theflyingmgoose
Well-known member
The minorities left can finally vote.That’s horrifying and I love it. I shudder to ask, but what’s the state of race relations at this point?
The minorities left can finally vote.That’s horrifying and I love it. I shudder to ask, but what’s the state of race relations at this point?
Hi everyone,List of Alternate Presidents and PMs IV just got locked and three people banned so as the new OP (@Rotunda was one of them lol) dont flame over if Mike Pense could have won and keep discussion of President Sanders policies to Chat please. I know this is kind of cliche and @Mumby did it last week but I wanted to do my take on it. Please like if you enjoyed my list
Theresa May calls a snap election
2016-2023: Theresa May (Conservative)
2017: Conservatives (Theresa May) 373 seats [1], Labour (Jeremy Corbyn) 160 seats [2], Scottish Nationalist (Nicola Sturgeon) 56 seats, Tim Farron (Liberal Democrat) 41 seats [3], Paul Nuthall (UKIP) 1 seat [4], Green (Caroline Lucas) 1 seat
2021: Conservatives (Theresa May) 349 seats, Labour (Lisa Nandy) 201 seats [5], Liberal Democrat (Tim Farron) 49 seats, SNP (Nicola Sturgeon) 27 seats, Green (Caroline Lucas) 3 seats [6]
2023-: Brandon Lewis (Conservative)
Next election 2026: Brandon Lewis (Conservative), Lisa Nandy (Labour), Tim Farron (Liberal Democrat), Scottish National (leadership election ongoing), Green (???)
[1] She even got 52% in one poll O_O hard to believe that happened when she failed so bad. Shes still bad at campaigning so the polls narrow a bit.
[2] Corbyn has to resign after losing loads of seats and the hard left is so discreditted they cant even put a candidate forward (Dennis Skinner tries but not enough nominations before the McDonald amendment they needed 15).
[3] Turns out the reason Theresa May decided not to call an election was because the Lib Dems were going to gain loads of seats. Guess they shouldve stuck with Farron lol (joke). https://www.independent.co.uk/news/...orbyn-theresa-may-lynton-crosby-a7669211.html https://www.newstatesman.com/politi...owed-party-would-lose-seats-liberal-democrats
[4] UKIP still collapse like they did but Carswell stands again in Clacton and wins. He then takes over the party from Paul Nuthall and makes it libertarian but nobody likes that except me back in August lol and he loses his seat next time.
[5] She gains seats so she stays as leader like Kinnock.
[6] The leftists who returned all defect back when Nandy whos on the right becomes leader and they win Hertfordshire North and West Bristol as well.
United States Edition:List of CSA and USA Presidents for my submission to @Lilitou 's alternate elections anthology
PRESIDENTS OF THE CONFEDERATE STATES OF AMERICA:
1861-1862 - Jefferson Davis (Independent)
1861 (with Alexander Stephens) def. Unopposed
1862-1868 - Jefferson Davis (Independent then Neofederalist)
1861 (with Alexander Stephens) def. Wade Hampton III (Independent)
1868-1874 - Alexander Stephens (Constitutionalist)
1867 (with Robert Toombs) def. Clement Clay (Neofederalist)
1874-1880 - Robert Toombs (Constitutionalist)
1873 (with Robert M.T. Hunter) def. Clement Clay (Neofederalist)
1880-1883 - James Longstreet (National Liberty)
1879 (with Simon Bolivar Buckner) def. Isham G. Harris (Neofederalist), William Miles (Constitutionalist)
1883-1885 - Simon Bolivar Buckner (National Liberty)
1885-1886 - Thomas "Stonewall" Jackson (Independent)
1886-1887 - John Breckinridge (National Constitutionalist)
1885 (with Wade Hampton III) def. Unopposed
1887-1898 - Wade Hampton III (National Constitutionalist)
1891 (with John H. Reagan) def. Unopposed
1898-1904 - John Marmaduke (National Constitutionalist)
1897 (with John H. Reagan) def. Thomas Wilson (Social Constitutionalist)
1904-1910 - Benjamin Tillman (Social Constitutionalist)
1903 (with Thomas Wilson) def. Wade Hampton IV (National Constitutionalist)
1910-1916 - Wade Hampton IV (National Constitutionalist)
1909 (with Murphy J. Foster) def. James K. Vardaman (Social Constitutionalist)
1916-1920 - Thomas Wilson (Social Constitutionalist)
1915 (with Thomas Watson) def. Murphy J. Foster (Social Constitutionalist)
1920-1920 - Thomas Watson (Social Constitutionalist)
1920-1922 - John J. Pershing (Salvation Coalition - Military)
1922-1932 - Coleman Blease (Salvation Coalition)
1921 (with Jim Tillman) def. Unopposed
1927 (with John T. Moore) def. Unopposed
1932-1940 - John J. Pershing (New Salvation Coalition)
1933 (with George Van Horn Moseley) def. Unopposed
1940-1952 - George Van Horn Moseley (New Salvation Coalition)
1939 (with Hiram Wesley Evans) def. Unopposed
1945 (with Hiram Wesley Evans) def. Unopposed
1951 (with Hiram Wesley Evans) def. Unopposed
1952-1955 - Hiram Wesley Evans (New Salvation Coalition)
1955-1964 - Strom Thurmond (New Salvation Coalition)
1957 (with Hiram Wesley Evans) def. Unopposed
1964-1970 - George Lincoln Rockwell (New Salvation Coalition)
1963 (with Bull Connor) def. Unopposed
1970-1975 - Bull Connor (New Salvation Coalition)
1969 (with Francis Parker Yockey) def. Unopposed
1975-1982 - Francis Parker Yockey (New Salvation Coalition)
1975 (with J.B. Stoner) def. Unopposed
1982-1988 - J.B. Stoner (New Salvation Coalition)
1981 (with David Duke) def. Unopposed
1988-1994 - Pat Buchanan (New Salvation Coalition then National Patriot Pact)
1987 (with David Duke) def. Unopposed
1994-2000 - David Duke (New Salvation Coalition)
1993 (with Jerry Falwell Sr.) def. Jerry Falwell Sr. (National Patriot Pact) Contingent Election
2000-2006 - Jerry Falwell Sr. (National Patriot Pact)
1999 (with Pat Robertson) def. David Duke (New Salvation Coalition)
2006-2012 - Pat Robertson (National Patriot Pact)
2005 (with Jerry Falwell Jr.) def. David Duke (New Salvation Coalition)
2012-2018 - Jerry Falwell Jr. (National Patriot Pact)
2011 (with Tommy Tuberville) def. Alex Jones (New Salvation Coalition)
2018-2025 - Alex Jones (New Salvation Coalition)
2017 (with Cindy Hyde) def. Teddy Cruz (National Patriot Pact)
2023 (with Cindy Hyde) def. Karen Handel (National Patriot Pact)
2025-2026 - Cindy Hyde (New Salvation Coalition)
2026-???? - Bill Blythe (United Center Roundtable)
2025 (with Mary Landrieu) def. Benjamin Thompson (Progressive Unionist), Jefferson Sessions (National Patriot Pact)
CURRENT CONGRESSIONAL CONTROL:
SENATE:
20 United Center Roundtable (Center Right)
14 National Patriot Pact (Right/Far Right)
9 Progressive Unionist (Center/Center Left)
3 New Salvation Coalition (Far Right)
HOUSE:
118 United Center Roundtable (Center Right)
77 National Patriot Pact (Right/Far Right)
57 Progressive Unionist (Center/Center Left)
23 New Salvation Coalition (Far Right)
2010-2016: David Cameron (Conservative)
2010 (Coalition with Liberal Democrats) def. Gordon Brown (Labour), Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat)
2011 AV referendum, 68% NO
2014 Scottish independence referendum, 55% NO
2015 (Majority) def. Ed Miliband (Labour), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat), Nigel Farage (UKIP)
2016-2019: Theresa May (Conservative)
2019-2023: Rebecca Long-Bailey (Labour)
2019 (Majority) def. Theresa May (Conservative), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Tom Brake (Liberal Democrat)
2023 (Majority) def. Liam Fox (Conservative), Tom Brake (Liberal Democrat), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP)
Quite a simple concept, this one, and not very detailed. No snap election, and after the McDonnell amendment passes at Conference the Project begins preparing to hand over to Rebecca Long-Bailey the next year. Corbyn stands down in early 2018 and Long-Bailey easily gets on the ballot and wins the leadership election, starting her leadership with a decent set of local election results. The Conservatives meanwhile tear themselves apart over May's deal, and after two record-breaking defeats at the end of the year the prime minister negotiates with Labour to get a deal through Parliament. Long-Bailey storms to victory in the election that follows.
The questions remains to this day: what if May hadn't bottled it, called a snap election, and won the landslide against Jeremy Corbyn the polls predicted?
Hi everyone,thanks for your critics for formating and using commas and @Rotunda welcome back but I dont know how my alt SNP leaders list made your eyes bleed its fine for me. Anyway I know im a bit late lol but this is my "your political evolution" list.
2005-2010: Charles Kennedy (Liberal Democrat) [1]
2010-2015: Gordon Brown (Labour-Liberal Democrat coalition) [2]
2015-2019: Ed Miliband (Labour) [3]
2019-2020: Rebecca Long-Bailey (Labour) [4][5]
2020-2020: Gerald Batten (British Peoples) [6]
2020-2021: Jeremy Corbyn (Labour) [7]
2021-2021: none [8]
2021-2021: Rebecca Long-Bailey (Labour) [9]
2021-2021: Rebecca Long-Bailey (Labour-Libertarian coalition) [10]
2021-2021: Liam Fox (Conservative) [11]
2021-2022: Zac Goldsmith (Conservative)
2022-2022: Gavin Williamson (Conservative)
2022-2022: Paul Emberry (Workers) [12]
2022-2023: none [13]
2023-2023: Douglas Carswell (UKIP) [14]
2023-2023: Rebecca Long-Bailey (Labour) [15]
2023-2023: Lisa Nandy (Labour) [16]
[1] I didnt really know much about politics at this time because I wasnt born until 2009 (surprise lol I actually wasnt allowed on this site when I signed up) but my parent's both voted for the Lib Dem's in 2005. So the Iraq war goes really bad and their is a Lib Dem landslide.
[2] Mum voted Labour in 2010 and Dad voted for the Lib Dem's again. The Lib Dem's arent very good and the economy crashs but Labour dont get a majority so they have to make a coalition.
[3] Both my parent's voted Labour and Dad says he will never vote Lib Dem again. So Ed Milliband replaces Guthrum Brown and Labour get a majority though I had to give them 50 per cent of the vote on Electoral calculus.
[4] We did a mock election at school I voted for Labour and we won by alot,the Green's came second which was a surprise.
[5] I started learning lots about politics from Youtube Wikipedia and Reddit and did the Political compass test which said I was a libertarian socialist (yes know I now it does that to everyone) like Ghandi. I dont think there are any librarian socialists in the Labour party though so Long-Bailey is still prime minister.
[6] I was playing alot of HOI4 and for like a week I was a national populist before I joined a Discord server and they said I wasnt allowed to be one of them because im gay so I went back to being a leftist lol
[7] I supported Bernie Sanders in the primarys and apparently Jeremy Corbyn was the British Bernie though I didnt know anything about politics before 2019. This is the largest time I had a ideology and stayed up all night for the election but after he won I kind of lost interest in American politics
[8] I was playing alot of HOI4 again and I became a Syndicalist and Id seen alternate history Youtube videos but I actually found this site while researching online about Syndicalism lol.
[9] Yeah I was sort of just a pro Labour ordinary socialist.
[10] I became a libertarian socialist again. Me and some friends also tried to enterism UKIP for libertarian socialism but our applications got rejected. I know the Libertarian's were right wing and merged with UKIP but there left wing in this
[11] After that I was a Tory for a bit as most of you probably remember,I was a eco-conservative for a bit also. I still think Thatcher was right about the mines but im not a Conservative anymore
[12] I read about the Alternate economic strategy and Peter Shore on Wikipedia,and heard about paul Emberry after he lost his deposit at the Hartlepool bye election and thought he was cool and but then I learned he hates trans people which wasnt cool
[13] I was a anarcho communist for a bit,not long tough.I guess Paul Emberry starts a war and London gets bombed or something and when everythings back to normal everyones mad at him,or hes overthrown by a anarcho syndicalist revolution
[14] Remember my libertarian phase? Yeah lol
[15] Realised libertarianism isnt that great and became a socialist again
[16] I still think Long Bailey has been a good prime minister and dont want to start a fight but im more moderate now and shes been pm nearly as long as Cameron was and if the left is still in control of the party Greg Clark is going to win the next general election so we need a right winger like Nandy.
This is a fantastic list within a list that gives a lot more revelations of the world, which I always love.I was inspired to do the above spin-off but, I promise, no more for what was originally supposed to be just the 'what if May didn't call a snap election?' list. Anyway: apparently the so-called 'Polcompball Wiki' retained the Wikia skin when they moved over to Miraheze (I say, as though I knew any of this before an hour ago), the skin that I was only a few years removed from so many communities abandoning Wikia over them being required to use it, and I am horrified.
Thank you!This is a fantastic list within a list that gives a lot more revelations of the world, which I always love.
i was inspired to do the above spin-off but, I promise, no more for what was originally supposed to be just the 'what if May didn't call a snap election?' list. Anyway: apparently the so-called 'Polcompball Wiki' retained the Wikia skin when they moved over to Miraheze (I say, as though I knew any of this before an hour ago), the skin that I was only a few years removed from so many communities abandoning Wikia over them being required to use it, and I am horrified.
No COVID, decided against including it, but I was thinking you probably get a similar pandemic by the end of the decade and would have worked that into a continuation if 2023 hadn't seemed like a good place to end what was really just a proof of concept. I think that if May hadn't called a snap election Corbyn would have gone as leader after it was possible to get Long-Bailey in to replace him, things would proceed roughly as they do in the list, and a 2017 snap election would be talked about to this day as a great missed opportunity.Quick query - is this a TL where COVID happens orr
Wait, what? Did his family move elsewhere or did Texas countersecede at some point?1949-1953 - Lyndon Johnson (Social Democratic)
2010-2016: David Cameron (Conservative)
2010 (Coalition with Liberal Democrats) def. Gordon Brown (Labour), Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat)
2011 AV referendum, 68% NO
2014 Scottish independence referendum, 55% NO
2015 (Majority) def. Ed Miliband (Labour), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Nick Clegg (Liberal Democrat), Nigel Farage (UKIP)
2016-2019: Theresa May (Conservative)
2019-2023: Rebecca Long-Bailey (Labour)
2019 (Majority) def. Theresa May (Conservative), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP), Tom Brake (Liberal Democrat)
2023 (Majority) def. Liam Fox (Conservative), Tom Brake (Liberal Democrat), Nicola Sturgeon (SNP)
Quite a simple concept, this one, and not very detailed. No snap election, and after the McDonnell amendment passes at Conference the Project begins preparing to hand over to Rebecca Long-Bailey the next year. Corbyn stands down in early 2018 and Long-Bailey easily gets on the ballot and wins the leadership election, starting her leadership with a decent set of local election results. The Conservatives meanwhile tear themselves apart over May's deal, and after two record-breaking defeats at the end of the year the prime minister negotiates with Labour to get a deal through Parliament. Long-Bailey storms to victory in the election that follows.
The questions remains to this day: what if May hadn't bottled it, called a snap election, and won the landslide against Jeremy Corbyn the polls predicted?
This is horrendous in the best way possible.'JoJo's Bizarre Adventure'
Under the 27th Amendment to the ITTL US Constitution people who were born in the CSA who then become US citizens have the full rights to run for President.Wait, what? Did his family move elsewhere or did Texas countersecede at some point?
Shuffling the deck?1913-1921: Gov. of New Jersey Woodrow Wilson (Democratic)
1912 (w/ Gov. of Indiana Thomas R. Marshall) def. Fmr. Pres. Theodore Roosevelt/Gov. of California Hiram Johnson (Progressive); Pres. William Howard Taft/Pres. of Columbia University Nicholas Butler (Republican)
1916 (w/ Vice Pres. Thomas R. Marshall) def. Associate Justice Charles Evans Hughes/Fmr. Vice Pres. Charles W. Fairbank (Republican)
1921-1923: Sen. From Ohio Warren G. Harding† (Republican)
1920 (w/ Director of the A.R.A. Herbert Hoover) def. Solicitor Gen. John W. Davis/Assist. Sec. of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic)
1923-1929: Vice Pres. Herbert Hoover (Republican)
1924 (w/ Fmr. Gov. of Massachusetts Calvin Coolidge) def. Fmr. Gov of Ohio James M. Cox/Gov. of Nebraska Charles W. Bryan (Democratic)
1929-1933: Vice Pres. Calvin Coolidge (Republican)
1928 (w/ Sen. Majority Leader Charles Curtis) def. Gov. of New York Al Smith/Sen. Minority Leader Joseph T. Robinson (Democratic); Sen. From Wisconsin Robert M. La Follette/Sen. From Montana Burton K. Wheeler (Progressive)
1933-1945: Gov. of New York Franklin D. Roosevelt† (Democratic)
1932 (w/ Speaker of the House John Nance Garner) def. Pres. Calvin Coolidge/Vice Pres. Charles Curtis (Republican)
1936 (w/ Vice Pres. John Nance Garner) def. Fmr. Pres. Herbert Hoover/Publisher Frank Knox (Republican)
1940 (w/ Sen. Majority Leader Alben W. Barkley) def. Gov. of Kansas Alf Landon/Publisher Frank Knox (Republican)
1944 (w/ Sen. From Missouri Harry S. Truman) def. Exec. of Commonwealth & Southern Wendell Willkie/Gov. of Ohio John W. Bricker (Republican)
1945-1957: Vice Pres. Harry S. Truman (Democratic)
1948 (w/ Sec. of Commerce Henry A. Wallace) def. Gov. of New York Thomas E. Dewey/Sen. Minority Leader Charles L. McNary (Republican)
1952 (w/ Vice Pres. Henry A. Wallace) def. Gov. of New York Thomas E. Dewey/Gov. of California Earl Warren (Republican); Fmr. Gov of South Carolina Strom Thurmond/Gov. of Mississippi Fielding L. Wright (Dixiecrat)
1957-1963: Sen. From California Richard M. Nixon† (Republican)
1956 (w/ Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower) def. Fmr. Gov. of Illinois Adlai Stevenson II/ Sen. From Texas Lyndon B. Johnson (Democratic)
1960 (w/ Rep. From Michigan Gerald Ford) def. Fmr. Gov. of Illinois Adlai Stevenson II/Sen. From Tennessee Estes Kefauver (Democratic)
1963-1965: Vice Pres. Gerald Ford (Republican)
1965-1973: Sen. Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson (Democratic)
1964 (w/ Sen. Majority Whip Hubert Humphrey) def. Pres. Gerald Ford/Sen. From Massachusetts Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (Republican)
1968 (w/ Vice Pres. Hubert Humphrey) def. Sen. From Arizona Barry Goldwater/Gov. of Maryland Spiro Agnew (Republican)
1973-1977: Gov. of California Ronald Reagan (Republican)
1972 (w/ Fmr. Gov. of Maryland Spiro Agnew) def. Vice Pres. Hubert Humphrey/Sen. From Alabama John Sparkman (Democratic); Gov. of Alabama George Wallace/USAF Gen. Curtis LeMay (American Independent)
1977-1982: Sen. From Massachusetts John F. Kennedy (Democratic)
1976 (w/ Sen. From Minnesota Walter Mondale) def. Pres. Ronald Reagan/Rep. From New York William E. Miller (Republican)
1980 (w/ Sen. From Delaware Joe Biden) def. Rep. from Illinois John B. Anderson/ Fmr. Sec. of Defence George H.W. Bush
1982-1985: Vice Pres. Joe Biden (Democratic)
1985-1993: Fmr. Sec. of Defence George H.W. Bush (Republican)
1984 (w/ Rep. From Wyoming Dick Cheney) def. Fmr. Sen. From South Dakota George McGovern/Fmr. Sen. From Maine Edmund Muskie (Democratic); Pres. Joe Biden/Fmr. Ambassador to France Sargent Shriver (Independent)
1988 (w/ Vice Pres. Dick Cheney) def. Sen. From Minnesota Walter Mondale/Rep. From New York Geraldine Ferraro (Democratic)
1993-2001: Fmr. Gov. of Georgia Jimmy Carter (Democratic)
1992 (w/ Sen. From Tennessee Al Gore) def. Sen. From Arizona John McCain/Sen. Minority Leader Bob Dole (Republican)
1996 (w/ Vice Pres. Al Gore) def. Sen. Majority Leader Bob Dole/Rep. From New York Jack Kemp (Republican); President and CEO of Perot Systems Ross Perot/Fmr. Gov. of Wisconsin Patrick Lucey (Reform)
2001-2005: Chairman of the Trump Organisation Donald Trump (Reform)
2000 (w/ Fmr. Pres. Joe Biden) def. Sen. From Arizona John McCain/Admiral James Stockdale (Republican); Vice Pres. Al Gore/Sec. of the Treasury Lloyd Bentsen (Democratic)
2005-2013: Gov. of Texas George W. Bush (Republican)
2004 (w/ Sen. From Indiana Dan Quayle) def. Fmr. Gov of Massachusetts Michael Dukakis/Sen. From Connecticut Joe Lieberman (Democratic); Pres. Donald Trump/Vice Pres. Joe Biden (Reform)
2008 (w/ Rep. From Indiana Mike Pence) def. Sen. From Massachusetts John Kerry/Fmr. Sen. From North Carolina John Edwards (Democratic)
2013-2021: Fmr. Sen. From Arkansas Bill Clinton (Democratic)
2012 (w/ Sen. From Illinois Barack Obama) def. Fmr. Gov of Massachusetts Mitt Romney/Fmr. Gov. of Alaska Sarah Palin (Republican)
2016 (w/ Vice Pres. Barack Obama) def. Fmr. Gov of Massachusetts Mitt Romney/Author Pat Buchanan (Republican)
2021-Present: Vice Pres. Barack Obama (Democratic)
2020 (w/ Sen. From Virginia Tim Kaine) def. Fmr. Sec. of State Hilary Rodham/Speaker of the House Paul Ryan (Republican)
Subtitled 'Joe Biden: Political Zombie'Shuffling the deck?
Germany Edition:United States Edition:
PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA:
1861-1865 - Abraham Lincoln (Republican)
1860 (with Hannibal Hamlin) def. John Breckinridge (Democratic), John Bell (Democratic), Stephen Douglas (Democratic)
1865-1873 - George McClellan (Democratic)
1864 (with Horatio Seymour) def. Abraham Lincoln (Republican)
1868 (with Horatio Seymour) def. Benjamin Wade (Republican)
1873-1875 - Ulysses Grant (Republican)
1872 (with James Garfield) def. Horatio Seymour (Democratic)
1875-1881 - James Garfield (Republican)
1876 (with James Blaine) def. John Palmer (Democratic)
1881-1885 - William Sherman (Republican)
1880 (with James Blaine) def. Grover Cleveland (Democratic), James Weaver (Popular Force)
1885-1889 - Thomas Bayard (Democratic)
1884 (with Allen Thurman) def. James Blaine (Republican), James Weaver (People's), Henry George (Social Labor)
1889-1894 - Henry George (Farmer-Labor)
1888 (with James Weaver) def. Thomas Bayard (Democratic), Mark Hanna (Republican)
1892 (with James Weaver) def. William McKinley (Anti-Radical)
1894-1897 - James Weaver (Farmer-Labor)
1897-1901 - Albert Beveridge (Conservative)
1896 (with Alton Parker) def. James Weaver (Farmer-Labor)
1901-1909 - Theodore Roosevelt (Farmer-Labor)
1900 (with William Jennings Bryan) def. Albert Beveridge (Conservative)
1904 (with William Jennings Bryan) def. William Taft (Conservative)
1909-1913 - William Jennings Bryan (Farmer-Labor)
1908 (with William Randolph Hearst) def. Thomas Marshall (Conservative)
1913-1921 - Nellie Tayloe Ross (National Unity)
1912 (with Thomas Marshall) def. William Jennings Bryan (Farmer-Labor), James Moyle (Conservative)
1916 (with Thomas Marshall) def. Frank Lowden (Conservative), Eugene Debs (Farmer-Labor)
1921-1927 - Leonard Wood (Farmer-Labor)
1920 (with Charles Evans Hughes) def. Thomas Marshall (National Unity), Nathan Miller (Conservative)
1924 (with Charles Evans Hughes) def. Nathan Miller (United Conservative)
1927-1929 - Charles Evans Hughes (Farmer-Labor)
1929-1933 - Royal Copeland (United Conservative)
1928 (with Herbert Hoover) def. Charles Evans Hughes (Farmer-Labor)
1933-1941 - Floyd Olson (Farmer-Labor then Social Democratic)
1932 (with William Borah) def. Royal Copeland (United Conservative)
1936 (with Frank Lloyd Wright) def. Arthur Vandenberg (United Conservative), William Borah (Farmer-Labor)
1941-1949 - Upton Sinclair (Social Democratic)
1940 (with Lyndon Johnson) def. Robert Taft (United Conservative), George Norris (Farmer-Labor)
1944 (with Lyndon Johnson) def. Robert Taft (Conservative), Henry Wallace (Farmer-Labor), Tom Dewey (National Unity)
1949-1953 - Lyndon Johnson (Social Democratic)
1948 (with Vito Marcantonio) def. Tom Dewey (One Nation), Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. (Farmer-Labor)
1953-1961 - Margaret Chase Smith (National Unity)
1952 (with Richard Nixon) def. Lyndon Johnson (Social Democratic)
1956 (with Richard Nixon) def. Stuart Symington (Social Democratic)
1961-1964 - Walter Reuther (Social Democratic)
1960 (with Bayard Rustin) def. Richard Nixon (National Unity)
1964-1969 - Bayard Rustin (Social Democratic)
1964 (with Daniel Inouye) def. Barry Goldwater (Conservative), Nelson Rockefeller (National Unity)
1969-1977 - Daniel Inouye (Social Democratic)
1968 (with Hubert Humphrey) def. Richard Nixon (National Unity), John Ashbrook (Conservative)
1972 (with Hubert Humphrey) def. Robert Stanfield (National Unity), Barry Goldwater (Conservative)
1977-1978 - Hubert Humphrey (Social Democratic)
1976 (with Shirley Chisholm) def. Ronald Reagan (Conservative), Edward Levi (National Unity)
1978-1981 - Shirley Chisholm (Social Democratic)
1981-1989 - Millicent Fenwick (National Unity)
1980 (with Charles Percy) def. Shirley Chisholm (Social Democratic), Bob Dole (Conservative)
1984 (with Charles Percy) def. George McGovern (Social Democratic), Bob Michel (Conservative)
1989-1993 - Charles Percy (National Unity)
1988 (with William Cohen) def. Geraldine Ferraro (Social Democratic), Barbara Jordan (Liberal), Bob Dole (Conservative)
1993-1994 - Barbara Jordan (Liberal)
1992 (with Al Gore) def. Charles Percy (National Unity), Bob Dole (Conservative), Mike Gravel (Social Democratic)
1994-1997 - Al Gore (Liberal)
1997-2005 - Robert Reich (Social Democratic)
1996 (with Barbara Boxer) def. Al Gore (Liberal), John Boehner (United Conservative)
2000 (with Barbara Boxer) def. Jack Lew (Liberal), John Boehner (United Conservative)
2005-2009 - John McCain (United Conservative)
2004 (with John Boehner) def. Barbara Boxer (Social Democratic), Gray Davis (Liberal)
2009-2017 - Hillary Rodham (Liberal)
2008 (with Colin Powell) def. Bernie Sanders (Social Democratic), John McCain (United Conservative), Ron Paul (Patriot)
2012 (With Colin Powell) def. Mitt Romney (United Conservative), Barbara Lee (Social Democratic)
2017-2021 - Colin Powell (Liberal)
2016 (with Meg Whitman) def. Michael Flynn (United Conservative), Julian Castro (Social Democratic)
2021-2025 - John Kasich (National Unity)
2020 (with Carly Fiorina) def. Colin Powell (Liberal), Michael Flynn (Patriot), Dave Eby (Social Democratic)
2025-???? - Rachel Lindner (Social Democratic) [1]
2024 (with Robert Lee Ahn) def. John Kasich (National Unity), Michael Flynn (Patriot), Kevin Falcon (Liberal)
CURRENT CONGRESSIONAL CONTROL:
COUNCIL OF STATE:
Secretary of State - Activist Xiong Yan (2023-?)
Secretary of Defense - General David Goldfein (2019-?)
Secretary of the Treasury - President Robert Reich (2023-?)
Attorney General - Solicitor General Barack Obama (2019-?)
Secretary of State:
✓Xiong Yan (Social Democratic) - 49.83% / 66.94%
Hillary Rodham (Liberal) - 20.54% / 33.06%
Michael Steele (National Unity) - 20.11%
Mike Pompeo (Patriot) - 9.45%
Jackson Hinkle (Peace) - 0.07%
Secretary of Defense:
✓David Goldfein* (Liberal) - 96.06%
Patrick Donahoe (We Want War) - 3.28% [2]
Max Blumenthal (Peace) - 0.66%
Secretary of the Treasury:
✓Robert Reich (Social Democratic) - 41.05% / 57.35%
Spencer Cox (National Unity) - 27.11% / 42.65%
Janet Yellen (Liberal) - 21.37%
Donald Trump (Patriot) - 10.35%
David Sacks (Peace) - 0.11%
Attorney General:
✓Barack Obama* (Social Democratic) - 55.72%
Michael Pence (National Unity) - 24.39%
Elena Kagan (Liberal) - 12.78%
Michael Flynn (Patriot) - 7.11%
SENATE:
37 Social Democratic (Left/Center-Left)
15 National Unity (Center/Center-Right)
12 Liberal (Center-Left/Center)
6 Patriot (Right/Far-Right)
HOUSE:
225 Social Democratic (Left/Center-Left)
141 National Unity (Center/Center-Right)
115 Liberal (Center-Left/Center)
19 Patriot (Right/Far-Right)
1 Peace (Far-Left) [3]
[1] OC created just so I could have a subject of ire in Jeff Sessions' speech. Leftist, Non-Christian, LGBT, Young, Woman.
[2] Meme candidacy created for the sole purpose of outpolling Peace for SecDef
[3] Only happened because of normal left divisions that led to a Patriot v. Peace runoff