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Lists of Heads of Government and Heads of State

Robert Maclennan (Liberal)
2006 - 2010: Charles Kennedy (Labour)
I think if Robert Maclennan defected to the Liberals, Charles Kennedy would join him given how they were politically quite close. So you have to chose here.
John Pardoe (Liberal)
I think if the Labour Right dominated the Labour Party, then Pardoe and his type of Radical, Socially Liberal, Fiscally Conservative, Ecological Proto-Green types would likely be more dominate.

Hell if there’s unclaimed Mushy Left Wing space I think that the Liberals could colonise that quite easily, amusingly Nick Harvey works well for that as would folks like Peter Hain, members of the Green Guard, Simon Hughes and later on Layla Moran.
 
I apologize for this.

Be Careful What You Wish For
Presidents of the United States of America
2017-2021: Donald Trump (Republican)
2016 (with Mike Pence): def. Hillary Clinton / Tom Perez (Democratic)
2021-2026: Bernie Sanders (Democratic)
2020 (with Amy Klobuchar): def. Donald Trump / Mike Pence (Republican)
2024 (with Amy Klobuchar): def. Rick Scott / Kristi Noem (Republican)

2026-2029: Amy Klobuchar (Democratic)
2029-0000: Blake Masters (Republican)
2028 (with Derek Schmidt) def. Maura Healey [replacing Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez] / Mandela Barnes (Democratic), Andrew Yang / Bari Weiss (Vision '28)

Generally speaking, Bernie wasn't a very lucky president. David Perdue edging out Jon Ossoff in the hotly-contested senate runoff (and thus giving senate control to Mitch McTurtle for two years more) wasn't exactly a good start to his time in the White House. Neither was a series of economic downturns and foreign crises, from the collapse of the Afghan government to the Taiwan standoff, when the Seventh Fleet collided with the PLAN (in some cases literally) as Speaker Pelosi's plane glided about in the crosshairs of Chinese fighter jets. Still, things looked like they were going well. Democrats won the Senate in 2022 (despite losing the gavel to Kevin McCarthy), and Bernie was re-elected in a surprising slam-dunk as the economy picked up in the fall of 2024 (though to be fair, he was going up against Rick Fucking Scott) and people were generally unbothered about the status quo.

Things went to shit soon afterwards.

To this day, no one knows if it was the diagnosis of Stage 4 bowel cancer or too much expired rice wine, but Xi Jinping decided - entirely on a whim - that he was going to be the Great Reunifier or die trying. As the PLAN made quick work of Taiwan's concerningly weak naval forces, the American Seventh Fleet panickily sprang into action, managing to hold the Chinese fleet to just east of Penghu, with a handful of American cruisers and smaller ships being sank or scuttled and China losing 50% of their functioning aircraft carriers in the process. What followed was an uneasy stalemate - American ships blockaded the Strait of Malacca and the southern Chinese coast, while the mauled PLAN stared down the massed American fleet. It took three months, but eventually (read: after two palace coups, a minor rebellion in several cities, and the loss of several more ships) the PLAN withdrew, claiming that the attempted invasion had been an "anti-sedition police operation" and thus victory (because of course they did).
The economy was wrecked and US-China relations lay in smoldering ruins, but everything was still fine.

Then Sanders had a heart attack.

Then another.

Then a hemorrhagic stroke.

Resigning from office on the 25th of October, the 46th President of the United States headed home to Burlington to die retire, leaving the White House in the hands of Amy Klobuchar. While the sympathy bump from Sanders' untimely departure netted Democrats the Senate (propelling Bee Nguyen to a shock victory over the increasingly-doddering Perdue and Jeff Jackson to victory over Governor Mark Robinson), Klobuchar found herself increasingly out of sync with both the party and the nation. Ultimately, she went out not with a bang but with a whimper, as allegations of abuse from her days in Number One Observatory Circle proved to be the wooden stake through the chest that finished off her 2028 hopes. For a while, it seemed that New York Senator Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez would be the American Left's light in the dark, finally reviving the promise of Sanders' movement.

Then a neo-Nazi shot her in Baltimore.

The DNC — even more chaotic than 1968, and ironically sinking into the ground rather than rising from the ashes like the namesake of its host city — cycled through several elections' worth of candidates (California's Senator Porter and ex-Governor Newsom, Pennsylvania's Senator Fetterman, Maryland's Governor Moore and Senator Raskin, home-state favorites Senator Feehan and The Klobberer, Virginia's Governor Foy, Michigan's Senator Benson, Secretary Kunce, ex-First Lady Michelle Obama, Oregon's Governor Read and Senator Fagan, Illinois' Senator Duckworth, Vermont's Governor Gray and Senator Donovan, Texas' Senator Castro, Washington's Governor Ferguson...) before settling on third-placer Maura Healey and Wisconsin progressive Mandela Barnes. Meanwhile, the Republican nomination fell to Arizona Senator Blake Masters (winning 2024 in an upset when Sinema decided to go out in a blaze of whatever-the-fuck-she-was-made-of when Gallego won the nomination by 23 points), campaigning on a far-right platform of neo-Trumpism, reactionary conservatism, and neo-isolationism. Despite all the flagrant sexuality-baiting and race-baiting, despite the GOP's approval of negative 17, despite it all - a divided Democratic Party and hyper-centrist splinter ticket proved to be sufficient for Peter Thiel's pet candidate to come through in the Electoral College.

It is 2030. Hu Haifeng's China is practically salivating over Taiwan, India and Brazil are in states of civil war between militant leftists and far-right reactionaries, much of Russia has become an Arctic-based remake of Mad Max, and the U.S. is doing...whatever the crypto-fellating, social-media-manipulating, 4chan-wet-dreaming fuck Blake Master considers to be 'truly American'.

The Free World looks to the leadership of Western Europe — Keir Starmer, Annalena Baerbock, Rob Jetten Ahmed Aboutaleb — in these trying times.
.......You somehow managed to make something even worse than the real life 2020s.
 
Because my opinion of Pelosi has improved significantly after the last 72 hours:

Screenshot 2022-08-03 at 10.42.18 PM.png
Presidents of the United States of America
1969-1972: Richard Nixon (Republican)
1968 (with Spiro Agnew): def. Hubert Humphrey / Carl Sanders (Democratic), George Wallace / Curtis LeMay (All-American)
1972-1974: Spiro Agnew (Republican)
1972 (with Chuck Percy): def. Ed Muskie / Terry Sanford (Democratic)
1974-1977: Chuck Percy (Republican)
1977-1981: Robert F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1976 (with Jimmy Carter): def. Chuck Percy / George Bush (Republican)
1980 (with Jimmy Carter): def. Phyllis Schlafly / Daniel J. Evans (Republican), Charles Mathias / John Anderson (Independent)
November 4, 1980: Rep. Nancy Pelosi is elected to the U.S. Senate from Maryland, defeating Larry Hogan Sr.
March 10, 1981: Former RNC staffer Ted Bundy, convinced that the Democratic Party rigged the election against Schlafly and Evans, assassinates Pres. Kennedy in Seattle.

1981-1985: Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
June 23, 1981: Minnesota Governor Rudy Perpich is confirmed as Vice President.
1985-1993: Dick Lugar (Republican)
1984 (with Pete du Pont): def. Jimmy Carter / Rudy Perpich (Democratic)
August 14, 1988: Delaware Senator Joe Biden passes away following a debilitating aneurysm on the eve of the DNC; Nancy Pelosi gains national attention for her well-received eulogy.
1988 (with Pete du Pont): def. Henry Cisneros
[replacing Joe Biden ] / Paul Tsongas (Democratic)
1993-2001: Nancy Pelosi (Democratic)
1992 (with Roland Burris): def. Pete du Pont / Bill Paxon (Republican)
1996 (with Roland Burris): def. Donald Trump / John Sununu Sr. (Republican), Pat Buchanan / Rick Santorum (Constitution)
June 22, 1997: Pres. Pelosi ends the "One China" Policy implemented by the Agnew administration by visiting Taipei and pledging American support against any armed incursion by the People's Republic of China; the Third Taiwan Straits Crisis begins when General Secretary Li Peng responds by blockading the island and ends when Li is removed from power in October.
August 5, 1999: Pres. Pelosi demands that PRC General Secretary Zhu Rongji formally apologize for the Chinese government's response to the 1989 Tiananmen protests and formally rescind all claims on Taiwan for entry into the World Trade Organization

2001-????: Roland Burris (Democratic)
2000 (with Al Gore): def. Tommy Thompson / Susan Molinari (Republican)

Democratic: #FFCC33
Republican: #2C82C9
Constitution: #9365B8
 
I suspect the China of the 90s would be more willing to play ball. After Li Peng is shot dead and dumped in an East Beijing ditch retired, anyways.

Why wouldn't they just wait for a more sympathetic administration to get elected the following year or, like after Tiananmen, just wait until the White House feels like everyone has forgotten about it? Though this concept of China-hawk Pelosi would be a lot more fun if Pete Navarro had a prominent position in her administration.
 
Why wouldn't they just wait for a more sympathetic administration to get elected the following year or, like after Tiananmen, just wait until the White House feels like everyone has forgotten about it? Though this concept of China-hawk Pelosi would be a lot more fun if Pete Navarro had a prominent position in her administration.
Because Li Peng. Namely, how he's much worse at the whole "hiding your strength and biding your time" shtick than Deng. So when the Soviets pack it in, the U.S. switches their attention to China.
tl;dr Cold War history books have an extra chapter detailing US-China relations post-1991/92 up to 1997.
 
2006-2008: Yasuo Fukuda (LDP)
2008-2009: Tarō Asō (LDP)
2009-2010: Katsuya Okada (Democratic)
2009: Tarō Asō(LDP),Shintaro Ishihara (Sunrise),Akihiro Ota (Komeito),Kazuo Shii(JCP),Mizuho Fukushima(Social Democratic),Yoshimi Watanabe(Your Party)
2010-2012: Yukio Hatoyama (Democratic)
2012-2013: Naoto Kan (Democratic)
2013: Shigeru Ishiba (LDP),Shintaro Ishihara (Sunrise),Yoshimi Watanabe(Your Party),Natsuo Yamaguchi(Komeito),Kazuo Shii(JCP),Mizuho Fukushima(Social Democratic)
2013-2014: Sakihito Ozawa (Democratic)
2014-2017: Renhō Saitō (Democratic)
2017-2020: Shinzo Abe (LDP)
2017: Renhō Saitō (Democratic), Kenji Eda (New Right),Natsuo Yamaguchi(Komeito),Kazuo Shii(JCP),Tadatomo Yoshida(Social Democratic)
2020-2021: Shigeru Ishiba (LDP)
2021-: Seiji Maehara (Democratic)
2021: Shigeru Ishiba (LDP),Ichirō Matsui (Japanese Initiatives),Natsuo Yamaguchi(Komeito),Kazuo Shii(JCP)


-Abe’s health problems flair up a little before the leadership election
- Fukuda runs like he thought about iotl
- The Dems pick Okada as their leader because of his high popularity with the public
- Shintaro Ishihara smells the blood in the water and launches his own party earlier. It acts in a similar fashion to the LDP as the Canadian Reform in the 1993 election did to the Tories
- Ultimately Hatoyama is too large of a figure to not become PM
- Tanigaki is backstabbed a few months
- the Dems win a second term but the LDP make significant rebounds
- Renhō becomes the first female PM
- Abe finally becomes PM but ittl a lot of the stuff he tries to pull is met with discontent and he resigns due to health issues
- the Dems return due to the poor handling of Covid by the Libs
 
@Mouser nice stuff, I do always find the 2009 election opened the most recent possibility of a two party Japan, outside of the Late 80s/Early 90s and the Late 70s. The way that the Democratic Party is more coherent politically and stable by the look of things.
 
C H A O S
2010-2013: David Cameron (Conservative)
2010 (Minority, C&S with LibDem backbenchers): Gordon Brown (Labour), Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrats), None (LibDem backbenchers)
2010 Labour leadership election: Hilary Benn def. David Miliband, Ed Balls, Diane Abbott, etc
2013 Conservative leadership election: Boris Johnson def. George Osborne, Steven Crabb, Amber Rudd, etc

2013-2017: Boris Johnson (Conservative)
2015 (Minority, C&S with UKIP): Hilary Benn (Labour), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrats), Nigel Farage (UKIP)
2015 Labour leadership election: Tom Watson def. John McDonnell, Andy Burnham, etc
2016 'Brexit' 1st Referendum: 50.3% NO49.7% YES
2017 Conservative leadership election: Andrea Leadsom def. George Osborne, etc

2017-2020: Andrea Leadsom (Conservative)
2017 (Minority, coalition with UKIP): Tom Watson (Labour), Nigel Farage (UKIP), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrats)
2017 Labour leadership election: Ed Miliband def. John McDonnell
2019 'Brexit' 2nd Referendum: 53.3% NO46.7% YES

2020-2020: David Cameron (Conservative) [acting]
2020 Conservative leadership election: Jacob Rees-Mogg def. Amber Rudd, Jeremy Hunt, etc
2020-present: Ed Milliband (Labour)
2020 (Majority): def. Jacob Rees-Mogg (Conservative), Nigel Farage (UKIP), Jo Swinson (Liberal Democrats), Jo Cherry (SNP)

Inspired by that post which had David Miliband become Labour leader and lose before Ed became leader and won in 2020.
 
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Nye Bless Us: 65 years of Bevanism in the UK

Prime Minsiters of the Great Britain (1945-2021)

1945-1951: Clement Attlee (Labour)
1945 (Majority) def. Winston Churchill (Conservative), Archibald Sinclair (Liberal)
1950 (Majority) def. Winston Churchill (Conservative), Clement Davies (Liberal)


1951-1955: Winston Churchill (Conservative)
1951 (Majority) def. Clement Attlee (Labour), Clement Davies (Liberal)

1955: Sir Anthony Eden (Conservative) *

1955-1960: Aneurin Bevan (Labour) **
1955 (Majority) def. Sir Anthony Eden (Conservative), Clement Davies (Liberal)

1960-1967: Barbara Castle (Labour)
1960 (Majority) def. Sir Anthony Eden (Conservative), Jo Grimond (Liberal)
1965 (Minority, S&C from Liberal) def. George Jellicoe, Earl Jellicoe (Conservative), Jo Grimond (Liberal), Roy Jenkins (CommonWealth)
1966 EEC Membership Referendum: 59% NO, 35% YES, 6% Abstention


1967-1968: Anthony Greenwood (Labour)

1968-1979: Keith Joseph (Conservative)
1968 (Majority) def. Anthony Greenwood (Labour), Roy Jenkins (CommonWealth), Jo Grimond (Liberal)
1972 (Majority) def. Anthony Greenwood (Labour), Roy Jenkins (CommonWealth), Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
1977 (Minority, S&C from Liberal and CW) def. David Owen (Labour), Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal), Roy Jenkins (CommonWealth)
1977 EEC Membership Referendum: 52% YES, 45% NO, 3% Abstention


1979-1984: David Owen (Labour)
1979 (Coalition, with Liberals) def. Keith Joseph (Conservative), David Steel (Liberal)

1984-1988: Sir Geoffrey Howe (Conservative)
1984 (Majority) def. David Owen (Labour), David Steel (Liberal)

1988-1997: Tony Benn (Labour)
1988 (Majority) def. Geoffrey Howe (Conservative), David Steel (Liberal)
1991 Commonwealth/Republic Referendum: 53% YES, 46% NO, 0.9% OTHER
1991 Strasbourg Treaty Referendum: 55% LEAVE, 41% JOIN, 4% OTHER
1993 (Majority) def. Michael Heseltine (Conservative), Cyril Smith (Liberal)
1996 Northern Irish Sovereignty Referendum: 45% INDEP., 29% UK, 26% IRELAND


1997-2003: Robin Cook (Labour)
1998 (Majority) def. Michael Heseltine (Conservative), Paddy Ashdown (Liberal)
2000 Federal Referendum: 60% Federal, 29% Devolution, 11% No Change


2003-2010: Caroline Spelman (Conservative)
2003 (Coalition, with Liberal) def. Robin Cook (Labour), Menzies Campbell (Liberal)
2005 Electoral Referendum: 68% FPTP, 15% AV, 11% STV, 6% OTHER
2008 (Majority) def. John Prescott (Labour), Menzies Campbell (Liberal)


2010-2012: Liam Fox (Conservative)

2012-2020: John McDonnell (Labour)
2012 (Majority) def. Liam Fox (Conservative), Mike Russel (SNP), Norman Lamb (Liberal)
2017 (Majority) def. Justine Greening (Conservative), Shaffaq Mohammed (Liberal), Mike Russel (SNP)


2020-20??: Hilary Benn (Labour)

British Heads of State (1945-2021)
1936-1952: George VI (Monarch)
1952-1991: Elizabeth II (Monarch)
1991-1992:
Charles Windsor (Interim) ***
1992-2000:
Dennis Skinner (Labour)
1992 def. Margaret Thatcher (Conservative), Menzies Campbell (Liberal), Charles Windsor (Write in)
1996 def. John Redwood (Conservative), Menzies Campbell (Liberal), Charles Windsor (Write in)

2000-2004: John Bercow (Conservative)
2000 def. Charles Kennedy (Liberal), Jeremy Corbyn (Labour), Charles Windsor (Write in)
2004-2012: Paddy Ashdown (Liberal)
2004 def. Betty Boothroyd (Labour), Sir Nicholas Soames (Conservative), Charles Windsor (Write in)
2008 def. Tony Benn (Labour), Sir Nicholas Soames (Conservative), Alex Salmond (SNP), Charles Windsor (Write in)

2012-2020: Ken Livingstone (Labour)
2012 def. Nick Clegg (Liberal), William Haugue (Conservative), Charles Windsor (Green), Alex Salmond (SNP), Tommy Robinson (BNP)
2016 def. Jeremy Hunt (Conservative), Charles Windsor (Green), Vince Cable (Liberal), Tommy Robinson (BNP), Alex Salmond (SNP)

2020-20??: Charles Windsor (Green)
2020 def. Sajid Javid (Conservtive), Danny Alexander (Liberal), Ed Balls (Labour)

* = POD: Herbert Morrison suffers a heart attack in '53 and retires, Attlee follows a year later opening the door for Bevan. He goes on to strengthen his position within the Party by defeating Eden.

** = Bevan retires when his health starts to fail like in OTL, however the influx and influence of prominent Bevanites in Labour opens a wider leadership contest that Castle evntually wins after Bevan denounces Harold Wilson. Labour Right and pro-Europeans leave the party to form their own in protest over the Bevanite hold on the Party, by the time the UK joins the Common Market in 1978, CommonWealth entered terminal decline.
*** = Britain votes to replace the Monarchy with a nominal but popularly elected Head of State, Elizabeth remains head of the Commonwealth and is asked to act as an interim HoS til an election is held but she refuses; Charles accepts the role, and often appears as a 'write in' candidate for the Presidency before joining the Green Party in 2012. After being elected as President outright in 2020, he abidicates his claim to the Throne and Head of the House of Windsor to Prince William.

I bet this TL gave monarchists an.... Aneurinysm

yes im replying to this 18 months late, fuck you
 
Never realised I didnt share this here

Same Deck, Different Design


1915-1922: David Lloyd George (Wartime Coalition then Coupon Liberal)

Def 1918 Eamon de Valera (Sinn Fein) William Adamson (Labour) H.H. Asquith (Liberal)
1922-1923: Bonar Law (Coupon Conservative)
Def 1922: J.R. Clynes (Labour) H.H. Asquith (Liberal) David Lloyd George (National Liberal)
1923-1924: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative Minority)
1923-1924: Ramsay MacDonald (Labour -Liberal Government)

Def 1923: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) H.H. Asquith (Liberal)
1924-1929: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative)
Def 1923: Ramsay MacDonald (Labour) H.H. Asquith (Liberal)
1929-1935: Ramsay MacDonald (Labour)
Def 1929: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) David Lloyd George (Liberal)
Def 1933: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) David Lloyd George (Liberal)
1935-1937: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative Minority with Liberal S&C)
Def 1923: Ramsay MacDonald (labour) John Simon (Liberal)
1937-1940: Neville Chaimberlain (Conservative Minority with Liberal S&C) (1)
1940-1945: Winston Churchill (Conservative leading National Government then War Government) (2)
1945-1951: Clement Atlee (Labour lead "Peace" National Government) (2)
1951-1955: Winston Churchill (Conservative Lead "Readiness" National Emergency Government)
1955-1957: Anthony Eden (
Conservative Lead "Readiness" National Emergency Government)
1957-1963: Harold MacMillan (Conservative)

Def 1957: Hugh Gaitskell (Labour) Jo Grimmond (Liberal)
Def 1962: Hugh Gaitskell (Labour) Jo Grimmond (Liberal)

1963-1964: Alec Douglas-Home (Conservative)
1964-1970: Harold Wilson (Labour-Liberal then Labour)

Def 1964: Alec Douglas-Home (Conservative) Jo Grimmond (Liberal)
Def 1965: Rab Butler (Conservative) Jo Grimmond (Liberal)
1970-1974: Edward Heath Conservative Minority )
Def 1970: Harold Wilson (Labour) Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
1974-1976: Harold Wilson (Labour)
Def: Edward Heath (Christian Democrat) Enoch Powell (New Democratic) Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
1976-1979: James Callaghan (Labour)
1979-1990: Margaret Thatcher (Liberal-Christian Democrat Coalition, then Christian Union)

Def 1979: James Callaghan (Labour) David Steel (Christian Democrat) Keith Joseph (New Democratic)
Def 1983: Dennis Healey (Labour) David Steel (Christian Democrat) Keith Joseph (New Democratic)
Def 1987: Neil Kinnock (Labour) Ian Gilmour (New Democratic)
1990-1997: John Major (Labour, then Labour Minority )
Def 1990: Margaret Thatcher (Christian Union) John Redwood (New Democratic)
Def 1995: Michael Heseltine (Christian Union) John Redwood (New Democratic)
1997-2001: Tony Blair (New Democratic-Christian Union)
Def 1997: John Major (Labour) Michael Portillo (Christian Union)
2001-2007: Tony Blair (New Democratic)
Def 2001: John Prescott (Labour) Charles Kennedy (Christian Union)
Def 2004: Robin Cook (Labour) Charles Kennedy (Christian Union)
2007-2010: Gordon Brown (Christian Union Minority with Labour S&C)
Def 2007: Tony Blair (New Democratic) Jack Straw (Labour)
2010-2016: David Cameron (New Democratic, then New Democratic Minority)
Def 2010: Gordon Brown (Christian Union) Jeremy Corbyn (Labour)
Def 2015: Vince Cable (Christian Union) Jeremy Corbyn Labour
2016-____: Theresa May: (Christian Union )
Def 2016: John McDonnell (Labour) David Cameron (New Democratic)
2019-2022: Boris Johnson (Christian Union then Christian Union- New Democratic Coalition)
Def 2020: Rebecca Long-Bailey (Labour) Liz Truss (New Democratic)

(1) Assassinated
(2) Removed in Pro-Peace "Yorkist" Coup)
(3) Removed in Anti-Soviet "Edwardist" Coup)

Including other bollocks I didnt quite develop
A No score draw WWI
A 3 way divided Ireland
A Soviet-Monarchist War in the late 30s
 
Never realised I didnt share this here

Same Deck, Different Design

1915-1922: David Lloyd George (Wartime Coalition then Coupon Liberal)

Def 1918 Eamon de Valera (Sinn Fein) William Adamson (Labour) H.H. Asquith (Liberal)
1922-1923: Bonar Law (Coupon Conservative)
Def 1922: J.R. Clynes (Labour) H.H. Asquith (Liberal) David Lloyd George (National Liberal)
1923-1924: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative Minority)
1923-1924: Ramsay MacDonald (Labour -Liberal Government)

Def 1923: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) H.H. Asquith (Liberal)
1924-1929: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative)
Def 1923: Ramsay MacDonald (Labour) H.H. Asquith (Liberal)
1929-1935: Ramsay MacDonald (Labour)
Def 1929: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) David Lloyd George (Liberal)
Def 1933: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) David Lloyd George (Liberal)
1935-1937: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative Minority with Liberal S&C)
Def 1923: Ramsay MacDonald (labour) John Simon (Liberal)
1937-1940: Neville Chaimberlain (Conservative Minority with Liberal S&C) (1)
1940-1945: Winston Churchill (Conservative leading National Government then War Government) (2)
1945-1951: Clement Atlee (Labour lead "Peace" National Government) (2)
1951-1955: Winston Churchill (Conservative Lead "Readiness" National Emergency Government)
1955-1957: Anthony Eden (
Conservative Lead "Readiness" National Emergency Government)
1957-1963: Harold MacMillan (Conservative)

Def 1957: Hugh Gaitskell (Labour) Jo Grimmond (Liberal)
Def 1962: Hugh Gaitskell (Labour) Jo Grimmond (Liberal)

1963-1964: Alec Douglas-Home (Conservative)
1964-1970: Harold Wilson (Labour-Liberal then Labour)

Def 1964: Alec Douglas-Home (Conservative) Jo Grimmond (Liberal)
Def 1965: Rab Butler (Conservative) Jo Grimmond (Liberal)
1970-1974: Edward Heath Conservative Minority )
Def 1970: Harold Wilson (Labour) Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
1974-1976: Harold Wilson (Labour)
Def: Edward Heath (Christian Democrat) Enoch Powell (New Democratic) Jeremy Thorpe (Liberal)
1976-1979: James Callaghan (Labour)
1979-1990: Margaret Thatcher (Liberal-Christian Democrat Coalition, then Christian Union)

Def 1979: James Callaghan (Labour) David Steel (Christian Democrat) Keith Joseph (New Democratic)
Def 1983: Dennis Healey (Labour) David Steel (Christian Democrat) Keith Joseph (New Democratic)
Def 1987: Neil Kinnock (Labour) Ian Gilmour (New Democratic)
1990-1997: John Major (Labour, then Labour Minority )
Def 1990: Margaret Thatcher (Christian Union) John Redwood (New Democratic)
Def 1995: Michael Heseltine (Christian Union) John Redwood (New Democratic)
1997-2001: Tony Blair (New Democratic-Christian Union)
Def 1997: John Major (Labour) Michael Portillo (Christian Union)
2001-2007: Tony Blair (New Democratic)
Def 2001: John Prescott (Labour) Charles Kennedy (Christian Union)
Def 2004: Robin Cook (Labour) Charles Kennedy (Christian Union)
2007-2010: Gordon Brown (Christian Union Minority with Labour S&C)
Def 2007: Tony Blair (New Democratic) Jack Straw (Labour)
2010-2016: David Cameron (New Democratic, then New Democratic Minority)
Def 2010: Gordon Brown (Christian Union) Jeremy Corbyn (Labour)
Def 2015: Vince Cable (Christian Union) Jeremy Corbyn Labour
2016-____: Theresa May: (Christian Union )
Def 2016: John McDonnell (Labour) David Cameron (New Democratic)
2019-2022: Boris Johnson (Christian Union then Christian Union- New Democratic Coalition)
Def 2020: Rebecca Long-Bailey (Labour) Liz Truss (New Democratic)

(1) Assassinated
(2) Removed in Pro-Peace "Yorkist" Coup)
(3) Removed in Anti-Soviet "Edwardist" Coup)

Including other bollocks I didnt quite develop
A No score draw WWI
A 3 way divided Ireland
A Soviet-Monarchist War in the late 30s

Based on all the crossovers its probably the case that all 3 major parties are on similar levels for about 30 years now and the CU and ND have some kind of Cordon Sanitaire against Labour. I could have put in alliances with various minor parties but I couldn't quite be bothered

Maybe Thatchers Liberal-Christian Democrats bring in electoral reform and there are more coalitions post 1979 but always with those 3 parties at the head.
 
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