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Lists of Heads of Government and Heads of State

List of presidentially named airports:

1. George Washington: Washington National Airport, Washington, D.C. (KDCA)
34. Dwight D. Eisenhower: Wichita Dwight D. Eisenhower National Airport, Wichita (KICT)
35. Richard M. Nixon: Richard Nixon Airport, Orange County (KSNA)
36. John F. Kennedy: John and Robert Kennedy International Airport, Boston (KJFK)
37. Albert Gore: Al Gore International Airport, Nashville (KBNA)
38. George Bush: none
39. Hubert H. Humphrey: Hubert Humphrey International Airport, Minneapolis-St. Paul (KMSP)
40. Abraham Ribicoff: none
41. George Bush: none
42. Al Gore, Jr.: Al Gore International Airport, Nashville (KBNA)
43. Henry Cisneros: Henry Cisneros International Airport, San Antonio (KSAT)
44. Win Rockefeller: Winthrop Rockefeller National Airport, Little Rock (KLIT)
45. William Weld: none
46. Harry Reid: Harry Reid International Airport, Las Vegas (KLAS)
47. Linda McMahon: none
48. Mark Shriver: none
 
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Political Career of Tulsi Gabbard


2002 - 2004: Hawaii State Legislator from the 43rd district (Democrat)
2002 (Democratic primaries): Rida T.R. Cabanilla, Rodolfo V. Ramos
2002: Alfonso Jimenez (Republican)
2004 (Democratic Primaries): Rida T.R. Cabanilla

2004 - 2009: Member of the Hawaii Army National Guard
2011 - 2012: Honolulu City Councillor from the 6th district (Democrat)
2010 (first round): Sesnita Der-Ling Moepono (Nonpartisan), Shawn Hamamoto (Nonpartisan), Frank A. Lavoie (Nonpartisan), Christopher J. Wong (Nonpartisan)
2010 (second round): Sesnita Der-Ling Moepono (Nonpartisan)

2013 - 2021: Congresswoman from Hawaii’s 2nd district (Democrat)
2012 (Democratic primaries): Mufi Hannemann, Esther Kia’āina
2012: Kawika Crowley (Republican)
2014 (Democratic primaries): unopposed
2014: Kawika Crowley (Republican)
2016 (Democratic primaries): Shay Chan Hodges
2016: Angela Aulani Kaaihue (Republican)
2018 (Democratic primaries): Sherry Alu Campagna
2018: Brian Evans (Republican)

2013 - 2016: Vice Chair of the Democratic National Committee
2019 - 2020: Candidate for the 2020 Democratic Presidential nomination
2020: Bernie Sanders, Michael Bloomberg, Pete Buttigieg, Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, Tom Steyer, Tulsi Gabbard
2020 - 2020: National Co-Chair of the 2020 Green Party Presidential Campaign
2020 defeated by Donald Trump / Mike Pence (Republican): Michael Bloomberg / Pete Buttigieg (Democrat), Jesse Ventura / Nina Turner (Green), Jacob Hornberger / John Monds (Libertarian)
2021 - 2022: Political Commentator on Fox News (Democrat)
2022 - 2022: Candidate for the United States Senate from Hawaii (Forward)
2022: Brian Schatz (Democrat), Tulsi Gabbard (Forward), Bob McDermott (Republican)
2022 - 2024: Political Commentator on Fox News (Forward)
2024 - 2024: Nominee for Vice-President of the United States (Forward)
2024 defeated by Donald Trump, Jr. / Kristi Noem (Republican): Pete Buttigieg / Stacey Abrams (Democrat), Nina Turner / Marianne Williamson (Movement for a People’s Party), Andrew Yang / Tulsi Gabbard (Forward), David Jolly / Greg Orman (Serve America Movement)
2025 - 2026: Secretary of Veterans Affairs (Forward)
Nominated by Donald Trump, Jr. (Republican): Confirmed 53-45
2026 - 2026: Secretary of Defense (Forward)
Nominated by Donald Trump, Jr. (Republican): Confirmed 54-46
2027 - 2029: Secretary of Defense (Republican)
2029 - 2033: Vice-President of the United States (Republican)
2028 Donald Trump, Jr. / Tulsi Gabbard (Republican): Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez / Adam Schiff (Democrat), Lee Carter / Caleb Maupin (Popular Front), Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson / Henry Cuellar (Independent)

2033 - 2035: United States Ambassador to India (Republican)
Nominated by Stephen Miller (Republican): Confirmed 60-16
2035 - 20XX: Deputy Charwoman of the Patriotic Government-in-Exile (Republican)


2017 - 2021: Donald Trump / Mike Pence (Republican)
2016: Hillary Clinton / Tim Kaine (Democrat), Gary Johnson / Bill Weld (Libertarian), Jill Stein / Ajamu Baraka (Green)

2020: Michael Bloomberg / Pete Buttigieg (Democrat), Jesse Ventura / Nina Turner (Green), Jacob Hornberger / John Monds (Libertarian)
2021 - 2022: Donald Trump (Republican) / vacant
2022 - 2025: Donald Trump / Mike Pompeo (Republican)
2025 - 2029: Donald Trump, Jr. / Kristi Noem (Republican)
2024: Pete Buttigieg / Stacey Abrams (Democrat), Nina Turner / Marianne Williamson (Movement for a People’s Party), Andrew Yang / Tulsi Gabbard (Forward), David Jolly / Greg Orman (Save America Movement)
2029 - 2033: Donald Trump, Jr. / Tulsi Gabbard (Republican)
2028: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez / Adam Schiff (Democrat), Lee Carter / Caleb Maupin (Popular Front), Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson / Henry Cuellar (Independent)
2033 - 2035: Stephen Miller / Herschel Walker (Republican)
2032: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez / Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (Democrat), Glenn Greenwald / Kyrsten Sinema (United Opposition), Caleb Maupin / Jimmy Dore (Popular Front against American Imperialism,
Rod Dreher / Charles A. Coulombe (Solidarity)
2035 - 2036: Charles A. Flynn (Millitary Emergency Government)
2036 - 20XX: Sara Nelson / Christian Smalls (Progressive)
2036 (Special): Charles A. Flynn / Kristi Noem (Independent), Roy Moore / Nick Fuentes (Republican), Eric Ulrich / Bruce D. Broussard (Moderate), Caleb Maupin / Mustapha Farrakhan Jr. (Popular Front against American Imperialism), Rod Dreher / various (Solidarity), Ricky Harrington Jr. / Todd Hagopian (Libertarian USA), Briahna Joy Gray / Henry Magowan (Populist)
 
Political Career of Tulsi Gabbard


2002 - 2004: Hawaii State Legislator from the 43rd district (Democrat)
2002 (Democratic primaries): Rida T.R. Cabanilla, Rodolfo V. Ramos
2002: Alfonso Jimenez (Republican)
2004 (Democratic Primaries): Rida T.R. Cabanilla

2004 - 2009: Member of the Hawaii Army National Guard
2011 - 2012: Honolulu City Councillor from the 6th district (Democrat)
2010 (first round): Sesnita Der-Ling Moepono (Nonpartisan), Shawn Hamamoto (Nonpartisan), Frank A. Lavoie (Nonpartisan), Christopher J. Wong (Nonpartisan)
2010 (second round): Sesnita Der-Ling Moepono (Nonpartisan)

2013 - 2021: Congresswoman from Hawaii’s 2nd district (Democrat)
2012 (Democratic primaries): Mufi Hannemann, Esther Kia’āina
2012: Kawika Crowley (Republican)
2014 (Democratic primaries): unopposed
2014: Kawika Crowley (Republican)
2016 (Democratic primaries): Shay Chan Hodges
2016: Angela Aulani Kaaihue (Republican)
2018 (Democratic primaries): Sherry Alu Campagna
2018: Brian Evans (Republican)

2013 - 2016: Vice Chair of the Democratic National Committee
2019 - 2020: Candidate for the 2020 Democratic Presidential nomination
2020: Bernie Sanders, Michael Bloomberg, Pete Buttigieg, Joe Biden, Elizabeth Warren, Amy Klobuchar, Tom Steyer, Tulsi Gabbard
2020 - 2020: National Co-Chair of the 2020 Green Party Presidential Campaign
2020 defeated by Donald Trump / Mike Pence (Republican): Michael Bloomberg / Pete Buttigieg (Democrat), Jesse Ventura / Nina Turner (Green), Jacob Hornberger / John Monds (Libertarian)
2021 - 2022: Political Commentator on Fox News (Democrat)
2022 - 2022: Candidate for the United States Senate from Hawaii (Forward)
2022: Brian Schatz (Democrat), Tulsi Gabbard (Forward), Bob McDermott (Republican)
2022 - 2024: Political Commentator on Fox News (Forward)
2024 - 2024: Nominee for Vice-President of the United States (Forward)
2024 defeated by Donald Trump, Jr. / Kristi Noem (Republican): Pete Buttigieg / Stacey Abrams (Democrat), Nina Turner / Marianne Williamson (Movement for a People’s Party), Andrew Yang / Tulsi Gabbard (Forward), David Jolly / Greg Orman (Serve America Movement)
2025 - 2026: Secretary of Veterans Affairs (Forward)
Nominated by Donald Trump, Jr. (Republican): Confirmed 53-45
2026 - 2026: Secretary of Defense (Forward)
Nominated by Donald Trump, Jr. (Republican): Confirmed 54-46
2027 - 2029: Secretary of Defense (Republican)
2029 - 2033: Vice-President of the United States (Republican)
2028 Donald Trump, Jr. / Tulsi Gabbard (Republican): Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez / Adam Schiff (Democrat), Lee Carter / Caleb Maupin (Popular Front), Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson / Henry Cuellar (Independent)

2033 - 2035: United States Ambassador to India (Republican)
Nominated by Stephen Miller (Republican): Confirmed 60-16
2035 - 20XX: Deputy Charwoman of the Patriotic Government-in-Exile (Republican)


2017 - 2021: Donald Trump / Mike Pence (Republican)
2016: Hillary Clinton / Tim Kaine (Democrat), Gary Johnson / Bill Weld (Libertarian), Jill Stein / Ajamu Baraka (Green)

2020: Michael Bloomberg / Pete Buttigieg (Democrat), Jesse Ventura / Nina Turner (Green), Jacob Hornberger / John Monds (Libertarian)
2021 - 2022: Donald Trump (Republican) / vacant
2022 - 2025: Donald Trump / Mike Pompeo (Republican)
2025 - 2029: Donald Trump, Jr. / Kristi Noem (Republican)
2024: Pete Buttigieg / Stacey Abrams (Democrat), Nina Turner / Marianne Williamson (Movement for a People’s Party), Andrew Yang / Tulsi Gabbard (Forward), David Jolly / Greg Orman (Save America Movement)
2029 - 2033: Donald Trump, Jr. / Tulsi Gabbard (Republican)
2028: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez / Adam Schiff (Democrat), Lee Carter / Caleb Maupin (Popular Front), Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson / Henry Cuellar (Independent)
2033 - 2035: Stephen Miller / Herschel Walker (Republican)
2032: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez / Carlos Ramirez-Rosa (Democrat), Glenn Greenwald / Kyrsten Sinema (United Opposition), Caleb Maupin / Jimmy Dore (Popular Front against American Imperialism,
Rod Dreher / Charles A. Coulombe (Solidarity)
2035 - 2036: Charles A. Flynn (Millitary Emergency Government)
2036 - 20XX: Sara Nelson / Christian Smalls (Progressive)
2036 (Special): Charles A. Flynn / Kristi Noem (Independent), Roy Moore / Nick Fuentes (Republican), Eric Ulrich / Bruce D. Broussard (Moderate), Caleb Maupin / Mustapha Farrakhan Jr. (Popular Front against American Imperialism), Rod Dreher / various (Solidarity), Ricky Harrington Jr. / Todd Hagopian (Libertarian USA), Briahna Joy Gray / Henry Magowan (Populist)
Hard to imagine Caleb Maupin becoming anything that’s not a complete joke
 
you can blame @gentleman biaggi for this cursed nonsense

1949-1957: Harold Stassen (Republican)
1948 (with Earl Warren) def. Strom Thurmond ('Southern' Democratic), Harry S Truman ('Official' Democratic)
1952 (with Earl Warren) def. J. William Fulbright (Democratic), Joe McCarthy (Anti-Communist)

1957-1961: Earl Warren (Republican)
1956 (with Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.) def. William F. Knowland (Anti-Communist), Estes Kefauver (Democratic)
1961-1969: Hubert H. Humphrey (Anti-Communist)
1960 (with Richard M. Nixon) def. Earl Warren (Republican), Happy Chandler (Democratic)
1964 (with Richard M. Nixon) def. Ezra Taft Benson (Democratic), Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (Republican)

1969-1977: Richard M. Nixon (Anti-Communist)
1968 (with John Connally) def. George Wallace (Democratic), Robert F. Kennedy (Republican), Eugene McCarthy (Peace and Freedom)
1972 (with John Connally) def. John Rarick (Democratic),
Pete McCloskey (Republican)
1977-1978: John Connally (Anti-Communist)
1976; disputed; (with William F. Buckley) def. Jesse Helms (Democratic), Frank Church (Republican)
1978-1980: William F. Buckley (Anti-Communist)
1980-1981: David C. Jones (Nonpartisan / Military)
1981-1985: Harold Stassen (Nonpartisan / National Unity)
1980 (with Ron Dellums) def. effectively unopposed
1985-1993: Ron Dellums (Republican)
1984 (with Glen Stassen) def. Jesse Helms (Democratic), Lowell P. Weicker (Liberal)
1988 (with Glen Stassen) def. Jack Kemp (Democratic), Lee Iacocca (Independent)

1993-0000: Glen Stassen (Republican)
1992 (with Jesse Jackson) def. Al Gore Jr. (Democratic)
 
List of Mayors of Sulgrave, Northamptonshire

1953–1961: Field Marshal Sir David Kenworthy


Sir David Kenworthy didn't have to retire from the public eye so soon. After the war, the celebrated Field Marshal was one of the most prominent men on the world's stage--universities were offering him visiting professorships, both major parties offered him a safe seat and the position of Foreign Secretary, and the King even offered him an earldom. It was quite a shock, even to old Army colleagues, when he chose to retire to the small village of Sulgrave (pop. roughly 400), and an even greater shock when the local council elected him Mayor. The mayorship may have been a mere ceremonial post, but it was no secret why the council wanted Sir David. His star power, so to speak, attracted attention to local business like never before, and this little village experienced a microscopic boom. Ever popular, and with the local economy continuing to grow, it seemed as though the mayoralty was his so long as he wanted it. He chose to retire after eight years as mayor, slightly disappointing his admirers, and began his well-deserved retirement.

1961–1963: Thomas MacBride

A progressive wave had swept over Sulgrave in the last few council elections, and when the old Field Marshal retired, the councillors elected Thomas MacBride to replace him. A young lawyer with experience at the Crown Prosecution Service, MacBride was the son of an Irish immigrant who became a successful trader in London. He may not have commanded the same star power as the Kenworthy years, but his youth and charisma electrified the village. His London connections proved useful, and speculations were rampant that he'd soon stand for Parliament. He was an active supporter of the national government's progressive social policies, and eagerly brought them to Sulgrave. However, residents of Sulgrave perhaps best remember MacBride for the events of one fateful trip he took to London. Amidst speculation that he had been recruited to stand for Parliament, MacBride's car was struck by a bus on the motorway. The wounds proved fatal.

1963–1969: Sir Nicholas Allred

Following a period of mourning, the council voted in Sir Nicholas Allred, a former MP and Leader of the House of Commons who had settled in Sulgrave following an early retirement. Allred had made many enemies in his time in Westminster, but the council, his no-nonsense approach and unparalleled powers of persuasion, selected him anyway. Allred's mayoralty was effective at first--his connections proved useful in securing government resources and financing developments for the village--but when news from Westminster came that an old political rival was appointed Local Government Minister, the council grew worried. Sure enough, the old feud was far from dead, and rumors of backroom threats to cut funding reached the ears of some of the councillors. With Allred unwilling to put on a conciliatory face and heal old wounds, councillors stepped in and called for his resignation, which he chose to do rather than face a humiliating defeat at the next annual mayoral election. Councillor Herbert Hamilton-Halsey, Allred's closest ally on the council, stepped in as interim mayor, intending to seek a full term.

1969–1969: Herbert Hamilton-Halsey
1969–1975: Bernard Dickinson


Alas, it was not to be: though Hamilton-Halsey had far fewer enemies than his predecessor, he also had fewer friends. Though the vote was tight, the final count had him losing to well-connected barrister Bernard Dickinson. Though it was no secret that the once-ceremonial post of mayor had lately become deeply political (most notably under Allred's leadership), Dickinson brought this new shift into the public eye. He made no secret of his governmental connections to win support from the council, and he used these connections to forge closer industrial cooperation with nearby towns and cities. What he did keep secret, however, was his sprawling political network of solicitors, operatives, and loyal aides who carried out the less-than-legal tasks a small-town mayor couldn't do alone. Dickinson's early successes--and a lack of viable opponents--got him handily re-elected six times, but everything began to unravel in 1975. It all began when a junior aide, disgruntled after being sacked by Dickinson's chief of staff, called a staff writer for the Sulgrave Herald. The aide knew of nothing more than a few cases of intimidation and bribery by more senior operatives, but the resulting found, in a matter of months, that individuals connected with the mayor installed listening devices in the offices of opposition councillors, and that Dickinson himself had personally received bribes from major corporations to allow them to make inroads in Sulgrave, a deeply unpopular development that put numerous small business owners out of business. A photograph taken of Dickinson meeting with a petrol company representative in a London café proved to be the proverbial bloody knife, sealing his political fate. In a speech that some believe to have been delivered while drunk, er, tired and emotional, Dickinson announced his immediate resignation.

1975–1977: Giles Austin
1977–1981: Harold Howe


Recognizing the need for change, the council elected one of their own, Giles Austin, to the mayor's post. A former political ally of Dickinson's who had quickly turned against him upon the emergence of the allegations, Austin was deemed the perfect balance between continuity and change for the moment. Though the citizens of Sulgrave never forgot his past support of the disgraced ex-mayor, modern residents look more kindly upon him for his success in "steadying the ship" following the scandals that rocked the small town. Austin served for two years before losing re-election to Harold Howe, the well-liked owner of a farm on the outskirts of the village. Howe's down-to-earth approach earned him goodwill from his fellow citizens, and his status as a relative outsider was a breath of fresh air to both councillors and constituents alike. Howe's mayoralty was marked by modest progress as Sulgrave's reputation began to repair itself.

1981–1988: Raymond Townes

By 1981, however, a challenger emerged. Raymond Townes, the Sulgrave native and successful West End playwright and director, moved back to his hometown and, soon enough, it was clear that he was putting out feelers for a challenge to Howe and his allies on the council. Sure enough, the charismatic thespian, master of both the grand poetic speech and the ever-popular straight talk, won both the mayoralty as well as a landslide in the council for his allies. There may have been some who thought that this meant a return to mayors who did little more than speeches and ribbon-cuttings, but they were wrong. With the backing of a strong majority of the council, Townes pushed through his plan of cuts to the council housing and public healthcare budgets, earning the deep ire of many of the town's poorer residents. Business owners and wealthier citizens, meanwhile, reveled in Townes's cuts to local taxes on the biggest earners. Townes nevertheless remained popular throughout his mayoralty, and opted to retire in 1988.

1988–1993: Julian Wakefield-Browne, 1st Viscount Tenterden

To replace him, the council turned in a different direction. During Townes's term, the retired diplomat Julian Wakefield-Browne, regarded as one of the top men in the Foreign Office, retired and settled down in Sulgrave. Ennobled shortly after as Viscount Tenterden, he quickly became a prominent figure in village life. It was no surprise, then, that Lord Tenterden defeated the affable but less well-connected solicitor Anthony Christodoulou to succeed the retiring mayor. Translating his diplomatic skills to something more domestic, Tenterden worked to increase cooperation with neighboring towns and cities, just as Parliament was debating local government reforms that would open up the possibility for metropolitan consolidation, more powerful councils, and greater resource sharing. Though sympathetic to Townes's financial policy, he walked back some of his predecessor's harsher cuts and increased taxes, despite earlier plans to not do so.

1993–2001: Samuel Hope

With an economic recession sweeping across Britain and the Continent, the aristocratic Tenterden lost popularity as a challenger emerged in Samuel Hope. Raised in council housing by a single mother, Hope had made his way out of poverty to earn a scholarship to Cambridge and made a living and a name for himself as a successful solicitor. With his wife (and law partner) Janet Hope by his side, he defeated Lord Tenterden at the 1993 election and assumed the mayorship for a new generation.

A charismatic and engaging speaker, Hope gained popularity especially from younger voters, whose support was crucial in unseating many of Townes and Tenterden's allies on the council. He carried out several major reforms to local government and utility operations, earning him and his allies repeated electoral successes. In 2000, however, scandal once again reared its head in Sulgrave. Rumors began to emerge of Hope carrying out an affair with a junior councillor. Despite his advisers' best attempts to allow the rumor to die a natural death, nothing could stop the barrage of allegations. His public denial was ineffective and failed to quell the suspicions. He ultimately stepped down in 2001, leading the people of Sulgrave to go in yet another direction for its new mayor.

2001–2009: The Hon. Jeremy Julian Wakefield-Browne

The Honourable Jeremy Julian Wakefield-Browne, so styled as the son of a viscount, had largely the same upper-class upbringing as his father. After his studies, he entered the world of business and eventually became the co-owner of an English Football League club. Despite the inevitable comparisons to his father, he was his own man. Citizens found him less cerebral but more personable, less diplomatic but more decisive. These attributes proved useful early on in his term when a bomb went off at a local community center, killing twenty and injuring fifteen. Wakefield-Browne promised a swift and thorough investigation, which he promised to personally coordinate in cooperation with the local police and national authorities. The Sulgrave Bomber, as the perpetrator became known, initially proved to be an enigma until police found evidence linking the bomb to a Sulgrave native who had moved to London as a young man. No paper trail was found and few records proved useful in locating him, and despite numerous sightings, the local government and police could not find him. In spite of this, the bombing led to an era of increased unity and solidarity among the people of Sulgrave, and Wakefield-Browne (commonly known simply as "Jules")'s popularity soared.

In the months and years following the bombing, Wakefield-Browne appealed to the community's sense of patriotism and lobbied hard for the construction of an RAF training facility to be built within the borders of Sulgrave. This deeply divided residents, with some worried about the increased costs and traffic, but with the post-bombing sentiment still looming, a local plebiscite turned out 67-33 in favor of the construction. Wakefield-Browne opted to retire after eight years in the mayor's post, and a new face emerged to replace him.

2009–2017: Neil Gupta

Neil Gupta, the mixed-race son of a Sulgrave native and an Indian graduate student, was born and raised in Sulgrave and worked as a community organizer and activist before obtaining a law degree and becoming a law professor. Upon the announcement that he would seek the mayorship, rumors began to emerge, especially among older and more conservative residents, that Gupta was ineligible to serve because he was not a British citizen. Though records disproved that claim almost immediately, the racist stunt by the so-called "birthers" was emblematic of a rising populist tide that would reach its peak less than a decade later. With residents gradually growing tired of Wakefield-Browne's leadership, and a wave of new young voters backing progressive councillors, Gupta was handily elected mayor in 2009. Under Gupta's direction, the cuts to local health services under Townes were finally completely reversed and the budget was even increased to purchase new ambulances and hire more nurses and assistants. Measures were passed to protect LGBT+ residents, the council and local government agencies promoted solar and wind energy as alternatives to non-renewable sources, and foundations were laid to take on the local government reforms offered by the national government. It was also under his mayoralty that authorities finally located and apprehended the Sulgrave Bomber, leading to a second wave of public unity, this time combined with widespread celebration. He elected to retire in 2017, and a familiar name emerged to replace him.

2017–2018: Janet Hope

Though their time in power ended in scandal, Samuel and Janet Hope quickly rebuilt their reputation. They returned to their law practice and Samuel even served as informal legal advisors to Wakefield-Browne and Gupta. In 2002, Janet stood for the local council, and won a seat despite the popularity of Wakefield-Browne and his allies. As a leading councillor, she was the frontrunner to succeed Gupta, who publicly endorsed her. In office, however, she lacked the charisma and dynamism of her husband or her predecessor, and despite her legal successes and impressive personal background, she was ultimately forced to contend with the forces of populism.

2018–2021: James Randall Burton

The wealthiest man in Sulgrave (or so he claimed, other sources put him at number two), James Randall Burton was a successful restaurateur known for his loose tongue. Previously an apolitical figure who donated to both Tenterden and Hope, Burton's decision to enter politics rocked the village. When campaign season geared up in 2017, Burton made no secret of the fact that he financed the campaigns of several council candidates--the Sulgrave First Team--who in turn pledged to elect him mayor the following year. Sure enough, they unseated numerous incumbents on a platform of resistance to local government reform and consolidation, a moratorium on new residents, and general loyalty to Burton. With his allies firmly in place, Burton was elected mayor in 2018. Once in office, his pronouncements gained widespread notoriety among fellow mayors, MPs, and even the Housing and Communities Secretary, who personally interjected to block his attempts to bar people from moving to Sulgrave. While opposition grew, it seemed as though his support base would not shrink, and indeed, it may have even grown. With the help of his chief ally Graham Shilling, a deeply conservative councillor and brother of the local vicar, the council passed a number of right-wing measures, delighting his base and incensing his opponents.

All came crashing down for Burton when the COVID-19 pandemic hit Britain. In contrast to other mayors and local executives, Burton downplayed the crisis, eschewing the wearing of masks and making rude comments about public health officials. When the national government rolled out their vaccination plan, he actively opposed it and worked against it, sharing anti-vaccine comments on government social media accounts. His allies suffered at the ballot box, and his popularity continued to sink.

2021–0000: Sir Dominic Flanagan, 1st Baronet

In response, the people turned to Sir Dominic Flanagan. The longest-serving councillor in Sulgrave's history (and perhaps the longest-serving incumbent councillor in the country), Flanagan had held his seat for 48 years and been the council's president for the last ten. He had even been given a baronetcy in recognition of his service to local government. His son Dom was previously speculated as a future councillor--perhaps even an MP--but he was killed in action while serving abroad as an Army officer. When the time came, Flanagan defeated Burton in 2021, becoming mayor after almost five decades of public service. Time will tell what becomes of Sulgrave after centuries of village life--Flanagan has expressed openness to finalizing the plans for consolidation into West Northamptonshire--but one thing is clear: political life in Sulgrave will never cease to excite.
 
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom:

1930-1935: David Lloyd-George (Centre)
1930 (Majority) def: Arthur Henderson (Labour), St John Brodrick, 1st Earl of Midleton (Unionist), Herbert Samuel (Liberal)
1935-1936: Tom Johnston (Labour)
1935 (Majority) def: David Lloyd-George (Centre), Archibald Sinclair (Liberal), St John Brodrick, 1st Earl of Midleton (Unionist), John Hargreave (Social Credit)
1936-1937: Edmund Ironside (Military leading ‘Action Coalition’)
1937-1942: David Lloyd-George (Action)

1937 (Majority) def: John Beckett (National Labour), Hastings William Sackville Russell, 12th Duke of Bedford (National Social Credit), Arnold Leese (Syncretic League)
1941 Elections Cancelled due to ‘Anti-Socialist War’

1942-1943: William Richard Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield (Action leading War Coalition)
1943-: Edmund Ironside (Military leading War Coalition)†
1944-1945: John Beckett (Action leading War Coalition)

1945-: Wilfred Risdon (Action leading Armistice Coalition)

Designated Leaders of the British Liberation Army:
1937-1939: Len Wincott (Workers-Navy)
1939-1941: Clement Attlee (Labour-Army)†
1941-1944: Tom Wintringham (Workers-Army)
1944-1945: Louis Mountbatten (Labour-Navy)


Designated Leaders of the British Land Force:
1937-1940: John Hargrave (Kibbo Krift)†
1940-1943: Oliver Baldwin (Labour)
1943-1945: Leslie Paul (Kibbo Krift)


Premier of the British Union:

1945-1950: George C. Marshall (Independent leading Anti-Actionist Reconstruction Forces)
1950-1960: Anthony Eden (National Democratic)

1950 def: Tom Wintringham (Workers), Innes Hope Pearse (Social Credit)
1955 def: Nye Bevan (Labour), Wilfrid Roberts (Liberal), Oliver Lyttelton (Free Trade), Robert McIntryre (Alba)

1960-: Louis Mountbatten (Labour)
1960 def: Harold Macmillan (National Democratic), Emrys Hughes (New Democracy), Oliver Lyttelton (Free Trade)

Prime Minister of the British Union:

1945-1950: Anthony Eden (National Democratic)
1945 (‘Grand Coalition’) def: Manny Shillwell (Labour), Wilfrid Roberts (Liberal), Leslie Paul (Social Credit), Tom Wintringham (Workers)
1950-1959: Oliver Baldwin (Labour)
1950 (‘Grand Coalition’) def: Harold Macmillan (National Democratic), Wilfrid Roberts (Liberal), Leslie Paul (Social Credit), Tom Wintringham (Workers)
1954 (Majority) def: Harold Macmillan (National Democratic), Richard Acland (Liberal), Oliver Lyttelton (Free Trade), Innes Hope Pearse (Social Credit), Thora Silverthorne-Clem Beckett (Workers), Robert McIntryre (Alba)

1959-: Edward G.Hulton (National Democratic)
1959 (Majority) def: Oliver Baldwin (Labour), Richard Acland (New Democracy), Innes Hope Pearse-Ross Nichols (Social Credit), Oliver Lyttelton (Free Trade), Thora Silverthorne-John Peck (Workers)

The Last Days of Lloyd George:
(2021, Dir. Sally Potter)

How do we remember the wonderful and brilliant actor Paul Ritter? Is it for his excellent work in Television Sitcoms or for his work on Broadway and the West End?

The answer is neither, we’ll talk about the fine and final collaboration with Sally Potter instead, the Last Days of Lloyd George in which Paul Ritter plays the illustrious and infamous Prime Minister in final days of his life is probably the best way to analyse the legacy of Paul Ritter, in a film which is both as funny as it is bleak.

The film starts in 1948 as Lloyd-George is being kept alive the best he can under house arrest. Most days he’s visited by his Anti-Actionist and Liberal MP daughter Megan (Rebecca Root) and is kept under guard by Capitan Denis Healey (Mathew Baynton) who is belligerent with the former Prime Minister. Paul Ritter uses these moments showcase a mixture of the warmth and vulnerable side of Lloyd-George alongside his pathetic broken shell that we see throughout much of the film, trying to pass the buck onto others.

Throughout the film, there are numerous hallucinations provided by Animation director Rob Szczerba in which Lloyd-George tries to reconcile the death of his son Gwylim, see’s nightmarish visions of Ironside, Mosley and Beckett and some slightly more peaceful visions of Frances Stevenson who tries to comfort him the best she can. These moments provide a sense of the guilt Lloyd-George feels and is inspired by actual dreams he had according to his diary he kept under house arrest.

Much of the film is seeing the brilliant Ritter try and make us find some humanity in a figure of utter horror in our lives and managing to succeed quite easily in presenting a man who most see as just another dictator...

(Related to that on of Oswald Mosley making Ireland his own Fascist Fiefdom).
 
List of Prime Ministers of Canada

1964–1970: Tommy Douglas (New Democratic)

1964 def. George Hees (Progressive Conservative), Jean Marchand (Liberal)
1966 def. Robert Stanfield (Progressive Conservative), Jean Marchand (Liberal)

1970–1974: Robert Stanfield (Progressive Conservative)
1970 def. Tommy Douglas (New Democratic), Paul Hellyer (Liberal)
1974–1976: Tommy Douglas (New Democratic)
Feb. 1974 def. Robert Stanfield (Progressive Conservative), Paul Hellyer (Liberal), René Levesque (Parti National)
Oct. 1974 def. Robert Stanfield (Progressive Conservative), Paul Hellyer (Liberal), René Levesque (Parti National)

1976–1979: David Lewis (New Democratic)
1979–1990: Flora MacDonald (Progressive Conservative)

1979 def. David Lewis (New Democratic), John Turner (Liberal)
1983 def. Mel Watkins (New Democratic), John Turner (Liberal)
1987 def. Ed Broadbent (New Democratic), John Turner (Liberal)

1990–1997: Brian Mulroney (Progressive Conservative)
1992 def. Ed Broadbent (New Democratic), John McCallum (Liberal)
1997–2007: Tom Mulcair (New Democratic)
1997 def. Brian Mulroney (Progressive Conservative), John McCallum (Liberal)
2001 def. Bernard Lord (Progressive Conservative), Gerard Kennedy (Liberal)
2005 def. Vic Toews (Progressive Conservative), Gerard Kennedy (Liberal)

2007–2010: Robert Chisholm (New Democratic)
2010–2016: Scott Brison (Progressive Conservative-Liberal coalition, then Progressive Conservative)

2010 def. Robert Chisholm (New Democratic), Justin Trudeau (Liberal)
2015 def. Peter Julian (New Democratic), Martine Ouellet (Parti National), Justin Trudeau (Liberal)

2016–2019: Christy Clark (Progressive Conservative)
2017 def. Alexandre Boulerice (New Democratic), Martine Ouellet (Parti National), Stéphane Dion (Liberal)
2019–0000: Doug Ford (Progressive Conservative)
2019 def. Alexandre Boulerice (New Democratic), Martine Ouellet (Parti National), Mélanie Joly (Liberal)
 
You know what would be a really interesting leader list for someone who's not me to make? A US presidents list from a timeline where George Washington decided not to come out of retirement to become president in 1788 and the US had to figure out someone else to do it. Could have very interesting effects on the early development of US political precedents and the question of a peaceful transition of power between heads of state, while also not really messing with the Constitution itself.
 
Working on an entry for the Personal Downfall HoS contest, it's getting pretty interesting already. TL;DR: Typical Alaska-as-a-Russian-Taiwan scenario, only with way less "last bastion of Tsarism against the Bolsheviks universally recognized by the West until WW2, something something reclaim the birthright" than you normally see and way more "Alexander Kolchak as Chiang Kai-shek in Taiwan, but he becomes an alcoholic and spends all day drinking in his dacha and crying while the actual country is a dysfunctional political pawn that the US and Japan are both trying to win over to their side during the interwar period, and also literally everyone is incredibly antisemitic."
 
Career of Tupac Shakur
1986-1988: Member, Baltimore Young Communist League USA
1989-1991: Private citizen, roadie and backup dancer for Digital Underground
1991-1996: Political activist

- involved in a lawsuit against the Oakland PD for police brutality
- acted as a functionary for the CPUSA Committees of Correspondence with Angela Davis

1992: Peace and Freedom candidate for California State Assembly (15th District)
lost to Richard Rainey, Charles W. Brydon
1996-2002: Oakland City Councillor (District 2)

'96: defeated John Russo
'98: defeated Phil Tagami
'00: defeated Danny Wan

2000: Regional coordinator for Ralph Nader 2000 (presidential campaign)
Nader/DeLuke lost to Gore/Bradley, Bush/Danforth
2002: Democratic candidate for California's 11th district (Nonpartisan primary)
lost to Richard Pombo
2003-2004: Political activist
- member of the East Bay Democratic Socialists Steering Committee
2004-2006: Representative for California's 13th District
- elected by California Governor Ron Dellums to finish the term of Secretary of State-elect Pete Stark
2006: Democratic Party candidate for California's 13th District (Nonpartisan primary)
defeated George Bruno, Howard Mora
- switched affiliation to independent upon winning part primary

2007-2012: Representative for California's 13th District
'08: defeated Raymond Chui
'10: defeated
Forest Baker, Marilyn M. Singleton (write-in)
2008: Democrat candidate for Vice President of the United States

- nominated with Bernie Sanders
Sanders/Shakur
lost to
Giuliani/Brownback
2012: Democrat primary candidate for President of the United States

defeated Andrew Cuomo, Bill Richardson, Tom Vilsack, others
2013-20XX: President of the United States
Shakur/Teachout defeated Giuliani/Brownback

Career of Marion "Suge" Knight
1987: Defensive end, Los Angeles Rams

- drafted as a a replacement player during the 1987 NFL Players Strike
1987-1989: Strongside linebacker, Las Vegas Raiders
1990-1991: Private citizen, entrepreneur
1991-1992: Offensive guard, Minnesota Vikings
1992-1995: Defensive tackle, San Diego Chargers
1995-1997: Prisoner, Herlong Federal Correctional Institution

- arrested and sentenced on charges of stalking, racketeering and witness intimidation
1997-1998: Private citizen, public speaker
1998-2001: Defensive coach, New England Patriots
2001-2006: Private citizen, restaurant owner
2007-20XX: Prisoner, Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility

- arrested and sentenced on charges of bribery, federal fraud, conspiracy and racketeering
 
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Days Like These: How I Would Do It Now;

1991-1994: Bryan Gould (Labour)
1991 (Majority) def: Margaret Thatcher (Conservative), Paddy Ashdown (Liberal Democrats), David Alton (Social Democrats)
1993 Maastricht Referendum: Yes 51%, No 49%

1994-2000: Margaret Beckett (Labour)
1995 (Majority) def: Michael Howard (Conservative), Paddy Ashdown (Liberal Democrats)
2000-2007: Francis Maude (Conservative)
2000 (Majority) def: Margaret Beckett (Labour), Don Foster (Liberal Democrats)
2004 (Majority) def: Peter Mandelson (Labour), Don Foster (Liberal Democrats), Robert Kilroy-Silk (Independence), Ron Davies-Lynne Jones (Forward!)

2007-2009: Liam Fox (Conservative)
2009-: Peter Hain (Labour)
2009 (Coalition with Liberal Democrats) def: Liam Fox (Conservative), Simon Hughes (Liberal Democrats), Robert Kilroy-Silk (Independence)
2010 MMP Referendum: Yes 54%, No 46%


Bryan Gould’s tenure as leader and Prime Minister is a short one. Whilst able to win an election with a majority of ten, Gould spends as much time battling his cabinet and being easily distracted by economic problems as much as running the country. Still, the National Investment Bank, The Industrial Democracy Act and some rescinding of Thatcherite Trade Union laws would be part of Gould’s positive legacy. Gould’s attempt to force a referendum of the ERM and Maastricht leads to a narrow victory for the Yes Vote and Gould decides that his ideals for Britain have been shot through.

After three years as Prime Minister, Gould would resign though he would ensure that suitable leader is brought about in his place, with Margaret Beckett being deemed the most reasonable candidate to unite the Gouldites and Europhiles under a vaguely Soft Left banner, easily beating Gordon Brown to the punch. With Robin Cook staying on as Chancellor, Gould’s economic plans continue unabated despite Beckett’s insistence on some fiscal restraint with public spending being reduced in some areas despite Gould’s grumblings.

Beckett’s 6 years reestablish an attempt at very British Social Democracy, but having come to the realisation that maybe going full on Thatcher in a Post-Gould age doesn’t work as well, the Conservative Party elects Francis Maude as leader. Maude’s tack towards the Centre, combined with the appearance of the Dot Com Burst in 1999 causing a recession allows Maude to get in on a message of fiscal responsibility.

Maude’s programme of fiscal responsibility mainly consists of austerity measures against public services and hopes amongst the Working Class that Labour would try and stop this are stymied by the appearance of Peter Mandelson as the Populist Voice of Middle England, which mainly consists of calling for the Gouldism but if it was more Corporate and Fiscally Conservative. Populists rise on both sides, as relatively quiet Ron Davies becomes the voice of the Left for young radicals and Robert-Kilroy Silk the voice of ‘forgotten England’.

Maude wins another Majority of the back of this split field as Mandelson loses his seat to an Independence Candidate as Labour collapses to its lowest result since Foot, but the worries in the Conservative Party about Maude inspiring Independence’s actions and fuelling it’s rhetoric of ‘traditional values’ despite what RKS believes cause the Tories to begin finding another possible Prime Minister.

Maude would be forced out after seven years fairly unpopular but his successor of Liam Fox whilst regaining the support of Tory voters who defected to Independence is fairly unlikeable and his continuation of Austere spending and gutting Councils doesn’t lend much support for him. A recession occurs in 2008 and the reaction is a Tory collapse in the polls.

In 2009 the Labour Leader Peter Hain, a former disciple of Gould and voice of Soft Left discontent at the Beckett and Mandelson reforms, gets into power on a message of Reform, Change and Social Democracy. But still his fairly radical ideas cause nervousness and so he is unable to win a majority, but after some discussions with the similarly minded Simon Hughes allows for a Labour-LibDem coalition to emerge.

Gould watches all of this with a mixture of pride and disappointment. Whilst he's happy his version of Socialism is finally getting a proper look in, the creation of an MMP based electoral system for Britain is something he finds not as pleasing.
 
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