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2032 United States presidential election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Screenshot 2022-12-16 at 12.03.05 PM.pngThe 2032 United States presidential election was the 62nd quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 2, 2032. The Democratic ticket of Georgia Senator Jon Ossoff and Illinois Senator Tammy Duckworth defeated the Republican ticket of incumbent President Mike Lawler and Vice President Tim Scott by a decisive margin. Ossoff became the first Jewish-American to be elected president, while Duckworth became the first Iraq veteran to be elected vice president. This was the last election where all four major party candidates for president and vice president would become their party's presidential nominee until 2056, making it the first such election since 1976. It was the first-ever U.S. presidential election where the presidential nominees of both major parties were millennials. The election saw the highest voter turnout by percentage since 2020, with each of the two main tickets receiving more than 74 million votes. Ossoff received more than 86 million votes, at the time the most votes ever cast for a candidate in a presidential election.

Incumbent Republican Mike Lawler sought re-election to a second term in office amidst a struggling global economy and slumping approval ratings. Despite murmurs of a serious primary challenge against his renomination, Lawler would ultimately be renominated by a wide margin against commentator and former Defense Department official Kash Patel. In the Democratic primaries, 2028 runner-up Jon Ossoff would once again mount a campaign for president, ultimately fending off a fractured field of primary challengers, including California Governor London Breed and Maryland Senator Pete Buttigieg.

The 2032 election was largely dominated by the Seattle General Strike and a concurrent attempt by a group of international conglomerates — including Amazon, Tencent, and Binance — to "buy" the Seattle city government due to the city government's bankruptcy. Ossoff — having already tacked to the progressive left during his 2028 primary bid — continued his leftward drift, promising to restrict corporate power and strengthen workers' protections, as well as calling for the audit of the finances of major cryptocurrency firms. Lawler — while promising to investigate the takeover effort — would be criticized for his prior history of executive action against labor advocates and unionization protests, which many viewed as overly corporatist, and major Republican politicians would frequently make unpopular attacks against unionization efforts. While foreign policy would never become the defining issue of the campaign as it did in 2028, the aftermath of the Kashmir War, the South African political crisis, and the collapse of the Tatmadaw junta in Myanmar would contribute to Lawler's perception as being unable to handle an unstable geopolitical scene. Other domestic issues subject to debate during the campaign included the rise in civil disorder, historically-high unemployment, and the aftermath of Hurricane Imelda, which left much of southern Florida devastated. Ossoff would attack Lawler as inept and uncaring, and labeled the Republican incumbent as a corporate crony and someone unwilling to take decisive action. Lawler would campaign on the need for continuity (in turn attacking the Democratic hopeful as a reckless far-left zealot), the slow return of blue-collar jobs to the United States, and the need to "keep the economy free" (owing to Ossoff's push for a nigh-unprecedented number of corporate regulations). The issue of nuclear power and housing development also became a key issue, with Democrats adopting a YIMBY stance and Republicans a NIMBY one.

While polling remained competitive throughout the early election season, Ossoff's lead would gradually widen as the corporate attempt to "buy" Seattle was leaked and the Seattle general strike began. In the final week before the election, Ossoff held an aggregate lead of 6 points as mail-in voting and early voting began across the nation. Notably, this was the first election where more than five states (Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Maine, Michigan, and Washington) adopted instant-runoff voting for presidential contests. Ossoff would build up a large lead by winning the key swing states of Georgia, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, all of which had been critical to Biden's victory in the previous two elections, as well as flipping the state of Arizona before 11pm. Ossoff would become the first presidential nominee since Donald Trump in 2016 to cross the 270-electoral-vote threshold for victory on Election Day when he was declared the victor in the state of Wisconsin at 11:23 pm. He went on to receive 339 electoral votes, flipping the states of Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Mississippi, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Texas. The Democratic Party would also expand its congressional majorities.

Ossoff became the first Democrat to win Mississippi and Texas since 1976, and Alaska since Lyndon B. Johnson's landslide re-election in 1964. Meanwhile, despite going down in defeat, Lawler would win New Hampshire and New Jersey's statewide contests. This was the last time Nebraska would use its district-based electoral system, as it would be abolished in 2035. It is considered by many to be the start of the Seventh Party System and was the last election held before the statehood of Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico.


In case you didn't know, this is a sequel to @Excelsior's list.

i even made a new portrait you really can't call it plagiarism
 
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2032 United States presidential election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

View attachment 63591The 2032 United States presidential election was the 62nd quadrennial presidential election, held on Tuesday, November 2, 2032. The Democratic ticket of Georgia Senator Jon Ossoff and Michigan Governor Dana Nessel defeated the Republican ticket of incumbent President Mike Lawler and Vice President Tim Scott by a decisive margin. This was the last election where all four major party candidates for president and vice president would become their party's presidential nominee until 2056, making it the first such election since 1976. It was the first election since 2020 where the incumbent president was defeated for re-election and the first where the presidential nominees of both major parties were millennials. The election saw the highest voter turnout by percentage since 2020, with each of the two main tickets receiving more than 74 million votes. Ossoff received more than 86 million votes, at the time the most votes ever cast for a candidate in a U.S. presidential election.

Incumbent Republican Mike Lawler sought re-election to a second term in office amidst a struggling global economy and slumping approval ratings. Despite murmurs of a serious primary challenge against his renomination, Lawler would ultimately be renominated by a wide margin against commentator and former Defense Department official Kash Patel. In the Democratic primaries, 2028 runner-up Jon Ossoff would once again mount a campaign for president, ultimately fending off a fractured field of primary challengers, including California Governor London Breed and Maryland Senator Pete Buttigieg.

The 2032 election was largely dominated by the Seattle General Strike and a concurrent attempt by a group of international conglomerates — including Amazon, Tencent, and Binance — to "buy" the Seattle city government due to the city government's bankruptcy. Ossoff — having already tacked to the progressive left during his 2028 primary bid — continued his leftward drift, promising to restrict corporate power and strengthen workers' protections, as well as calling for the audit of the finances of major cryptocurrency firms. Lawler — while promising to investigate the takeover effort — would be criticized for his prior history of executive action against labor advocates and unionization protests, which many viewed as overly corporatist, and major Republican politicians would frequently make unpopular attacks against unionization efforts. While foreign policy would never become the defining issue of the campaign as it did in 2028, the aftermath of the Kashmir War, the South African political crisis, and the collapse of the Tatmadaw junta in Myanmar would contribute to Lawler's perception as being unable to handle an unstable geopolitical scene. Other domestic issues subject to debate during the campaign included the rise in civil disorder, historically-high unemployment, and the aftermath of Hurricane Imelda, which left much of southern Florida devastated. Ossoff would attack Lawler as inept and uncaring, labeling the Republican incumbent as a corporate crony and unwilling to take decisive action. Lawler would campaign on the need for continuity (in turn declaring the Democratic hopeful as a reckless far-left zealot), the slow return of blue-collar jobs to the United States, and the need to "keep the economy free" (owing to Ossoff's push for a nigh-unprecedented number of corporate regulations). The issue of nuclear power and housing development also became a key issue, with Democrats adopting a YIMBY stance and Republicans a NIMBY one.

While polling remained competitive throughout the early election season, Ossoff's lead would gradually widen as the corporate attempt to "buy" Seattle was leaked and the Seattle general strike began. In the final week before the election, Ossoff held an aggregate lead of 6 points as mail-in voting and early voting began across the nation. Notably, this was the first election where more than five states (Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, Maine, Michigan, and Washington) adopted instant-runoff voting for presidential contests. On Election Day, Ossoff opened up an early lead by winning the key swing state of Georgia, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, all of which had been critical to Biden's victory in the previous two elections, as well as flipping the state of Arizona. Ossoff would become the first presidential nominee since Donald Trump in 2016 to cross the 270-electoral-vote threshold for victory on Election Day, when he was declared the victor in the state of Wisconsin. He went on to receive 339 electoral votes, flipping the states of Alaska, Arizona, Georgia, Mississippi, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Texas. The Democratic Party would also expand its congressional majorities.

Ossoff became the first Democrat to win Mississippi and Texas since 1976, and Alaska since Lyndon B. Johnson's landslide re-election in 1964. Meanwhile, despite going down in defeat, Lawler would win New Hampshire and New Jersey's statewide contests. This was the last time Nebraska would use its district-based electoral system, as it would be abolished in 2035. It is considered by many to be the start of the Seventh Party System and was the last election held before the statehood of Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico.

dude this is essentially just Excelsior's most recent post in his thread u need to give credit for this
 
dude this is essentially just Excelsior's most recent post in his thread u need to give credit for this
I would say it's a continuation of it.

I didn't really copy it did I? It's more of what could (but given his own work doesn't) happen post-2028.

look i know my record is shit but it really isn't the same fucking post
 
don't hop on my ass like im not trying to help u here
you are, thank you, but
1) i didn't copy his whole text so much as took his 2028 map and thought "hmm, what if Ossoff were more successful in '32"
2) It still isn't close to being a copy; the events are different, the scenario is different, i even made a new portrait

I mean you could argue that taking his scenario and running with it is plagiarism but it'd certainly be a weird hill to die on
 
Presidents of the United States of America:
2021-2027: Joe Biden / Kamala Harris (Democratic)
'20 def. Donald Trump Sr. / Mike Pence (Republican)
'24 def. Donald Trump Sr. / J. D. Vance (Republican)
2027-2027: Kamala Harris / none, then Roy Cooper (Democratic)
2029-2031: Mike Lawler / Rick Scott (Republican)

'28 def. Kamala Harris / Josh Shapiro (Democratic); Justin Amash / Ashley Swearengin (Independent)
2031-2033: Mike Lawler / none, then Tim Scott (Republican)
2033-0000: Jon Ossoff / Tammy Duckworth (Democratic)

'32 def. Mike Lawler / Tim Scott (Republican)
'24 def. Donald Trump Jr. / Mike Flood (Republican); Preston Bezos / B. Chance Saltzman (Excelsior)
 
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allthepresidentsmen, you are now banned from the forum. You have been repeatedly warned about using other people's work without credit and instead of taking those warnings in good faith, you have seemingly kept testing how much you might be allowed to get away with. Whether this is deliberate or an issue of competence, the mod team is not inclined to allow you to chip away at the integrity of this site. Sea Lion Press is a writers' community and therefore has a duty to take plagiarism particularly seriously.
 
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