biden (D): 480 EV/ 60.0% PV
    Sen. Ted Cruz/Businessman Ron Johnson (R): 52 EV/ 32.8% PV
    Rep. Evan McMullin/Rep. Mindy Finn (L-I): 6 EV/ 7.5% PV

    SENATE:
    1666987450676.png
    D: 52 (-9)
    R: 48 (+9)

    Sen. Al Gross (D-AK), January 3, 2011-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Stephanie Murphy (D-FL), January 3, 2017-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), January 3, 2017-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Kay Hagan (D-NC), January 3, 2011-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Jim Bob Duggar (R-AR), January 3, 2017-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Jason Kander (D-MO), January 3, 2011-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Russ Feingold (D-WI), January 3, 1993-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Richard Mourdock (R-IN), January 3, 2017-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Ted Strickland (D-OH), January 3, 2011-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Katie McGinty (D-PA), January 3, 2011-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Paul Hodes (D-NH), January 3, 2011-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Jim DeMint (R-SC), January 3, 2017-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Raphael Warnock (D-GA), January 3, 2011-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Roy Moore (R-AL), January 3, 2017-January 3, 2023
    Sen. Joseph Cao (R-LA), January 3, 2017-January 3, 2023
    Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), January 3, 1987-January 3, 2011; January 3, 2017-January 3, 2023

    HOUSE:
    D: 225 (+81)
    R: 210 (-81)

    GUBERNATORIAL:
    1666989319712.png
    R: 32 (-)
    D: 18 (-)

    Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. (R-UT),
    January 3, 2005-March 19, 2010; January 8, 2013-January 6, 2021
    Gov. Carte Goodwin (D-WV), January 17, 2017-January 22, 2021
    Gov. Colin Van Ostern (D-NH), January 24, 2017-January 22, 2019
    Gov. Nicole Galloway (D-MO), January 4, 2017-January 7, 2021
    Gov. Shelli Yoder (D-IN), January 18, 2017-January 15, 2021
     
    Kerry '04 (President Obama's Second Term, Part I)
  • JUSTICES:
    CJ: Merrick Garland (2005, by Kerry)
    AJ: Clarence Thomas (1991, by Bush I)
    AJ: Sonia Sotomayor (2006, by Kerry)
    AJ: Elena Kagan (2008, by Kerry)
    AJ: Neil Gorsuch (2010, by Bush II)
    AJ: Sri Srinivasan (2014, by Clinton II)
    AJ: Lucy Koh (2015, by Obama)
    AJ: Noah Feldman (2016, by Obama)
    AJ: Ketanji Brown Jackson (2018, by Obama)

    LEGISLATION:

    Infrastructure Spending Act of 2017:

    -Authorizes $250 Billion for repairs of existing infrastructure
    -Authorizes $400 Billion in various climate change investments
    -Authorizes $350 Billion for new projects

    Minimum Wage And Tax Relief Act of 2017:
    -Increases the minimum wage from $8.55 to $9.25 by 2018, $10.05 by 2019, and $11.15 by 2020
    -Removes the benefits cliff for the EITC and several other programs in favor of a taper-off

    Health Care For All Act of 2017:
    -Expands medical scholarship programs
    -Establishes a public option to compete with insurance companies on the exchanges
    -Caps Medicare out-of-pocket costs at $2,000 per year
    -Streamlines federal health programs

    Education Act of 2018:
    -Establishes free community college, vocational/trade schools, and job training
    -Caps public university tuition at 25% the average annual income in the state
    -Establishes a $45,000 minimum teacher salary
    -Increases total K-12 educational funding by 25% over two years
     
    Kerry '04 (2018 Elections)
  • SENATE:
    1667099522358.png
    D: 52 (-1)
    R: 48 (+1)

    Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-MO), January 3, 2013-January 3, 2025
    Sen. Jon Tester (D-MT), January 3, 2013-January 3, 2025
    Sen. Josh Gottheimer (D-NJ), January 3, 2019-January 3, 2025
    Sen. Richard Lugar (R-IN), January 3, 1977-January 3, 2025
    Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (R-AZ), January 3, 2019-January 3, 2025
    Sen. Don Blankenship (R-WV), January 3, 2019-January 3, 2025
    Sen. Bill Nelson (D-FL), January 3, 2001-January 3, 2025

    HOUSE:
    R: 224 (+14)
    D: 211 (-14)

    GUBERNATORIAL:
    2018_United_States_gubernatorial_elections_results_map.svg (1).png
    R: 29 (-3)
    D: 21 (+3)

    Gov. Scott Walker (R-WI), January 5, 2019-January 4, 2023
    Gov. Chellie Pingree (D-ME), January 7, 2019-January 5, 2023
    Gov. Pat Grassley (R-IA), January 14, 2019-January 16, 2023
    Gov. Alan Fung (R-RI), January 6, 2015-January 8, 2023
    Gov. John Kasich (R-OH), January 12, 2019-January 14, 2023
    Gov. Brian Sandoval (R-NV): April 4, 2015-January 10, 2023 (Election certified on March 31, 2015, sworn in formally on the morning of April 5, 2015)
    Gov. Melanie Stansbury (D-NM): January 1, 2019-January 1, 2023
    Gov. Cynthia Nixon (D-NY): January 1, 2019-December 31, 2022
    Gov. Mary Fallin (R-OK), January 13, 2015-January 12, 2023
    Gov. Jenny Sanford (R-SC), January 21, 2015-January 23, 2023
    Gov. Kristi Noem (R-SD), January 8, 2015-January 8, 2023
    Gov. Bill Lee (R-TN): January 17, 2015-January 12, 2023
    Gov. Rita Meyer (R-WY): January 7, 2015-January 8, 2023
    Gov. Paul Davis (D-KS): January 13, 2019-January 14, 2023
    Gov. Andrew Gillum (D-FL): January 8, 2019-January 6, 2023
    Gov. Sean Parnell (R-AK): December 6, 2018-December 7, 2022
    Gov. Kate Brown (D-OR): January 21, 2019-January 21, 2023
    Gov. Chris Sununu (R-NH), January 3, 2009-January 10, 2011; January 22, 2019-January 18, 2023
    Gov. Stacey Abrams (D-GA), January 23, 2019-January 23, 2023
     
    Kerry '04 (President Obama's Second Term, Part II)
  • JUSTICES:
    CJ: Merrick Garland (2005, by Kerry)
    AJ: Clarence Thomas (1991, by Bush I)
    AJ: Sonia Sotomayor (2006, by Kerry)
    AJ: Elena Kagan (2008, by Kerry)
    AJ: Neil Gorsuch (2010, by Bush II)
    AJ: Sri Srinivasan (2014, by Clinton II)
    AJ: Lucy Koh (2015, by Obama)
    AJ: Noah Feldman (2016, by Obama)
    AJ: Ketanji Brown Jackson (2018, by Obama)

    LEGISLATION:

    COVID Relief Act of 2020:

    -$1,200 stimulus checks for most Americans ($300 Billion)
    -$50 Billion supervised PPP loan pool
    -$100 Billion infusion to state unemployment insurance programs
    -6-month eviction freeze for those who are unemployed

    National Healthcare Act of 2020:
    -Requires that hospitals accept the public option
     
    Kerry '04 (2020 Elections)
  • PRESIDENT:
    1667108542636.png
    Vice Pres. Joe Biden/Sen. Kamala Harris (D): 369 EV/ 53.1% PV
    Businessman Donald Trump/Gov. Kristi Noem (R): 169 EV/ 44.9% PV

    SENATE:
    1667108890016.png
    D: 57 (+6)
    R: 43 (-6)

    Sen. John Kennedy (R-LA),
    January 3, 2009-January 3, 2027
    Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-OR), January 3, 2021-January 3, 2027
    Sen. John Thune (R-SD), January 3, 2009-January 3, 2027
    Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC), January 3, 2021-January 3, 2027
    Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH), January 3, 2015-January 3, 2027
    Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV), January 3, 2009-January 3, 2027
    Sen. Cory Booker (D-NJ), January 3, 2015-January 3, 2027
    Sen. Ted Stevens (R-AK), December 24, 1968-January 3, 2027
    Sen. Abby Finkenauer (D-IA), January 3, 2021-January 3, 2027

    HOUSE:
    D: 231 (+20)
    R: 204 (-20)

    GUBERNATORIAL:
    1667109334892.png
    R: 32 (+3)
    D: 18 (-3)

    Gov. Alex Mooney (R-WV),
    January 22, 2021-January 20, 2025
    Gov. Nicole Galloway (D-MO), January 4, 2017-January 5, 2025
    Gov. Eric Holcomb (R-IN), January 15, 2021-January 15, 2025
    Gov. Chris Sununu (R-NH), January 3, 2009-January 10, 2011; January 22, 2019-January 18, 2023
    Gov. Phil Scott (R-VT), January 10, 2021-January 10, 2023
     
    Kerry '04 (List Of Presidents)
  • 44. John Kerry/John Edwards (D): January 20, 2005-January 20, 2009
    '04- def. George W. Bush/Dick Cheney (R)
    Defeated for re-election
    45. George W. Bush/John Ashcroft (R): January 20, 2009-May 2, 2010
    '08- def. John Kerry/John Edwards (D)
    VP Ashcroft resigned after investigations stemming from Ashcroft v. Iqbal
    45. George W. Bush/VACANT (R): May 2, 2010-August 13, 2010
    New Vice President appointed and confirmed
    45. George W. Bush/Matt Blunt (R): August 13, 2010-January 20, 2013
    Incumbent term-limited
    46. Hillary Clinton/Barack Obama (D): January 20, 2013-March 6, 2015
    '12- def. John Ashcroft/Paul Ryan (R)
    President Clinton resigned under threat of impeachment
    47. Barack Obama/VACANT (D): March 6, 2015-March 14, 2015
    New Vice President appointed and confirmed
    47. Barack Obama/Joe Biden (D): March 14, 2015-January 20, 2021
    '16- def. Ted Cruz/Ron Johnson (R)
    Incumbent retired
    48. Joe Biden/Kamala Harris (D): January 20, 2021-Present
    '20- def. Donald Trump/Sarah Palin (R)
    Incumbent

    PRESIDENTIAL GREATNESS RANKINGS:
    Barack Obama (2015-2021), #5/47
    John Kerry (2005-2009), #23/47
    George Bush (2001-2005, 2009-2013), #34
    Hillary Clinton (2013-2015), #36


    LIST OF WHITE HOUSE CHIEFS OF STAFF:
    KERRY:

    Alexis Herman: January 20, 2005-June 30, 2006
    Cameron Kerry: June 30, 2006-July 17, 2006
    Alexis Herman: July 17, 2006-November 19, 2006
    Ron Klain: November 19, 2006-March 4, 2008
    Katie McGinty: March 4, 2008-January 20, 2009
    BUSH:
    Porter Goss:
    January 20, 2009-May 14, 2010
    Tommy Thompson: May 14, 2010-January 20, 2013
    CLINTON:
    Terry McAuliffe:
    January 20, 2013-March 2, 2014
    Huma Abedin: March 2, 2014-March 6, 2015
    OBAMA:
    Huma Abedin:
    March 6, 2015-March 9, 2015
    David Axelrod: March 9, 2015-January 31, 2017
    Shailagh Murray: January 31, 2017-September 1, 2018
    Mitch Landrieu: September 1, 2018-January 20, 2021
    BIDEN:
    Mitch Landrieu:
    January 20, 2021-May 15, 2021
    Ron Klain: May 15, 2021-February 25, 2022
    Jen Psaki: February 25, 2022-Present
     
    Kerry '04 (Gubernatorial Shit)
  • Morning Consult Highest Job Approval:
    2015:
    Lee Fisher (D-OH), 81%
    2016: Lee Fisher (D-OH), 78%
    2017: Lee Fisher (D-OH), 80%
    2018: Lee Fisher (D-OH), 85%
    2019: Bennie Thompson (D-MS), 72%
    2020: Jared Polis (D-CO), 77%
    2021: Charlie Baker (D-MA), 74%
    2022: Jared Polis (D-CO), 75%

    Morning Consult Lowest Job Approval:
    2015:
    Bobby Jindal (R-LA), 24%
    2016: Sam Brownback (R-KS), 29%
    2017: Matt Bevin (R-KY), 24%
    2018: Matt Bevin (R-KY), 18%
    2019: Matt Bevin (R-KY), 11%
    2020: Kate Brown (D-OR), 30%
    2021: Tate Reeves (R-MS), 20%
    2022: Tate Reeves (R-MS), 12%
     
    Kerry '04 (2005 UK Election)
  • UK General Election on May 5, 2005:
    1667175470258.png
    Labour (John Prescott): 33.0%/297 Seats (-115)
    Conservative (Michael Howard): 34.1%/254 Seats (+88)
    Liberal Democrats (Chris Huhne): 25.0%/67 Seats (+16)
    Scottish National (Alex Salmond): 1.1%/7 Seats (+3)
     
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    Kerry '04 (Howard Ministry)
  • Administration of Michael Howard
    May 28, 2005-September 16, 2007 (841 Days)

    Prime Minister: Rt. Hon. Michael Howard MP (2005-2007)
    Deputy Prime Minister: Rt. Hon. Chris Huhne MP (2005-2007)
    Chancellor Of The Exchequer: Rt. Hon. Oliver Letwin MP (2005-2007), Rt. Hon. George Osborne MP (2007-2007)
    Foreign Secretary: Rt. Hon. David Davis MP (2005-2006), Rt. Hon. Theresa May MP (2006-2007)
    Home Secretary: Rt. Hon. Nick Clegg MP (2005-2007), Rt. Hon. Iain Duncan Smith MP (2007-2007), Rt. Hon. Justine Greening MP (2007-2007)
    Minister for Defense: Rt. Hon. Liam Fox MP (2005-2007)
    Minister for Justice: Rt. Hon. Kenneth Clarke MP (2005-2005), Rt. Hon. Dominic Grieve MP (2005-2007)
    Minister for Business: Rt. Hon. Vince Cable MP (2005-2007)
    Minister for Work And Pensions: Rt. Hon. Theresa May MP (2005-2006), Rt. Hon. Grant Shapps MP (2006-2007)
    Minister for Education: Rt. Hon. Alistair Carmichael MP (2005-2007)
    Minister for Local Government: Rt. Hon. Caroline Spelman MP (2005-2007)
    Minister for Health: Rt. Hon Jeremy Hunt MP (2005-2005), Rt. Hon. Andrew Lansley MP (2005-2007)
    Minister for Environment: Rt. Hon. Chris Huhne MP (2005-2007)
    Minister for Development: Rt. Hon. Justine Greening MP (2005-2007), Rt. Hon. Boris Johnson MP (2007-2007)
    Minister for Scotland: Rt. Hon. Alistair Carmichael MP (2005-2006), Rt. Hon. David Mundell MP (2006-2007)
    Minister for Energy: Rt. Hon. Ed Davey MP (2005-2007)
    Minister for Climate Change: Rt. Hon. Chris Huhne MP (2006-2007)
    Minister for Transportation: Rt. Hon Grant Shapps MP (2005-2007), Rt. Hon. John Bercow MP (2007-2007)
    Minister for Culture And Sport: Rt. Hon. Julie Kirkbride MP (2005-2007)
    Minister for Wales: Rt. Hon. Bill Wiggin MP (2005-2007)
    Minister for Northern Ireland: Rt. Hon. David Lidington MP (2005-2007), Rt. Hon. Theresa Villiers MP (2007-2007)

    May 2005- General Election
    May 2005- Conservatives +4%
    June 2005- Conservatives +2%
    July 2005- Conservatives +3%
    August 2005- Conservatives +5%
    September 2005- Conservatives +6%
    October 2005- Conservatives +6%
    November 2005- Conservatives +5%
    December 2005- Conservatives +7%
    January 2006- Conservatives +4%
    February 2006- Conservatives +6%
    March 2006- Conservatives +7%
    April 2006- Conservatives +8%
    May 2006- Conservatives +10%
    June 2006- Conservatives +9%
    July 2006- Conservatives +10%
    August 2006- Conservatives +10%
    September 2006- Conservatives +13%
    October 2006- Conservatives +11%
    November 2006- Conservatives +10%
    December 2006- Conservatives +15%
    January 2007- Conservatives +6%
    February 2007- Conservatives +9%
    March 2007- Conservatives +8%
    April 2007- Conservatives +12%
    May 2007- Conservatives +15%
    June 2007- Conservatives +13%
    July 2007- Conservatives +8%
    August 2007- Conservatives +3%
    September 2007- Conservatives +1%
    September 2007- General Election
     
    Kerry '04 (2007 UK Election)
  • UK General Election on September 6, 2007:
    1667183018662.png
    Labour (Gordon Brown): 31.8%/297 Seats (-)
    Conservative (Michael Howard): 33.1%/255 Seats (+1)
    Liberal Democrats (Chris Huhne): 25.9%/69 Seats (+2)
    Scottish National (Alex Salmond): 1.5%/6 Seats (-1)
     
    Kerry '04 (Brown Ministry)
  • Administration of Gordon Brown
    September 16, 2007-May 2, 2008 (229 Days)

    Prime Minister: Rt. Hon. Gordon Brown MP (2007-2008)
    Chancellor Of The Exchequer: Rt. Hon. Ed Balls MP (2007-2008)
    Foreign Secretary: Rt. Hon. David Miliband MP (2007-2008)
    Home Secretary: Rt. Hon. Jacqui Smith MP (2007-2008)
    Minister for Defense: Rt. Hon. Des Brown MP (2007-2008)
    Minister for Justice: Rt. Hon. Jack Straw MP (2007-2008), Rt. Hon. Sadiq Khan MP (2008-2008)
    Minister for Business: Rt. Hon. John Hutton MP (2007-2008)
    Minister for Work And Pensions: Rt. Hon. Peter Hain MP (2007-2008)
    Minister for Education: Rt. Hon. Alistair Darling MP (2007-2008)
    Minister for Local Government: Rt. Hon. Hazel Blears MP (2007-2008)
    Minister for Health: Rt. Hon. Alan Johnson MP (2007-2008)
    Minister for Environment: Rt. Hon. Chris Huhne MP (2005-2008)
    Minister for Development: Rt. Hon. Douglas Alexander MP (2007-2008)
    Minister for Energy: Rt. Hon. Hillary Benn MP (2007-2008)
    Minister for Climate Change: Rt. Hon. Chris Huhne MP (2006-2008)
    Minister for Transportation: Rt. Hon. Ruth Kelly MP (2007-2008)
    Minister for Culture And Sport: Rt. Hon. James Purnell MP (2007-2008)

    September 2007- General Election
    September 2007- Labour +1
    October 2007- Conservatives +1
    November 2007- Labour +6 (Michael Howard sacked as Tory leader)
    December 2007- Labour +5
    January 2008- Labour +7
    February 2008- Labour +5
    March 2008- Labour +5
    April 2008- Labour +6
    May 2008- Labour +5
    May 2008- General Election
     
    Kerry '04 (2008 UK Election)
  • UK General Election on May 1, 2008:
    1667189964866.png

    Labour (Gordon Brown): 34.1%/326 Seats (+29)
    Conservative (David Cameron): 30.5%/222 Seats (-33)
    Liberal Democrats (Chris Huhne): 26.1%/73 Seats (+4)
    Scottish National (Alex Salmond): 1.7%/6 Seats (-)
     
    Kerry '04 (Brown, Corbyn, and Miliband Ministries)
  • Administration of Gordon Brown:
    September 16, 2007-February 8, 2011 (1,241 Days)

    Prime Minister: Rt. Hon. Gordon Brown MP (2007-2011)
    Chancellor Of The Exchequer: Rt. Hon. Ed Balls MP (2007-2010), Rt. Hon. Ed Miliband MP (2010-2011)
    Foreign Secretary: Rt. Hon. David Miliband MP (2007-2010), Rt. Hon. David Lammy MP (2010-2011)
    Home Secretary: Rt. Hon. Jacqui Smith MP (2007-2008), Rt. Hon. Yvette Cooper MP (2008-2010), Rt. Hon. Ed Balls MP (2010-2011)
    Minister for Defense: Rt. Hon. Des Brown MP (2007-2011)
    Minister for Justice: Rt. Hon. Jack Straw MP (2007-2008), Rt. Hon. Sadiq Khan MP (2008-2009), Rt. Hon. Keir Starmer MP (2009-2011)
    Minister for Business: Rt. Hon. John Hutton MP (2007-2011)
    Minister for Work And Pensions: Rt. Hon. Peter Hain MP (2007-2011)
    Minister for Education: Rt. Hon. Alistair Darling MP (2007-2011)
    Minister for Local Government: Rt. Hon. Hazel Blears MP (2007-2011)
    Minister for Health: Rt. Hon. Alan Johnson MP (2007-2008), Rt. Hon. Andy Burnham MP (2008-2011)
    Minister for Environment: Rt. Hon. Mary Creagh MP (2008-2011)
    Minister for Development: Rt. Hon. Doug Alexander MP (2007-2009, 2010-2011), Rt. Hon. David Lammy MP (2009-2010)
    Minister for Energy: Rt. Hon. Hillary Benn MP (2007-2009), Rt. Hon. Ivan Lewis MP (2009-2011)
    Minister for Climate Change: Rt. Hon. Caroline Flint MP (2008-2011), Rt. Hon. Mary Creagh MP (2011-2011)
    Minister for Transportation: Rt. Hon. Ruth Kelly MP (2007-2011)
    Minister for Culture And Sport: Rt. Hon. James Purnell MP (2007-2011)

    Administration of Jeremy Corbyn:
    February 8, 2011-June 5, 2011 (117 Days)

    Prime Minister: Rt. Hon. Jeremy Corbyn MP (2011-2011)
    Chancellor Of The Exchequer: Rt. Hon. Dennis Skinner MP (2011-2011)
    Foreign Secretary: Rt. Hon. David Lammy MP (2010-2011)
    Home Secretary: Rt. Hon. Emily Thornberry MP (2011-2011)
    Minister for Defense: Rt. Hon. Des Brown MP (2007-2011)
    Minister for Justice: Rt. Hon. Rebecca Long-Bailey MP (2011-2011)
    Minister for Business: Rt. Hon. Angela Rayner MP (2011-2011)
    Minister for Work And Pensions: Rt. Hon. Diane Abbott MP (2011-2011)
    Minister for Education: Rt. Hon. Alistair Darling MP (2007-2011)
    Minister for Local Government: Rt. Hon. Hazel Blears MP (2007-2011)
    Minister for Health: Rt. Hon. Andy Burnham MP (2008-2011)
    Minister for Environment: Rt. Hon. Mary Creagh MP (2008-2011)
    Minister for Development: Rt. Hon. David Lammy MP (2011-2011)
    Minister for Energy: Rt. Hon. Ivan Lewis MP (2009-2011)
    Minister for Climate Change: Rt. Hon. Mary Creagh MP (2011-2011)
    Minister for Transportation: Rt. Hon. Ruth Kelly MP (2007-2011)
    Minister for Culture And Sport: Rt. Hon. James Purnell MP (2007-2011)

    Administration of Ed Miliband:
    June 5, 2011-May 5, 2012 (335 Days)

    Prime Minister: Rt. Hon. Ed Miliband MP (2011-2012)
    Chancellor Of The Exchequer: Rt. Hon. Oona King MP (2011-2012)
    Foreign Secretary: Rt. Hon. David Lammy MP (2011-2012)
    Home Secretary: Rt. Hon. Keir Starmer MP (2011-2012)
    Minister for Defense: Rt. Hon. John Healey MP (2011-2012
    Minister for Justice: Rt. Hon. Emily Thornberry MP (2011-2012)
    Minister for Business: Rt. Hon. James Purnell MP (2011-2012)
    Minister for Work And Pensions: Rt. Hon. Ruth Kelly MP (2011-2012)
    Minister for Education: Rt. Hon. Kate Green MP (2011-2012)
    Minister for Local Government: Rt. Hon. James Murphy MP (2011-2012)
    Minister for Health: Rt. Hon. Andy Burnham MP (2008-2012)
    Minister for Environment: Rt. Hon. Caroline Flint MP (2011-2012)
    Minister for Development: Rt. Hon. Paul Boateng MP (2011-2012)
    Minister for Energy: Rt. Hon. Lady Valerie Amos, Baroness Amos (2011-2012)
    Minister for Climate Change: Rt. Hon. Caroline Flint MP (2011-2012)
    Minister for Transportation: Rt. Hon. Barry Gardiner MP (2011-2012)
    Minister for Culture And Sport: Rt. Hon. James Purnell MP (2007-2012)

    May 2008- General Election
    May 2008- Labour +5
    June 2008- Labour +3
    July 2008- Labour +2
    August 2008- Conservative +1
    September 2008- Conservative +1
    October 2008- Conservative +4
    November 2008- Conservative +3
    December 2008- Conservative +4
    January 2009- Conservative +4
    February 2009- Conservative +5
    March 2009- Conservative +6
    April 2009- Conservative +8
    May 2009- Conservative +7
    June 2009- Conservative +5
    July 2009- Conservative +10
    August 2009- Conservative +7
    September 2009- Conservative +6
    October 2009- Conservative +8
    November 2009- Conservative +10
    December 2009- Conservative +11
    January 2010- Conservative +7
    February 2010- Conservative +9
    March 2010- Conservative +9
    April 2010- Conservative +8
    May 2010- Conservative +7
    June 2010- Conservative +5
    July 2010- Conservative +4
    August 2010- Conservative +6
    September 2010- Conservative +3
    October 2010- Conservative +6
    November 2010- Conservative +5
    December 2010- Conservative +11 (NHS Winter Crisis)
    January 2011- Conservative +13
    February 2011- Conservative +19
    March 2011- Conservative +32
    April 2011- Conservative +44
    May 2011- Conservative +61
    June 2011- Conservative +57
    July 2011- Conservative +53
    August 2011- Conservative +50
    September 2011- Conservative +46
    October 2011- Conservative +42
    November 2011- Conservative +40
    December 2011- Conservative +39
    January 2012- Conservative +37
    February 2012- Conservative +35
    March 2012- Conservative +30
    April 2012- Conservative +32
    May 2012- Conservative +30
    May 2012- General Election
     
    Last edited:
    Kerry '04 (2012 UK Election)
  • UK General Election on May 3, 2012:
    5f63e3d0-ee7b-4563-aa1e-b6b0766a1afa.png
    Conservative (Zac Goldsmith): 37.9%/331 Seats (+109)
    Labour (Ed Miliband): 30.3%/ 225 Seats (-101)
    Scottish National (Alex Salmond): 3.8%/55 Seats (+49)
    Liberal Democrats (Nick Clegg): 15.2%/23 Seats (-50)
    UK Independence (Nigel Farage): 10.9%/4 Seats (+4)
     
    Last edited:
    Kerry '04 (Goldsmith Ministry)
  • Administration of Zac Goldsmith:
    May 5, 2012-November 15, 2014 (924 Days)

    Prime Minister: Rt. Hon. Zac Goldsmith MP (2012-2014)
    Chancellor Of The Exchequer: Rt. Hon. Rishi Sunak MP (2012-2014)
    Foreign Secretary: Rt. Hon. Theresa May MP (2012-2014)
    Home Secretary: Rt. Hon. Boris Johnson MP (2012-2012), Rt. Hon. Amber Rudd MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Defense: Rt. Hon. Ben Wallace MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Justice: Rt. Hon. Kenneth Clarke MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Business: Rt. Hon. Sajid Javid MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Work And Pensions: Rt. Hon. Damian Green MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Education: Rt. Hon. Justine Greening MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Local Government: Rt. Hon. Chloe Smith MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Health: Rt. Hon. Jeremy Hunt MP (2012-2013), Rt. Hon. Michael Gove MP (2013-2014)
    Minister for Environment: Rt. Hon. Zac Goldsmith MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Development: Rt. Hon. Penny Mordaunt MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Energy: Rt. Hon. Greg Clark (2012-2014)
    Minister for Climate Change: Rt. Hon. Zac Goldsmith MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Transportation: Rt. Hon. Tom Tugendhat MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Culture And Sport: Rt. Hon. Karen Bradley MP (2012-2014)
    Minister for Immigration: Rt. Hon. Priti Patel MP (2013-2014)
    Minister for Equalities: Rt. Hon. Helen Grant MP (2012-2014)

    May 2012- General Election
    May 2012- Conservative +28
    June 2012- Conservative +26
    July 2012- Conservative +26
    August 2012- Conservative +25
    September 2012- Conservative +24
    October 2012- Conservative +21
    November 2012- Conservative +23
    December 2012- Conservative +22
    January 2013- Conservative +23
    February 2013- Conservative +20
    March 2013- Conservative +19
    April 2013- Conservative +17
    May 2013- Conservative +16
    June 2013- Conservative +20
    July 2013- Conservative +21
    August 2013- Conservative +24
    September 2013- Conservative +26
    October 2013- Conservative +30
    November 2013- Conservative +32
    December 2013- Conservative +33
    January 2014- Conservative +35
    February 2014- Conservative +40
    March 2014- Conservative +42
    April 2014- Conservative +37
    May 2014- Conservative +38
    June 2014- Conservative +34
    July 2014- Conservative +36
    August 2014- Conservative +33
    September 2014- Conservative +33
    October 2014- Conservative +34
    November 2014- Conservative +30
    November 2014- General Election
     
    Last edited:
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