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Lists of Heads of Government and Heads of State

The American Tendency

"The very idea that domestic British politics might in some way be influenced from outside is anathema: Italy, under the Christian Democrats, well of course; and, yes, probably Japan under the Liberal Democrats. But Britain, the home of the mother of parliaments? Never." - Tom Easton, 'Who Were They Travelling With?', Lobster 31 (June 1996)



1979-1982: Margaret Thatcher (Conservative)
1979: James Callaghan (Labour), David Steel (Liberal)
1982-1984: Willie Whitelaw (Conservative)
1984-1985: Roy Jenkins (Social Democratic)
1984: Michael Foot (Labour), Willie Whitelaw (Conservative), David Penhaligon [replacing David Steel] (Liberal)
1985-1989: Shirley Williams (Social Democratic)
1989-1999: Robert Maclennan (Social Democratic)
1989: Tony Benn (Labour), John Nott (Conservative), Archy Kirkwood (Liberal), Shirley Williams (Independent Fabian)
1993: Terry Fields (Socialist), Graham Bright (Conservative), Archy Kirkwood (Liberal), Austin Mitchell (Labour Representation Committee)
1997: David Davis (Conservative), Tony Banks (Socialist)*, Frank Field (LRC), David Alton (Liberal)

1999-2001: Stephen Haseler (Social Democratic)
2001-2003: Sue Slipman (Social Democratic)
2001: David Davis (Conservative), Robin Ramsay (Socialist), Bob Marshall-Andrews (LRC), Norman Baker (Liberal), David Campbell-Bannerman (Tory)
2003-: David Davis, Robin Ramsay, Bob Marshall-Andrews, Norman Baker [collective leadership] (Democracy)
2003: Sue Slipman (Social Democratic), Bill Jordan (Freedom Group), David Campbell-Bannerman (Tory), Various (Independent Socialist)

*Tony Banks died during the election campaign, reportedly of a heart attack.
 
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The American Tendency

"The very idea that domestic British politics might in some way be influenced from outside is anathema: Italy, under the Christian Democrats, well of course; and, yes, probably Japan under the Liberal Democrats. But Britain, the home of the mother of parliaments? Never." - Tom Easton, 'Who Were They Travelling With?', Lobster 31 (June 1996)



1979-1982: Margaret Thatcher (Conservative)
1979: James Callaghan (Labour), David Steel (Liberal)
1982-1984: Willie Whitelaw (Conservative)
1984-1985: Roy Jenkins (Social Democratic)
1984: Michael Foot (Labour), Willie Whitelaw (Conservative), David Penhaligon [replacing David Steel] (Liberal)
1985-1989: Shirley Williams (Social Democratic)
1989-1999: Robert Maclennan (Social Democratic)
1989: Tony Benn (Labour), John Nott (Conservative), Archy Kirkwood (Liberal), Shirley Williams (Independent Fabian)
1993: Terry Fields (Socialist), Graham Bright (Conservative), Archy Kirkwood (Liberal), Austin Mitchell (Labour Representation Committee)
1997: David Davis (Conservative), Tony Banks (Socialist)*, Frank Field (LRC), David Alton (Liberal)

1999-2001: Stephen Haseler (Social Democratic)
2001-2003: Sue Slipman (Social Democratic)
2001: David Davis (Conservative), Robin Ramsay (Socialist), Bob Marshall-Andrews (LRC), Norman Baker (Liberal), David Campbell-Bannerman (Tory)
2003-: David Davis, Robin Ramsay, Bob Marshall-Andrews, Norman Baker [collective leadership] (Democracy)
2003: Sue Slipman (Social Democratic), Bill Jordan (Freedom Group), David Campbell-Bannerman (Tory), Various (Independent Socialist)

*Tony Banks died during the election campaign, reportedly of a heart attack.

horrifying

who is that bill jordan tho
 
Here Be Dragons

70-65 million BC: Trinisaura Nixapod - Snow-footed Trinisaur

For reasons that are still debated, bird species went extinct in Antarctica at around this time, and their absence allowed dinosaurs to fill some of the niches that even then were becoming associated with birds. The reasons why are unknown, but in this one part of the world, dinosaurs survived the mass extinction.

65-63 million BC: Trinisaura Minor

A small dinosaur species, fit for a depleted world. The Trinisaur Minor was semi aquatic and survived on a diet of seaweed and land plants, along with insects.

64-59 million BC: Draco Antecessor

Basal dragon - while the ancestors of the Leviathon species evolved to be fully aquatic and developed a predatory diet, the early dragons were land dwelling and subsisted on the dwindling supply of vegetation, a diet they were not suited to. Much like Galapagos Iguanas they could not evolve to digest their diet, but they could essentially cook their food slowly in their guts. In the summer this was possible through basking, but the draco antecessor also broke down its food through internal fermentation, especially in winter. This had the added advantage of generating heat.

62-55 million BC: Draco Leporidae - Hare Dragon

Wolf sized predators started to predate on dragons, and size became an advantage, both to fend off hunters and to survive the long winters. Ironically then, the ancestor of all Dragons was one of the smallest herbivore species. Their unique piston muscles allowed them to make use of their stomach muscles to leap great distances, allowing them to escape hunters

55-47 million BC: Draco Pseudopteromyini - Squirrel Dragon

In the heat of the Paleocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum the forests of Antarctica expanded and times were good for herbivores. The Draco Lepis took to the trees, exchanging leaping for gliding, using their loose back skin as the gliding surface. This allowed them to keep their arms free and take advantage of their strong chest muscles. Some evidence exists that Squirrel Dragons could produce toxic gasses from their mouths as a defensive strategy.

47-41 million BC: Draco Vulpes - Fox Dragon

A larger variety of Squirrel Dragon, this species took up an omnivorous lifestyle of scavanging and some hunting. It is believed it latched onto prey and incapacitated them with its chemical breath, using its wings to steady itself for the kill. This is the earliest specie to be firmly classified as a Great Dragon. It is still debated if the Fox Dragon had fire breathing capabilities,

41-30 million BC: Draco Tarasqua Minor - Lesser Tarascque

The first Great Dragon species to take up an obligate carnivore lifestyle, and, at six foot, one of the biggest predators in the Antarctic at the time. The big innovation of the Tarasque was, however, the power of flight. The strong, gas driven gut muscles of the lesser dragons had migrated to the back, and the ability to fly allowed it to prowl larger areas, which was important for a species that needed to stay active in the ong Antarctic nights.

30-15 million BC: Draco Tarasqua Major - The Greater Tarascque

Very similar to the earlier Tarascque, the big difference was that Tarasqua Major was bigger, some as big as 15 feet long. For the Dragons, larger size meant larger digestive tracts, which were key to its flight. The Great Dragons are the only form of life whose flying ability gets greater the bigger it is. As Antarctica froze, the rest of the southern hemisphere became its hunting grounds. However the declining fauna of the Antarctic had an advantage for a species that nested on the ground. It would forever remain the Dragon's primary spawning ground.

15 million BC - Present Day: Draco Rex - True Dragon

Dragons reached their greatest size as the temperature cooled, and the Draco Rex was adapted for the new ice age. At 30 feet long, the True Dragon is the largest animal in the world and has hunting ranges across the southern hemisphere.

The "True Dragon" earned its name because the animal has been such a major feature of all cultures on Earth - to the extent that it features on the flags of as disparate states as Wales, Bhutan, Mexico, New Zealand, and of course Antarctica. When it was first encountered by Europeans in the 14th century, it was like something out of myth. It seemed unbelievable that such a thing could really exist.

However, it is not the only specie of its type - Leviathans are still a common enough sight at sea, even if climate change and over hunting have seriously impacted their numbers. Smaller Sea Dragons are found across the southern hemisphere, where they fill a similar ecological niche to seals and selkies. Australian Fire Dragons may be smaller, but they are so prolific as to cause major crop damage, in fact in the 1930s the military had to be called in to cull their numbers in an event that is now called The Dragon Wars. New Zealand's own native dragon species survived until the Maoris hunted them to extinction.

In the dry and frozen regions of Antarctica, the True Dragon is the major ecosystem engineer. Their excretions are a major source of nutrients and their burrowing has prevented total freezing of the coast lands. Their dung is also a major source of seeds on a continent where little in the way of native flora survives.

The True Dragon also built the continent in another way - the first explorers, in the early 18th century, arrived in search of their spawning ground and found extreme wealth. The continent was rich in minerals, a good port for whalers, but most importantly, it allowed for the hunting of dragons. Dragon pelts, eggs, meat, and fuel was worth a great deal across the world. So much, in fact, that the continent was seen as too important for any one country to dominate. In 1885, due to its untapped natural wealth, the Berlin Conference granted Antarctica the unique designation of International Dominion. In part, the establishment of the League of Nations and later, the United Nations, was in part because of Dragons.

By the 1940s, that natural wealth had been almost exhausted. True Dragons had become rare, and frightened of humans. Ten years later, the hunting of True Dragons was banned. Modern environmentalism grew out of this effort, which is why the dragon can now be found in the logos of groups like Greeneace and the WWF. The study of dragons drove the development of rocketry, genetics, and Darwin's visit to Antarctica inspired the theory of evolution. Without dragons, modern civilisation would be completely unrecognisable.

Here in Antarctica, dragons are inspiring new generations of scientists, poets, environmentalists, adventurers and many more people who are driven, every year, to explore this place where, due to a heroic international conservation effort, the map still reads Here be Dragons

Information board, Victoria & Wilhelm International Zoo, Antarctica
 
The Wobbly War

1913-1913: Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive)
1912 (with Hiram Johnson) def. Woodrow Wilson (Democratic), William Howard Taft (Republican), Eugene Debs (Socialist)
1913-1914: Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive / Republican)
1914-1914: Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1914-1914: John J. Pershing (Nonpartisan / Military Junta)
1914-1915: de jure vacant, de facto collective government by the Organizing Committee of the General Strike
1915-1917: Hiram Johnson (Progressive / Socialist)
1917-1921: Eugene Debs (Socialist)
1916 (with Bill Haywood) def. Hiram Johnson (Progressive), various regional 'Constitutionalist' tickets
1921-1929: Bill Haywood (Socialist)
1920 (with Lucy Parsons) def. Robert M. La Follette Sr. (Progressive), Emma Goldman (Independent), various regionalist tickets
1924 (with Lucy Parsons) def. Robert M. La Follette Sr. (Progressive), Earl Browder (Jeffersonian Socialist), various regionalist and abstentionist tickets


The US becomes the only country where a general strike to prevent entry into WW1 actually works - this incidentally also gives the French and British the opportunity to clear out their gold reserves - collapsing the value of the dollar. This might have helped the Entente extract goods and war materiel from American industry - if the IWW wasn't in charge and in the process of abolishing wage slavery. This was in fact made easier by the collapse in the value of the dollar and soaring inflation.

Amendments were added to the existing Constitution to enshrine socialism in the United States - and indirectly ban counter-revolutionary parties. The political right ends up channelling itself into tolerated regionalist movements, while the national stage tends to be dominated by the Socialists and other revolutionary (or semi revolutionary parties). The Anarchists put up a fairly substantial abstentionist ticket, while the Jeffersonians have become a thorn in the IWW's side with their calls for a more substantial watering of the nation's roots with blood.
 
The Wobbly War

1913-1913: Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive)
1912 (with Hiram Johnson) def. Woodrow Wilson (Democratic), William Howard Taft (Republican), Eugene Debs (Socialist)
1913-1914: Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive / Republican)
1914-1914: Hiram Johnson (Progressive)
1914-1914: John J. Pershing (Nonpartisan / Military Junta)
1914-1915: de jure vacant, de facto collective government by the Organizing Committee of the General Strike
1915-1917: Hiram Johnson (Progressive / Socialist)
1917-1921: Eugene Debs (Socialist)
1916 (with Bill Haywood) def. Hiram Johnson (Progressive), various regional 'Constitutionalist' tickets
1921-1929: Bill Haywood (Socialist)
1920 (with Lucy Parsons) def. Robert M. La Follette Sr. (Progressive), Emma Goldman (Independent), various regionalist tickets
1924 (with Lucy Parsons) def. Robert M. La Follette Sr. (Progressive), Earl Browder (Jeffersonian Socialist), various regionalist and abstentionist tickets


The US becomes the only country where a general strike to prevent entry into WW1 actually works - this incidentally also gives the French and British the opportunity to clear out their gold reserves - collapsing the value of the dollar. This might have helped the Entente extract goods and war materiel from American industry - if the IWW wasn't in charge and in the process of abolishing wage slavery. This was in fact made easier by the collapse in the value of the dollar and soaring inflation.

Amendments were added to the existing Constitution to enshrine socialism in the United States - and indirectly ban counter-revolutionary parties. The political right ends up channelling itself into tolerated regionalist movements, while the national stage tends to be dominated by the Socialists and other revolutionary (or semi revolutionary parties). The Anarchists put up a fairly substantial abstentionist ticket, while the Jeffersonians have become a thorn in the IWW's side with their calls for a more substantial watering of the nation's roots with blood.

Does Roosevelt try to pull the US into WW1 from its start here? I can see that not flying with the population considering they're really not threatened whatsoever and have no stake in the game but on the other hand in 14 no one has any idea about how murderous this war would be.
 
Does Roosevelt try to pull the US into WW1 from its start here? I can see that not flying with the population considering they're really not threatened whatsoever and have no stake in the game but on the other hand in 14 no one has any idea about how murderous this war would be.

Yeah pretty much.

I imagined that Roosevelt is initially brought down by a mixture of industrial action - but in reality it's mostly pressure from within his own party. But that spooks a certain segment of American society and a military coup happens, which puts a shot in the arm of existing industrial action.
 
'Solidarity USA', or how Lyndon LaRouche killed the Democratic Party

EDIT: I'd like to apologize to the Red-Green colorblind community

40) 1981-1989: Fmr. Gov. Ronald Reagan / Fmr. UN Ambassador George Bush (Republican)
def. 1980: Pres. Jimmy Carter / Vice Pres. Walter Mondale (Democratic), Rep. John B. Anderson / Fmr. Gov. Patrick Lucey (Independent)
def. 1984: Fmr. Vice Pres. Walter Mondale / Rep. Geraldine Ferraro (Democratic)

41) 1989-1997: Vice Pres. George Bush / Sen. Dan Quayle (Republican)
def. 1988: Gov. Michael Dukakis / Sen. Lloyd Bentsen (Democratic)
def. 1992: Fmr. Gov. Jerry Brown / Mayor Sheila Jones (Democratic), Businessman Ross Perot / Sen. David Boren (Independent)

42) 1997-2001: Vice Pres. Dan Quayle / Rep. Bill Paxon (Republican)
def. 1996: Gov. Adlai Stevenson III / Sen. Bill Bradley (Solidarity), Businessman Ross Perot / Rep. Bernadine Healy (Reform), Fmr. Mayor Sheila Jones / Sen. Ernest Hollings ("Free" Democratic)
43) 2001-2009: Rep. Dick Gephardt / Sen. Jay Rockefeller (Solidarity)
def. 2000: Pres. Dan Quayle / Vice Pres. Bill Paxon (Republican), Businessman Donald Trump / Fmr. Gov. Dick Lamm (Reform), State Party Chair Janice Hart / State Sen. Mel Logan (Democratic)
def. 2004: Sen. John McCain / Sen. John Ensign (Republican), City Councilman Pete Navarro / State Rep. Lawrence Freeman (Reform-Democratic)

44) 2009-2013: Sen. David Beasley / Rep. Tom Cole (Republican)
def. 2008: Gov. Paul Wellstone / Gov. Brian Schweitzer (Solidarity), Mayor Michael Bloomberg / Fmr. Sen. Sam Nunn (Independent)
45) 2013-2017: Sen. Robert Reich / Sen. Amy Klobuchar (Solidarity)
def. 2012: Pres. David Beasley / Vice Pres. Tom Cole (Republican)
46) 2017-2021: Gov. Pete Coors / Sen. Mike Huckabee (Republican)
def. 2016: Pres. Robert Reich / Vice Pres. Amy Klobuchar (Solidarity); Fmr. Mayor Michael Bloomberg / Rep. Gary Locke (Americans Elect)
47) 2021-0000: Gov. Sherrod Brown / Sen. Jenny Durkan (Solidarity)
def. 2020: Vice Pres. Mike Huckabee / Sen. J.C. Watts (Republican), Governor Mike Dell / Rep. David Jolly (Americans Elect), Commentator Alex Jones / State Rep. Kshama Sawant (Democracy Reborn)


The year is 1986. In a shocking turn of events, LaRouche-backed candidates for Lt. Governor and Secretary of State for Illinois wrest the Democratic Party nomination from more established candidates. Disgusted by his new bedfellows, Adlai Stevenson, the Democratic nominee for governor, jumps ship and creates an alternative in the form of the "Solidarity Party", a left-liberal ticket with decidedly anti-LaRouche sympathies. Predictably, this split ticket wouldn't win in November. However, this wouldn't be the last attempted power grab by the LaRoucheites.

The Democrats would continue to struggle through their wilderness period. The 1988 election would see Governor Dukakis of Massachusetts fail to beat Vice President Bush. The defeat of this more technocratic form of liberalism left a yearning in the party faithful for a candidate and an ideology that would lead them to greatness once again.

In Chicago, one year later, another battle between LaRoucheites and traditional liberals played out. After the death of Mayor Harold Washington, a special election was called to fill his office. Heir-apparent Richard Daley's shot at the job disintegrated after a drunken hit-and-run failed to be hidden from the public eye. Councilman Ed Vrydolak would attempt to take the Democratic nomination for himself, but the LaRoucheite infestation was just too strong- accomplished musician and community organizer Sheila Jones would miraculously sew up the city's black vote on a populist but vaguely conspiratorial platform. Of course, when you're running against one of the most entrenched councilmen in the city (one with a nickname like "Fast Eddie", no less) in your primary, a conspiratorial but anti-establishment battle cry doesn't hurt. Vrydolak would do as he did in 1987 and jump to the Solidarity Party, which was by now a vessel for establishment Democrats pushed out of the party by lunatics. Despite tight polling, Jones (and the insidious movement behind her) would narrowly win the mayoralty of America's Second City.

Going into 1992, the void for ideological leadership in the Democratic Party was seeking to be filled. Bill Clinton, champion of the DLC wing, looked to be the frontrunner until some.... unsavory revelations about his character made their way to the surface. Jerry Brown somehow picked up the torch with his ideological incoherency and narrowly beat away Paul Tsongas and Bob Kerrey. After being talked out of picking Jesse Jackson as his running mate, he turned to a similar candidate: Sheila Jones. While it polling showed that Brown could best Bush, at least for a while, Ross Perot hopped back into the race after hearing the various insane things that dripped out of Mayor Jones' mouth. As a result of these two ideologically-similar candidates being in the race against the conservative Bush, they stole votes from each other, allowing the incumbent president to walk to victory yet again.

However, the most important thing after the election wasn't that the Democrats had a fourth straight loss. Instead, it was that the LaRoucheites had hooked their teeth into a still-desperate Democratic Party via Sheila Jones, and with the party more demoralized than ever, they planned to strike.

It started with fielding congressional candidates who ran against entrenched incumbents. The strategy of running populists against an ineffective party structure and an unbeaten Republican opposition worked well, allowing them to snag key races when they weren't throwing them to the Republicans on accident. Establishment Democrats began following the lead of Adlai Stevenson, who took back the governor's office on his Solidarity Party ticket. With a solid chunk of their caucus replaced by conspiracy theorists, many of the remaining Democrats hopped over to the Solidarity Party in hopes that shedding the Big D from their names would give them the chance to reinvent themselves.

To some extent, they were right. As the new party was led out of the Midwest, the brand of left-liberalism was decidedly more laborist and social-democratic than the fiscally conservative faction that had cropped up in recent years. However, this operation would take a couple years to get underway. A split liberal opposition meant a stronger conservative plurality, and the Republicans were able to team up with some of the more conservative LaRoucheites to push moralistic bills through Congress. The Simpsons in its original form would be the first of many casualties, though libertarians and moderates in the party were able to form a firewall preventing DOMA from passing.

The consequences of the left-wing split would rear their head in 1996, when Vice President Quayle would narrowly become president. However, while the next four years would be dark for any non-theocrats or non-tycoons, the Solidarity Party found footing in a respectable second-place finish, as Ross Perot's centrist haven took third and Sheila Jones showed enough of her true colors to plummet down to fourth. The addition of longtime Democratic senator Ernest Hollings to her ticket was planned to be a sop to the establishment, and while some southerners who were still sketched out by the Republicans bought into it, most saw the doddering coot for what he was.

The Solidarites (Solidaritans? Solidaricrats?) would have their first big victory in 1998, when backlash towards the Quayle administration allowed some center-left recruits (though not the Third Way type) to snatch seats back from Republicans and "Democrats" alike. After twenty years of Republican governance, every good job being shipped overseas, and all good late-night television being watered down, the American people were finally ready to take a chance on the Solidaritans (note to self: figure out demonym ASAP) on the presidential level. Rep. Gephardt represented the laborist, pro-working and middle class agenda of the new party better than anyone else, and his Vice President, while equally liberal, had a last name that made a decent amount of moderate business-types comfortable.

The Gephardt administration would quickly undo NAFTA and replace it with a system of bilateral, worker-friendly trade deals and would undo the mistake of letting China into the WTO. These successes were hampered by an unorganized Congress, but hey, it wasn't four more years of Quayle! Ross Perot's Reform Party, despite having a substantial amount of seats in Congress, quickly found itself becoming a vanity project for yet another brash multi-millionaire, which would ultimately spell its doom.

In 2004, John McCain would attempt to reimagine the Republican party according to his maverick ideals, but he was dragged down by his running mate's "extracurricular activities". Meanwhile, Los Angeles City Councilman Peter Navarro would wed the crank wing of the Reform Party to the Democrats as a last-ditch bid to save America's main isolationist party as the Reform Party's members gradually flocked back to the moderate branches of both large parties.

From thereon, things have more or less levelled out as the laborist Solidarites and neocon-theocrat Republicans trade blows while Michael Bloomberg's Americans Elect Party represents the "fiscally conservative, socially liberal" Finance Bros of the country. Granted, there are hiccups. The Solidarity Party frequently struggles to maintain a balance between the kitchen-table-issues focused (read: play down divisive social issues), midwestern populist wing and the grassroots but swing-voter-alienating coastal activist wing, while the Republicans are engulfed in a civil war between more socially-moderate business-types and the hardline Christian right wing. This recently came to a head when President Coors stood down from re-election after spending all his political capital within his party refusing to veto the Freedom To Marry Act in 2017. This has led to more moderate Republicans looking in the direction of Americans Elect than ever, though hardline conservatives blame them for President Brown's rise to power.

Meanwhile, Lyndon LaRouche's legacy has been taken up by crackpot podcaster Alex Jones, though whether or not he can stage a hostile takeover of one of the major parties like his predecessor remains to be seen...

Solidarity Party: center-left to left-wing, left-populism, social liberalism, laborism, social democracy (factions), protectionism, global liberalism (factions)
Republican Party: right-wing, social conservatism, neoconservatism, fiscal conservatism, christian right, libertarianism (factions), civil libertarianism (factions),
Americans Elect Party: centrism, fiscal conservatism, technocracy, social moderatism, social liberalism (factions)
Democracy Reborn Movement: larouchism, national socialism, ultranationalism, economic democracy (factions)
 
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What if those behind the Business Plot ignored Butler and went right to another General...

Presidents of the United States of America
1933-1934: Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic)

(with John Nance Garner) defeated Herbert Hoover/Charles Curtis
1934-1937: Franklin D. Roosevelt (de jure)
1937-1940: Charles Lindenberg(American Liberty League)

(with Alf Landon) defeated Franklin D. Roosevelt/Henry Wallace, William Borah/Frederick Steiwer, William Lemke/various (unrecognized faithless electors)
1940-1941: Alf Landon
1941-1945: Smedley Butler (National Restoration, then Independent)

(with James Van Zandt) defeated Gerald L.K. Smith/Albert Jay Nock
1945-???: Will Rogers (Independent)

Jungle primary: (with Milo Reno) defeated Everett Dirksen, Wilbert "Pappy" O'Daniel, Joseph Rauh Jr., Upton Sinclair, Harry S. Truman

Secretaries of General Affairs
1934-1935: George Van Horn Moseley
1935-1938: Hugh Samuel Johnson
1938-1941: Jakob Raskob
1941-1942: Rexford Tugwell
1942: [office abolished]
 
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Political Career of Henry George:
1887-1891: Mayor (Labor) of New York City
1886 def. Abram Hewitt (Democratic) and Theodore Roosevelt (Republican)
1891-1892: Private citizen
1892-1897: Governor (Democratic) of New York
1891 def. Jacob Sloat Fassett (Republican)
1897-1901: President (Democratic) of the United States
1896 (with William J. Bryan) def. William McKinley (Republican)
1901-1905: President (Commonwealth) of the United States
1900 (with William J. Bryan) def. Cushman K. Davis (Republican) and J. Hamilton Lewis (Democratic)
 
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