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Lists of Heads of Government and Heads of State

The Parliament and the Revolution
H. H. Asquith (Liberal majority, then minority supported by IPP, then Wartime Coalition) 1908-1917

Jan. 1910 [min.]: def. A. J. Balfour (Conservative & Liberal Unionist), John Redmond (IPP), Arthur Henderson (Labour), William O'Brien (All-for-Ireland)
Dec. 1910 [min.]: def. A. J. Balfour (Conservative & Liberal Unionist), John Redmond (IPP), George Barnes (Labour)

A. J. Balfour (Conservative-led Wartime Coalition, then Constitutional Coalition) 1917-1919
1918 [coal.]: def. J. Ramsay MacDonald (Labour), Patrick Pearse (Sinn Féin), Winston Churchill (Liberal-Constitutionalist), William Redmond (IPP), David Lloyd George (People's Liberal), Guy Aldred [de facto] (Anti-Parliamentary), H. H. Asquith (National Liberal)
William Joynson-Hinks (Conservative-led Constitutional Coalition) 1919-1920
Henry Page Croft (Conservative-led Constitutional Coalition) 1920

J. Ramsay MacDonald (Labour-led Council of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates) 1920-present

1921 [coun.]: def. David Lloyd George (People's Liberal), Rudolf Rocker [de facto] (Anti-Parliamentary), Horatio Bottomley (All for Unity)

With the failure of Jinx and Croft to hold back the Red Menace, and with Parliament falling apart as more and more turned to the rising Council of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates - which every attempt at cracking down only empowered it - the King sighed and made a fateful decision.

He made a call to the leader of Labour, the chair of the Council of Workers' and Soldiers' Delegates, a full-throated defender of the Soviets growing in Russia and Germany (and news say there's syndicates in France those days too?), and invited him to come to Buckingham Palace to kiss hands. The revolution seemed inevitable to the King, and so he stepped aside. He did not want to be like his cousin Nicholas II, stuck in some frozen Siberian wasteland for fighting the workers. No, let him decide the pace of the inevitable, it is much better than to rage against the whirlwind.

The supposed red terror of Britain, the wrecker of the war, arrived at the palace in morning dress and made every courtesy to the King. The capitalist powers were breaking, but many workers still saw the King in a deeply kind light, and MacDonald had no wish to split his cause in its hour of victory. No, let socialism and the New Jerusalem come through the accepted process [even if the Council now supersedes the Parliament]. He would absolutely hear much grievance from this from the Anti-Parliamentarians, but the Revolution must be secured, not alienated.

The war broke capitalism, and the new world was in birth, a brave new world of socialism.
 
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Another no-9/11 Bush TL bitchessssss

43. 2001 - 2005: George W. Bush (Republican)
2000 with Dick Cheney def. Al Gore / Joe Lieberman (Democratic)
44. 2005 - 2013: John Edwards (Democratic)
2004 with John Kerry def. George W. Bush / Dick Cheney (Republican)
2008 with John Kerry def. John McCain / Tim Pawlenty (Republican)

45. 2013 - 2021: Rick Santorum (Republican)
2012 with Marco Rubio def. John Kerry / Bill Richardson (Democratic)
2016 with Marco Rubio def. Hillary Clinton / Evan Bayh (Democratic)

46. 2021 - 0000: Barack Obama (Democratic)
2020 with Sherrod Brown def. Marco Rubio / Michael Bloomberg (Republican)



So-called "President" George W. Bush was still forcing himself to smile by 2:00 AM. Fox had still held out -- Much thanks to Ailes no doubt -- but CNN and MSNBC had called it: George W. Bush had lost the presidency. There were no words coming out of the muted television in his green room, but he could read their lips just fine. "LOSER. LOSER. LOSER." Even the crowds at his own party seemed to be sarcastic with their chanting, which reverberated through the building. "DON’T BACK DOWN. DON’T BACK DOWN. BACK—."




MODERATOR POST:

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The Mods remember.

Also the mods can see your deleted post where you admitted to your "inspiration".

Therefore, having broken the terms of your return to this community, you are banned again, you may of course appeal this decision to the Admin
 
1859-1866: Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston† (Liberal)
1859 (Minority) def. Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby (Conservative)
1861 – Declaration of European Neutrality in the American Civil War; Trent Affair
1862 – Withdraw of British Support from the Mexican Intervention
1863 – French Recognition of the C.S.A. after the Battles of Gettysburg and Westminster; Reiteration of British Neutrality in North America; Napoleon III’s intervention in the American Civil War
1864 – French Invasion of New Orleans; General George McClellan elected President of the United States after the Republican Party splits; Paraguayan War begins; Sherman’s March halted at Atlanta
1865 (Majority) def. Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby (Conservative)
1865 – Battle of Germantown leads to the withdrawal of the Confederates behind the Potomac; Second Schleswig War; Osborne House Conference; The Gladstone Affair; Treaty of Portsmouth ends the American Civil War with the South securing independence

1866-1868: John Russell, 1st Earl Russell (Liberal)
1866 – Austro-Prussian War; Reform Act of 1866; British North America Act; Great Britian officially recognizes the Confederate States of America; Assassination of President McClellan, he is succeeded by Vice President Horation Seymour
1867 – Factory Act; The Alaskan Controversy; General Robert E. Lee soundly defeats Jefferson Davis in the Confederacy’s first peacetime election; French troops withdraw from Mexico after stabilising Emperor Maximillian’s rule with Confederate assistance

1868-1869: Edward Smith-Stanley, 14th Earl of Derby† (Conservative Minority)
1868 – Napier’s Expedition to Abyssinia; despite continued splits in the Republican Party, Horatio Seymour is defeated and replaced by the Radical Democracy candidate Benjamin Wade; Suspension of work on the Transcontinental Railroad after the Judah and Credit Mobilier Scandals
1869-1871: Benjamin Disraeli (Conservative)
1869 (Majority) def. Robert Lowe, 1st Viscount Sherbrooke (Liberal)
1869 – Elementary Education Act; Trade Union Act
1870 – Establishment of Secret Ballot in England; Franco-Prussian War; Napoleon III forced to abdicate by the Maréchals, establishment of the Third French Republic

1871-1872: Robert Lowe, 1st Viscount Sherbrooke (Liberal)
1871 (Minority) def. Benjamin Disraeli (Conservative)
1871 – British Columbia incorporated into the Dominion of Canada; Beginning of the Canadian Transcontinental Railroad; Death of Queen Victoria; Disestablishment of the Church of Ireland

1872-1881: Benjamin Disraeli† (Conservative)
1872 (Majority) def. Robert Lowe, 1st Viscount Sherbrooke (Liberal)
1872 – Coronation of King Albert I Edward; Licensing Act of 1872; Hampton Reforms to the British Army; the reunited Republican Party elects Supreme Court Judge David Davis as President of the United States
1873 – Robert E. Lee steps down as Confederate President, replaced by Nathan Bedford Forrest
1874 – Spanish-Confederate War, loss of all Spanish colonies in the Caribbean; The Great Balkan Crisis; Hawaii becomes a protectorate of the United States after rebuffing British advances; The “Comanche Campaign” ends with the ethnic cleansing of Comanche Indians from Texas
1875 – British Purchase of the Suez Canal; Balkan uprisings against the Ottoman Empire
1876 – Emperor of India Act, Albert I Edward travels to India for the first Imperial Durbar; Samuel J. Tilden elected President of the U.S.A., first to serve from the nation’s new capital in Columbus, Ohio
1877 – Russo-Turkish War; Congress of Berlin; Canadian Transcontinental Railroad Completed, linking Vancouver to Quebec, an extension to Halifax begins construction.
1878 (Majority) def. Robert Lowe, 1st Viscount Sherbrooke (Liberal); Isaac Butt (Home Rule League)
1879 – Anglo-Zulu War; Second Anglo-Afghan War, Britain retains a garrison at Kandahar; War of the Pacific

1881-1885: Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (Conservative)
1881 – Tsar Alexander II survives an attempt on his life; The Boer War begins between Britain and the Boer Republics; League of the Three Emperor’s ends
1882 – Anglo-Egyptian War, Britain becomes the dominant power in the region over French and Turkish objections
1884 (Minority) def. William Ewart Gladstone (Liberal); Charles Stewart Parnell (IPP)
1884 – British representatives negotiate a white peace in the First Sino-French War; Austro-French Alliance signed in Vienna; General Gordon is dispatched to repress the Mahdists Revolt in Sudan; conservative Democrat Winfield Hancock is elected President, succeeding the liberal Samuel Tilden

1885-1887: William Ewart Gladstone (Liberal)
1885 (Majority) def. Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (Conservative); Charles Stewart Parnell (IPP)
1885 – The Relief of Khartoum saves General Gordon and his army; British control of both Egypt and Sudan permanently alienates Britain and the Ottomans; Death of Prince Albert; James Longstreet is elected President of the C.S.A. and begins the slow emancipation of Dixie’s Slaves; King Leopold II of Belgium establishes the Congo Free State as private property

1887-1888: Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (Conservative)
1887 – Russo-German alliance signed; General Georges Boulanger elected President of the Third Republic; End of the Fenian Raids after decisive clash in Manitoba, U.S. President Hancock deploys Federal troops to the Black Hills to round up remaining Fenians, repatriating many to England for trial; First Irish Home Rule Bill is killed in House of Commons, Gladstone resigns
1888-1894: William Ewart Gladstone (Liberal)
1888 (Majority) def. Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (Conservative); Charles Stewart Parnell (IPP)
1888 – Start of the Last Indian War after the Apache Geronimo escapes his reservation, sparking uprisings of native tribes across the Great Plains for several years; Anglo-Boer War leads to the annexation of the Boer Republics; Kaiser Wilhelm I dies, the coronation of Fredrich III is delayed as he recovers from his cancer operation
1890 – Treaty of Lisbon resolves Portuguese disputes with Britain in Africa, securing its sovereignty over land north of the Zambezi and linking Angola and Mozambique by land; Second Sino-French War ends in French victory, annexing the Tonkin Gulf, the Leizhou Peninsula and Hainan as colonies; Bismarck is dismissed by Kaiser Fredrich and a more liberal coalition under Eugen Richter takes power; the Royal Navy adopts the two-power standard
1892 – Spanish-Moroccan War leads to the deposing of the Sultan and establishment of a Spanish protectorate; Reforming Russian Tsar Alexander II dies, his son and successor Alexander III disbands the State Duma and restores Absolutist Tsarism
1894 (Majority) def. Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 3rd Marquess of Salisbury (Conservative); Charles Stewart Parnell (IPP)
1894 – Second Irish Home Rule Bill fails to pass the House of Commons; Gladstone resigns as Prime Minister to prevent a split in the Liberal Party

1894-1897: William Harcourt (Liberal)
1894 – The Dreyfus Affair leads to a crackdown by President Boulanger, imposing greater restrictions on the Third Republic
1895 – Sino-Japanese War signals the arrival of Japan on the world stage; Tsar Alexander III is assassinated, his son succeeds him as Nicholas II; Kaiser Fredrich III succumbs to pneumonia, his son Wilhelm II succeeds him; President Boulanger’s health begins to decline, fearing for the stability of France without him Philippe, Count of Paris, is summoned back to France and preparations made to restore the Bourbons

1897-1906: Joseph Chamberlain (‘Ministry of All Talents’)
1897 (Coalition w/ some Conservative and some Liberal) def. Lord Randolph Churchill (Conservative); William Harcourt (Liberal); John Redmond (IPP)
1897 – The Third attempt to pass Irish Home Rule, an election gives neither Party a majority, and the King summons Joseph Chamberlain to form a coalition ministry; a French-Confederate consortium begins groundwork on a canal through the Isthmus of Panama; Alfonso XIII and Philippe VII sign an alliance treaty between Spain and France
1898 – Philippe VII of France is assassinated, the Duke of Orleans is crowned Philippe VIII
1901 – The End of the Boxer Rebellion; Oceania Act amalgamates the British colonies of Australia, Westralia, and New Zealand into the Empire’s second autonomous Dominion; the French naval plan begins to strain Anglo-French relations
1902 (Coalition w/ Conservative and Unionist Liberal) def. Lord Randolph Churchill (Conservative); Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman (Liberal); John Redmond (IPP); Spencer Cavendish, 8th Duke of Devonshire (Unionist Liberal); Keir Hardie (Labour Representative Council)
1902 – Anglo-Japanese alliance is signed in London; Anglo-German alliance signed in Berlin; the Liberal Party splits on Tarriff reform, Chamberlain calls an election that keeps him in power in coalition between the Conservatives and his pro-Tarriff Unionist supporters
1904 – The Panama Canal completes construction, with France securing the controlling interest; Theodore Roosevelt is elected President of the United States, the first Progressive leader in North America; Russo-Japanese War leads permanent Japanese control over Korea and the leading interest in Manchuria; King Albert I Edward tours North America, meeting future Presidents Wilson and Bryan, and President Roosevelt; Confederation of South Africa becomes an independent Dominion in the British Empire
1905 – Franco-Turkish Alliance signed in Constantinople; 1905 Revolution almost topples Tsarism in Russia, Nicholas II restores the Duma and make other concessions to retain his rule; HMS Dreadnought is launched, triggering a global naval arms race, most intently felt by France and Britain

1906-: Austen Chamberlain (Unionist ‘Caretaker’)
1906-1908: Spencer Cavendish, 8th Duke of Devonshire† (Unionist Liberal)
1906 (Coalition w/ Conservative and Unionist Liberal) def. Lord George Hamilton (Conservative); Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman (Liberal); John Redmond (IPP); Austen Chamberlain (Unionist Liberal); Keir Hardie (Labour Representative Council)
1906 – Joseph Chamberlain suffers a stroke, and resigns, his son Austen does not hold the confidence of the Cabinet and is soon replaced by the Duke of Devonshire; Anglo-German Naval Agreement leads to a massive expansion of the German fleet, giving the allies a theoretical four power standard by 1920

1908-1909: Lord George Hamilton (Conservative)
1909-????: H.H. Asquith (Liberal)
1909 (Majority) def. Lord George Hamilton (Conservative); John Redmond (IPP); Austen Chamberlain (Unionist Liberal); David Shackleton (Labour)
1909 – Theodore Roosevelt’s second inauguration, the first Republican to serve two terms in office; Anglo-Russian Agreement signed, resolving differences in Central Asia; the increasingly weak Unionist government collapses, the Liberals form a new government under Asquith; Woodrow Wilson is elected Confederate President, a Progressive ‘New Whig’; New French naval plan scales back dreadnought production, concentrating on commerce raiders
1911 – Russian Prime Minister Pytor Stolypin is assassinated creating a power vacuum; Revolution topples the Qing dynasty in China; King-Emperor Albert I Edward dies, succeeded by his son Albert II Victor, his funeral is the largest assembly of crowned heads in History
1912 – Unionist Liberals officially integrate with the Conservative Party; The May Days – after a failed coup in Serbia leads to the assassination of Nikola Pašić, and Europe spirals into war between the Triple Alliance (Britain, Germany and Russia) and the Entente (France, Spain, Turkey and Austria); Emperor Maximillian of Mexico dies, his adopted son Agustín II succeeds him, but the country is plunged into chaos; Progressive Democrat William Jennings Bryan is elected President of the United States
1909-1915: H.H. Asquith (Liberal)
1909 (Majority) def. Lord George Hamilton (Conservative); John Redmond (IPP); Austen Chamberlain (Unionist Liberal); David Shackleton (Labour)
1909 – Theodore Roosevelt’s second inauguration, the first Republican to serve two terms in office; Anglo-Russian Agreement signed, resolving differences in Central Asia; the increasingly weak Unionist government collapses, the Liberals form a new government under Asquith; Woodrow Wilson is elected Confederate President, a Progressive ‘New Whig’; New French naval plan scales back dreadnought production, concentrating on commerce raiders
1911 – Russian Prime Minister Pytor Stolypin is assassinated creating a power vacuum; Revolution topples the Qing dynasty in China; King-Emperor Albert I dies, succeeded by his son Albert II, his funeral is the largest assembly of crowned heads in History
1912 (Wartime Coalition) def. Arthur Steel-Maitland (Conservative); John Redmond (IPP); David Shackleton (Labour)
1912 – Unionist Liberals officially integrate with the Conservative Party; The May Days – after a failed coup in Serbia leads to the assassination of Nikola Pašić, and Europe spirals into war between the Triple Alliance (Britain, Germany and Russia) and the Entente (France, Spain, Turkey and Austria); Emperor Maximillian of Mexico, his adopted son Agustín II succeeds him, but the country is plunged into chaos; a French advance to outflank the German armies leads to a full invasion of Belgium, the B.E.F. lands at Antwerp but cannot save the country and evacuate the Belgian army out through the port; Russia’s advance into Galicia stalls around the fortress of Przemyśl; Britain seizes Italian dreadnoughts under construction and presses them into service; Germany withdraws from Alsace-Lorraine after Chief of Staff von Moltke panics and falls back to the Rhineland; Progressive Democrat William Jennings Bryan is elected President of the United States
1913 – Japan enters the war, seizing France’s eastern colonies; Austria’s advance into Saxony is driven back by Generals Hindenburg and Ludendorff; the Conservatives enter the British war government; Curragh Mutiny leads to fears in Britain of Irish insurrection; Battle of the Tonkin Gulf; Polish Legions formed by Dmowski and Piłsudski to fight for the Entente; Bohemia Offensive leads to the fall of Prague and Krakow; Lord Kitchener arrives in Egypt to manage Britain’s war against the Turks; Italy joins the Entente, the influx of Italian troops in Bohemia and the Alps causes stalemate in the East; Battle of Ceylon inaugurates the voyages of the French commerce raider Charlamagne; Spain declares war on Portugal after British ship base at the Azores; Dardanelles campaign begins with allied landings to try capture Constantinople; Serbia collapses under allied pressure, Italy invades Albania to interne the retreating Serb army; Siege of Gibraltar ends in Spanish victory, closing the Mediterranean to British reinforcements west of Suez; Fall of Saigon to Japanese troops, the last Entente holdout in South East Asia; Fall of Tbilisi, Tsar Nicholos leaves Petrograd and assumes personal command of the Russian army
1914 – An insurrection in the Spanish Philippines gains British and Japanese support; End of the Dardanelle Campaign; France ends all restrictions on its commerce raiding; Victoriano Huerta launches a coup that removes Agustín II, but instability continues in Mexico; President Bryan’s Neutrality Acts begin restricting American trade of war materials to the Triple Alliance; Battles of the Ushant and Ría de Ortigueira sees the British bloody the Entente’s nose at sea, securing the Atlantic against the threat of dreadnoughts; Battle of the Balearics; Third Battle of Aachen, the B.E.F.’s first major engagement on the Western Front; the Canadian Corps distinguishes itself by turning the Spanish Army away from Lisbon; the Munich Advance creates a salient around the city, leading to the bloodiest battle of the war; British troops land in Mesopotamia and advance up the Tigris; Start of the Arab Revolt; Battle of Turks and Caicos ends with the sinking of Charlamagne, having crossed the Pacific, its location was betrayed by Confederate agents after illegally transiting the Panama Canal; Battle of Malta ends in disaster as the Entente attempts to land on the island is defeated by the British and Serb exiles; Second Battle of Bonn, the bloodiest day of the war for the British Army; Casement Affair, the British diplomat is exposed as a French agent, embarrassment and the revelation of his diaries lead him to be tried with “gross indecency” rather than treason; Dixie Occupation of Haiti; Revolution breaks out against President Huerta


1915-1922: Winston Churchill (Liberal)
1915 (Wartime Coalition) def. Arthur Steel-Maitland (Conservative); John Redmond (IPP); David Shackleton (Labour)
1915 – Lenin and Trotsky arrive in Russia with a blank cheque from France and Austria; Umberto I of Italy dies, his son Vittorio Emmanuel III begins seeking a means to withdraw from the war; Woodrow Wilson is the first Confederate President elected to a second six year term; Titanic is sunk with all hands by a French submarine, with many Americans onboard and further neutrality acts are killed in the U.S. Senate; the Confederacy declares war on France, seizing the Panama Canal and French Caribbean; Secretary of War Winston Churchill leads a Cabinet revolt against Asquith, replacing him as Prime Minister; Confederate troops begin arriving in Portugal; the Ulster Compromise leads to the passage of Home Rule for Ireland, exempting the three eastern counties of Ulster, and the Irish Nationalists join the War Cabinet; the Anglo-Canadian-Portuguese Army ejects the Spanish from Portugal; France launches the first armoured attack in history at the Battle of Landau, German troops abandon their positions and the General Staff considers how to adapt to this new threat; Battle of Kut ends with the withdraw of British troops back to Basra; Battle of Badajoz, Britain’s first use of armoured warfare; Start of the Channel Bombing Campaign, the world’s first air campaign by aircraft and airship; Confederate Navy occupies the Canary Islands and joins the Atlantic Blockade; Anglo-Confederate troops land on Sicily from Malta
1916 – Caucus Offensive led by Mustafa Kemal breaks through and captures Baku, throwing the Russian army into chaos; Battle of Gaza, British troops breakout of Sinaia into Palestine; March Revolution topples Tsar Nicholas II, establishing a duopoly between the Duma and Soviets; Fall of Manila; Brusilov-Mackensen Offensives aims to knock Austria out the war; Fall of Aqaba; Barcelona Uprising leads to the dethronement of Alfonso XIII; Confederate troops capture Palermo; Toledo Armistice, Spanish Republic exits the war; Kitchener’s March on Jerusalem; Sykes-Weizemann Agreement, Britain promises a Jewish homeland in Palestine; Tenth and Final Battle of Przemyśl; Fall of Brno; Greece and Romania declare war on the Entente; Bolshevik November Revolution seizes power in Russia; Ludendorff splits the Italians and Austrians at Innsbruck; Death of Emperor Franz Josef, succeeded by his son Rudolf; Canada occupies Russian Alaska
1917 – Italy withdraws all troops to the Isonzo; Arab Revolt captures Damascus, British troops capture Baghdad; Battle of Krasnodar, the furthest extent of the Turkish advance; Budapest Uprising; Soviet Russia halts all advances; Allied armies withdraw from Iberia to the Western Front; Treaty of Lemberg, peace between Soviet Russia and the Entente; Battle of Linz; Siege of Cluj; Zapatista rebels capture Mexico City, toppling Victoriano Huerta; Romanov family flees Russia for Germany; Liberation of Belgrade by Greek and Romanian troops; Treaty of San Marino, Italy defects from the Entente to the Allies; Rhine-Ruhr Offensive, the French Army throws everything to break the western stalemate, ejecting British troops from ‘Bloody’ Bonn, Confederates from Cologne, before the Germans hold the line at Dusseldorf; Battles of Cannes and Trieste, Italy’s first offensives against her former allies; Allied landings in Dalmatia; Emperor Rudolf signs the Salzburg Armistice; King Constatine of Greece marches with his army into Constantinople; Leverkusen and Wiesbaden Offensives break the French army in the Rhineland; Generals Kornilov and Denikin mutiny against the Soviets, start of the Russian Civil War; Battle of Aleppo, Turkish troops hold the British-Arab advance; National uprisings in Poland, the Baltics and Ukraine, Allied troops ship in to support them against the Bolsheviks; Royal and Japanese navies take Arkhangelsk and Vladivostok in support of the White Armies; Battle of Strasbourg leads the French to withdraw from Germany entire; Hungary declares its independence; Czech National Congress founded in Prague; Liberation of Belgium; Battle of Lillie; Nancy Mutiny of French troops; French Prime Minister Count Bernard de Vésins is assassinated, Philippe VIII tries to replace him with Marshal Foch who refuses so long as Philippe remains King, Philippe abdicates and makes Foch Regent of France; Armistice of November 11th; Foch appoints Radical Republican Georges Clemenceau as Prime Minister

Treaty of Lisbon (1917) – Peace Treaty with the Spanish Republic

  • Galicia to be occupied by the Portuguese, for 10 years with all revenues paid as reparations to Portugal.
  • Balearic Islands placed under British administration for 20 years.
  • British troops and ships allowed to base at Algeciras and Tangiers until facilities at Gibraltar restored.
  • Sultan of Morrocco restored to his throne, his Kingdom remains a protectorate of the Spanish Republic.
  • The Philippines will be an autonomous republic under the protection of Japan.
1918 – Dmowski and Piłsudski split after Germany invites the Polish Legions to help maintain order in Poland; Indian and Australian cavalry reach Lake Van; Greek troops cross the Bosphorus; the Ottoman Sultan surrenders to the allies; The Coupon Elections keeps the Liberal-Conservative Coalition in Parliament; Spanish Flu epidemic starts; Czech National Congress declare an independent Bohemia; Battle of Yekaterinburg, Admiral Kolchak is defeated by the Red Army; Home Rule act comes into force, most Ireland will be governed as an independent Dominion from Dublin; Treaty of Potsdam recognizes an independent Kingdom of Poland; Jacobin Uprising and the Paris Commune are supressed; Soviet-German War begins when the Red Army storms White Ruthenia; Fourth French Republic declared; the Royal Navy occupies Sevastopol to support the White Army; Bela Kun’s short-lived Soviet Hungary is destroyed when the Czechs, Romanians, Serbs and Germans invade; Siberian Offensive ends in failure, Admiral Kolchak is executed by the Red Army

Treaty of Versailles (1918) – Peace Treaty with France

  • French Congo, Madagascar and Ivory Coast ceded to Germany. Cambodia placed under German protectorate; Indochina partitioned with Japan.
  • Savoy and Nice ceded to Italy.
  • Pas de Calais demilitarised zone established and occupied by the Belgian Army, with all revenues paid directly to Brussels.
  • French Indian and Pacific Ocean Territory, Djibouti and Caribbean islands ceded to Great Britain. Chad added to the Anglo-Egyptian administration of Sudan.
  • France agreed to pay extensive reparations to Belgium and Germany for damage during the occupation of Belgium and the Rhineland.
  • European Recognition of the Confederate States of America’s occupation of Haiti.
  • Japan maintains possession of Hainan and the Leizhou Peninsula.
  • The Panama Canal enters the custody of the Confederate States of America.
1919 – Britain withdraws from Arkhangelsk; Miklós Horthy restores order in Hungary, ruling as “Regent” on behalf of Emperor Rudolf; Treaty of Gothenburg, Denmark, Norway and Sweden enter a customs union and sign a joint defence agreement; King Albert II Victor of Britain dies of the Spanish Flu, childless, his brother the Admiral and Duke of York, succeeds as George V; The White Offensive on Moscow in defeated by Leon Trotsky; Kurdish Uprising repressed by British and Arab troops; Treaty of Linderhof; Emperor Rudolf abdicates, Austria declares itself a Republic; Second Chinese Revolution topples the dictatorship of Yuan Shikai
Treaty of Linderhof (1919) – Peace Treaty with Austria-Hungary

  • Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary officially dissolved.
  • Bohemia annexes Slovakia to form the Kingdom of Czechoslovakia with expectation it will elect its own monarch.
  • Galicia ceded to Poland; Archduke Charles Stephen allowed to contend with Prince August Wilhelm of Prussia for the Polish Crown before the Sejm.
  • Transylvania and Bukovina ceded to the Kingdom of Romania.
  • Albania restored as an independent nation, under Italian protection.
  • Independent Serbia restored, with Montenegro and Bosnia-Herzegovina annexed to its territory.
  • Italy granted custody of South Tyrol, Trieste, and the Dalmatian coast.
1920 – Battle of Tsaritsyn, Josef Stalin is killed defending the city, soon renamed in his honour; Treaty of Smyrna; the Allies launch an offensive against the Red Army from Poland, but are stopped short of Minsk; Petain’s Putsch, revanchist soldiers fail to overthrow the Fourth Republic; Battle of Voronezh, the last major field engagement between Red and White armies; Emiliano Zapata inaugurated as President of Mexico; Treaty of Riga, the Romanov family leaves Germany for France in protest, most White Exiles join them; Britain divides its Arab mandates between the Hashemite Princes, Palestine remains under direct rule; the Republicans win back the White House under Henry Cabot Lodge; Bonapartist claimant to France, Prince Louis-Napoleon, dies at 64, the claim passes to his grandson, 20 year-old Charles-Napoleon.

Treaty of Smyrna (1920) – Peace with the Ottoman Empire

  • The Sultan renounces all claims on European territory.
  • All Turkish troops withdraw from Arabia and Hejaz is granted sole custody of Mecca and Medina.
  • Persia and the Gulf Emirates fall solely into the British Sphere of influence.
  • Thrace, Constantinople, Crete, and the Aegean Islands are ceded to Greece.
  • Palestine, Syria, and Mesopotamia are placed under Mandate, with custody awarded to the British Empire.
  • An allied Garrison is placed in Smyrna and on the Anatolian side of the Straits.
  • Tripolitania and Cyrenaica are granted to Italy, who administer Libya as a colony.
Treaty of Riga (1920) – Peace with the Soviet Union
  • The Soviet Union recognizes the independence of the Baltic Free States, Lithuania, and the Kingdom of Poland
  • The Western Allies will cease their backing of any remaining White Forces in Russia, Ukraine, and the Caucasus.
  • The Soviet Union renounces its claims on Bessarabia, which is annexed by Romania, and the Territory captured by the Allies in the Spring Offensives.
  • The Royal Navy and the Japanese will evacuate Sevastopol and Vladivostok by years end.
  • A non-intervention agreement in Hungary and Austria is signed by the Soviets, the Allies in turn will not intervene in the Caucasus.
  • Alaska is recognized as a possession the Dominion of Canada.
1921 – Czechoslovakia choose Prince Arthur of Connaught as its King, Albert II; the Ottoman Empire declares war on the Soviet Union with British encouragement; the Red Army occupies Kiev, ending an independent Ukraine; Tulsa Massacre, the worst act of post-slavery racial violence in the Confederacy; Augustus IV (Prince Auwi) of Poland abdicates, the Polish Sejm elect the old Habsburg candidate Archduke Charles as King; Trotsky smashes the Ottoman army, occupying most of the Caucuses; the Allies withdraw from Smyrna; Georges Clemenceau elected President of France; Secretary of State Edward M. House succeeds Woodrow Wilson as Confederate President; Secret Committee of Revolutionary Action is established by Eugène Deloncle; Exiled Tsarevich Alexei dies of complication with his haemophilia

1922-????: F. E. Smith, 1st Viscount of Birkenhead (Conservative)
1922 (Minority) def. Winston Churchill (Liberal), Ramsay MacDonald (Labour)
1922 – Second Mexican-American War; the Soviet Union invades Anatolia; Lord Kitchener is assassinated in Jerusalem; the March of the Fascisti on Rome end in failure; the British Cabinet revolts when Churchill prepares to dispatch troops to assist the Ottomans; Lord Birkenhead becomes the first elected Conservative Prime Minister in 40 years; the Soviet Union declares an independent Kurdistan out of Turkish territory; the Kuomintang become the dominant power in China; Mustafa Kemal deposes the Sultan with Soviet support, establishing the Turkish Republic; Britain returns to the gold standard; Charles-Napoleon marries Romanov Princess Anastasia
 
Shuffling the Deck, But Somehow It's Still In The Same Order

Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) 1924-1929 [same party as OTL]
1924 [maj.]: def. Ramsay MacDonald (Liberal), Sylvia Pankhurst (Independent Labour), John Dillon (Irish Parliamentary)
Ramsay MacDonald (Liberal) 1929-1935 [worked for a Liberal MP at a young age]
1929 [maj.]: def. Stanley Baldwin (Conservative), Sylvia Pankhurst (Independent Labour), W. T. Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary)
1931 [coal. with ILP]: def. Stanley Baldwin (Conservative), Philip Snowden (Independent Labour), W. T. Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary)

Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) 1935-1937
1935 [min.]: def. Ramsay MacDonald (Liberal), James Maxton (Independent Labour), W. T. Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary)
Neville Chamberlain (Liberal) 1937-1940 [his dad was one before he defected]
1937 [min. supported by ILP, IPP]
1939 [wartime coalition]

Winston Churchill (Liberal) 1940-1945 [was one once]
1940 [wartime coalition]
Clement Attlee (Conservative) 1945-1951 [had self-described Tory views at a young age [his dad was Liberal, could have made him one!]]
1945 [maj.]: def. Winston Churchill (Liberal), Aneurin Bevan (Independent Labour), James Dillon (Irish Parliamentary)
1950 [min.]: def. Winston Churchill (Liberal), Aneurin Bevan (Independent Labour), James Dillon (Irish Parliamentary)

Winston Churchill (Liberal) 1951-1955
1951 [maj.]: def. Clement Attlee (Conservative), Aneurin Bevan (Independent Labour), James Dillon (Irish Parliamentary)
Anthony Eden (Liberal) 1955-1957 [his mother was from the Grey family, a well-known Whig/Liberal family]
1955 [maj.]: def. Clement Attlee (Conservative), Aneurin Bevan (Independent Labour), James Dillon (Irish Parliamentary)
Harold Macmillan (Liberal) 1957-1963 [a well-known admirer of old Liberal PMs]
1959 [maj.]: def. The Marquess of Salisbury (Conservative), James Dillon (Irish Parliamentary), Jennie Lee [de facto] (Independent Labour)
Alec Douglas-Home (Liberal) 1963-1964 [his mother came from a Liberal family]
1963 [maj.]
Harold Wilson (Liberal) 1964-1970 [was active in his local university Liberal Party]
1964 [maj.]: def. Alan Lennox-Boyd (Conservative), Edward Heath (Labour), Liam Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary)
1966 [maj.]: def. Edward Heath (Labour), Alan Lennox-Boyd (Conservative), Andrew Fountaine (National), Liam Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary)

Edward Heath (Labour) 1970-1974 [supported the Spanish Republicans]
1970 [coal. with IPP]: def. Harold Wilson (Liberal), Liam Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary), Andrew Fountaine (National), unclear (Conservative)
Harold Wilson (Liberal) 1974-1976*
1974 [coal. with IPP, Labour]: def. Andrew Fountaine (National-Conservative), James Callaghan (Irish Parliamentary), Edward Heath (Labour)
James Callaghan (Irish Parliamentary) 1976-1979 [family came from Ireland on father's side]
1976 [coal. with Liberals, Labour]
Margaret Thatcher (Liberal) 1979-1990 [saw herself as a heir to Gladstone]
1979 [maj.]: def. Andrew Fountaine (Unionist), James Callaghan (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Roy Jenkins (Labour)
1983 [maj.]: def. John Biggs-Davison (Unionist), Jim Sillars (Party of Nations and Regions [SNP]), Roy Jenkins (Labour), E. P. Thompson (Socialist Alternative)
1987 [maj.]: def. Teddy Taylor (Unionist), Jim Sillars (Party of Nations and Regions [SNP]), David Marquand (Labour), Tariq Ali (Socialist Alternative)

John Major (Liberal) 1990-1997 [he started his politics through seeing Macmillan give his speech, sooo]
1990 [maj.]
1992 [maj.]: def. Teddy Taylor (Unionist), Bertie Ahern (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), David Marquand (Labour), Tariq Ali (Socialist Alternative)

Tony Blair (Liberal) 1997-2007 [he very much did have Liberal sympathies]
1997 [maj.]: def. Bertie Ahern (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Michael Meacher (Socialist Alternative), Charles Kennedy (Labour), James Goldsmith [de jure] (Unionist)
2001 [maj.]: def. Bertie Ahern (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Charles Kennedy (Labour), Michael Meacher (Socialist Alternative)
2005 [coal. with PNR]: def. Robin Cook (Popular Front [Labour / SA]), Gordon Brown (Party of Nations and Regions [SNP]), Nigel Farage (Green)

Gordon Brown (Party of Nations and Regions [SNP]) 2007-2010 [best I could do is "he backed devolution, so radicalise him"]
2007 [coal. with Liberals]
David Cameron (Liberal) 2010-2016 [very much someone within that 'liberal' vibe]
2010 [coal. with PNR]: def. George Galloway (Popular Front [Labour / SA]), Gordon Brown (Party of Nations and Regions [SNP]), Nigel Farage (Green)
2015 [min.]: def. Ted Miliband (Labour), Pearse Doherty (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Nigel Farage (Green), Keir Starmer (Socialist Alternative)

Theresa May (Labour) 2016-2019 ["Christian socialist" or something]
2016 [coal. with PNR, supported by SA]
2017 [coal. with PNR, supported by Greens]: def. Nick Clegg (Liberal), Pearse Doherty (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Keir Starmer (Socialist Alternative), Nigel Farage (Green)
2018 [min, supported by Liberals]

Boris Johnson (Liberal) 2019-2022 [sort of guy to say 'I'm a liberal me' to get ahead]
2019 [min, supported by Greens]
2019 [maj.]: def. Theresa May (Labour), Keir Starmer (Socialist Alternative), Zac Goldsmith (Green), Daniel McCrossman (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Colin Fox (Red)

Liz Truss (Liberal) 2022 [was a Lib Dem when she was young]
2022 [maj.]
Rishi Sunak (Liberal) 2022-present [said he loved New Labour, would have joined that given the right push]
2022 [maj.]
 
Last edited:
"hey what if the irish presidency alternated between protestants and catholics"
"challenge accepted"

1938–1945: Douglas Hyde (Independent)
1945–1959: Seán T. O'Kelly (Fianna Fáil/Independent)
1959–1966: Ernest Blythe (Fine Gael)
1966–1973: Seán Lemass (Fianna Fáil)
1973–1987: Michael Yeats (Fianna Fáil)
1987–2001: Peter Barry (Fine Gael)
2001–2015: Martin Mansergh (Fianna Fáil)
2015–2022: Richard Bruton (Fine Gael)
2022–0000: Trevor Sargent (Green)
 
Shuffling the Deck, But Somehow It's Still In The Same Order

Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) 1924-1929 [same party as OTL]
1924 [maj.]: def. Ramsay MacDonald (Liberal), Sylvia Pankhurst (Independent Labour), John Dillon (Irish Parliamentary)
Ramsay MacDonald (Liberal) 1929-1935 [worked for a Liberal MP at a young age]
1929 [maj.]: def. Stanley Baldwin (Conservative), Sylvia Pankhurst (Independent Labour), W. T. Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary)
1931 [coal. with ILP]: def. Stanley Baldwin (Conservative), Philip Snowden (Independent Labour), W. T. Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary)

Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) 1935-1937
1935 [min.]: def. Ramsay MacDonald (Liberal), James Maxton (Independent Labour), W. T. Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary)
Neville Chamberlain (Liberal) 1937-1940 [his dad was one before he defected]
1937 [min. supported by ILP, IPP]
1939 [wartime coalition]

Winston Churchill (Liberal) 1940-1945 [was one once]
1940 [wartime coalition]
Clement Attlee (Conservative) 1945-1951 [had self-described Tory views at a young age [his dad was Liberal, could have made him one!]]
1945 [maj.]: def. Winston Churchill (Liberal), Aneurin Bevan (Independent Labour), James Dillon (Irish Parliamentary)
1950 [min.]: def. Winston Churchill (Liberal), Aneurin Bevan (Independent Labour), James Dillon (Irish Parliamentary)

Winston Churchill (Liberal) 1951-1955
1951 [maj.]: def. Clement Attlee (Conservative), Aneurin Bevan (Independent Labour), James Dillon (Irish Parliamentary)
Anthony Eden (Liberal) 1955-1957 [his mother was from the Grey family, a well-known Whig/Liberal family]
1955 [maj.]: def. Clement Attlee (Conservative), Aneurin Bevan (Independent Labour), James Dillon (Irish Parliamentary)
Harold Macmillan (Liberal) 1957-1963 [a well-known admirer of old Liberal PMs]
1959 [maj.]: def. The Marquess of Salisbury (Conservative), James Dillon (Irish Parliamentary), Jennie Lee [de facto] (Independent Labour)
Alec Douglas-Home (Liberal) 1963-1964 [his mother came from a Liberal family]
1963 [maj.]
Harold Wilson (Liberal) 1964-1970 [was active in his local university Liberal Party]
1964 [maj.]: def. Alan Lennox-Boyd (Conservative), Edward Heath (Labour), Liam Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary)
1966 [maj.]: def. Edward Heath (Labour), Alan Lennox-Boyd (Conservative), Andrew Fountaine (National), Liam Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary)

Edward Heath (Labour) 1970-1974 [supported the Spanish Republicans]
1970 [coal. with IPP]: def. Harold Wilson (Liberal), Liam Cosgrave (Irish Parliamentary), Andrew Fountaine (National), unclear (Conservative)
Harold Wilson (Liberal) 1974-1976*
1974 [coal. with IPP, Labour]: def. Andrew Fountaine (National-Conservative), James Callaghan (Irish Parliamentary), Edward Heath (Labour)
James Callaghan (Irish Parliamentary) 1976-1979 [family came from Ireland on father's side]
1976 [coal. with Liberals, Labour]
Margaret Thatcher (Liberal) 1979-1990 [saw herself as a heir to Gladstone]
1979 [maj.]: def. Andrew Fountaine (Unionist), James Callaghan (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Roy Jenkins (Labour)
1983 [maj.]: def. John Biggs-Davison (Unionist), Jim Sillars (Party of Nations and Regions [SNP]), Roy Jenkins (Labour), E. P. Thompson (Socialist Alternative)
1987 [maj.]: def. Teddy Taylor (Unionist), Jim Sillars (Party of Nations and Regions [SNP]), David Marquand (Labour), Tariq Ali (Socialist Alternative)

John Major (Liberal) 1990-1997 [he started his politics through seeing Macmillan give his speech, sooo]
1990 [maj.]
1992 [maj.]: def. Teddy Taylor (Unionist), Bertie Ahern (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), David Marquand (Labour), Tariq Ali (Socialist Alternative)

Tony Blair (Liberal) 1997-2007 [he very much did have Liberal sympathies]
1997 [maj.]: def. Bertie Ahern (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Michael Meacher (Socialist Alternative), Charles Kennedy (Labour), James Goldsmith [de jure] (Unionist)
2001 [maj.]: def. Bertie Ahern (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Charles Kennedy (Labour), Michael Meacher (Socialist Alternative)
2005 [coal. with PNR]: def. Robin Cook (Popular Front [Labour / SA]), Gordon Brown (Party of Nations and Regions [SNP]), Nigel Farage (Green)

Gordon Brown (Party of Nations and Regions [SNP]) 2007-2010 [best I could do is "he backed devolution, so radicalise him"]
2007 [coal. with Liberals]
David Cameron (Liberal) 2010-2016 [very much someone within that 'liberal' vibe]
2010 [coal. with PNR]: def. George Galloway (Popular Front [Labour / SA]), Gordon Brown (Party of Nations and Regions [SNP]), Nigel Farage (Green)
2015 [min.]: def. Ted Miliband (Labour), Pearse Doherty (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Nigel Farage (Green), Keir Starmer (Socialist Alternative)

Theresa May (Labour) 2016-2019 ["Christian socialist" or something]
2016 [coal. with PNR, supported by SA]
2017 [coal. with PNR, supported by Greens]: def. Nick Clegg (Liberal), Pearse Doherty (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Keir Starmer (Socialist Alternative), Nigel Farage (Green)
2018 [min, supported by Liberals]

Boris Johnson (Liberal) 2019-2022 [sort of guy to say 'I'm a liberal me' to get ahead]
2019 [min, supported by Greens]
2019 [maj.]: def. Theresa May (Labour), Keir Starmer (Socialist Alternative), Zac Goldsmith (Green), Daniel McCrossman (Party of Nations and Regions [IPP]), Colin Fox (Red)

Liz Truss (Liberal) 2022 [was a Lib Dem when she was young]
2022 [maj.]
Rishi Sunak (Liberal) 2022-present [said he loved New Labour, would have joined that given the right push]
2022 [maj.]

This is a much better take than my attempt at the concept. I updated it a little while back in my google docs. Figured tweak a few bits and post it here. I hope you don't mind.

Also unlike you I am lazy and have only posted the major parties unless they ended up in govt.

Started on AH .com, then finished here

The Original TL starts with WW1 carrying on until 1920 and features stupid ideas like
-An longer, two phase Irish War of Independence that ends up in a 3 way parititon of Ireland between Ulster, Collins and Lynch until Dev unites the south in the 40s.
-A WW2 between The Western powers and a German-USSR Communist bloc. something I've actually reused in a thing I'm writing at the moment (although @Japhy suggested the idea to me independently)
-A Long Emergency government and the Tories and Labour not holding elections for over twenty years
-the Original had Tory Blair, ive replaced it with something equally stupid
-And for those playing bingo, traditional Bolt does Proportional representation bollocks

1915-1922: David Lloyd George (Wartime Coalition then Liberal-Conservative Coalition)
Def 1921: Same leaders as OTL 1918 but different seat numbers)
1922-1923: Andrew Bonar Law (Liberal-Conservative Coalition then Conservative)
1923-1924: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative)

1924-1924: Ramsay MacDonald (Labour Minority)

Def 1924: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) Herbert Samuel (Liberal)
1924-1929: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative)
Def 1924: Ramsay MacDonald (Labour) Herbert Samuel (Liberal)
1929-1935: Ramsay Macdonald (Labour then Labour Minority with Liberal Support)
Def 1929: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) Herbert Samuel (Liberal)
Def 1934: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative) Archibald Sinclair (Liberal)

1935-1937: Stanley Baldwin (Conservative and Unionist Minority with Liberal Support)
Def 1935: Ramsay Macdonald (Labour) Archibald Sinclair (Liberal)
1937-1940: Neville Chamberlain (Conservative and Unionist Minority with Liberal Support) (1)
1940-1945: Winston Churchill (National emergency, then Wartime government)
1945-1951: Clement Atlee (National Emergency-Pro Treaty Government
1951-1955: Winston Churchill (National Emergency-Anti Treaty Government)
1955-1957: Anthony Eden (National Government (Conservative))
1957-1963: Harold MacMillan (National Government (Conservative))
1963-1964: Alec Douglas-Home (National Government (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)
1980 Electoral Reform Referendum: 51% Yes 33% Mix Member Proportional Representation.
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-Ecology then Labour-SNP-Plaid Cymru) (2)
Def 1990: Margaret Thatcher (Christian Union) John Redwood (New Democratic) Sara Parkin (Green)
Def 1995: Michael Heseltine (Christian Union) John Redwood (New Democratic) Tony Blair (SNP) Dafydd Wigley (Plaid Cymru)
1997-2001: Tony Blair (SNP Leading National Emergency Government)
2001-2004: Tony Blair (SNP Leading "Reconstruction Coupon" Government, Labour, "National" Christian Union, SNP, Plaid Cymru, SDLP, Greens)
Def 2001: Charles Kennedy (Christian Union) Jeffrey Titford New Democratic)
2002: Constitutional Reform Referendum 51% Yes.
2004-2007: Tony Blair ("Reconstruction Coupon" minority: Labour, SNP, Plaid Cymru, SDLP, Greens)
Def 2004: Charles Kennedy (Christian Union) Jeffrey Titford New Democratic)
2007-2010: Gordon Brown (Christian Union- Green- Independent )
Def 2007: John McDonnell (Labour) Nigel Farage (New Democratic) Caroline Lucas (Green)
2010-2012: David Cameron (Christian Union-Green-Independent)
2012-2015: David Cameron (Christian Union-New Democratic)

Def 2012: Frances O'Grady (Labour) Nigel Farage (New Democratic)
2015-2016: David Cameron (Christian Union Minority)
2016-2019: Theresa May (Christian Union-Labour Grand Coalition
Def 2016: Andy Burnham (Labour) Nigel Farage (New Democratic)
2017 European Community Referendum 52% Join
2019-2021: Alexander Johnson (Christian Union-Labour Grand Coalition)
2021-2022: Alexander Johnson (Christian Union-Free Democrats) (3)
Def 2021: Clive Lewis (Labour) Anne Marie Waters (New Democratic)
2022-2022: Liz Truss (Free Democrats leading Christian Union-Free Democrats)
2022-Present: Rishi Sunak: (Christian Union-Free Democrats)


(1) Assassinated by a communist revolutionary
(2) Killed in the Great Mistake
(3) Died in a plane Crash

And now, the conclusion!
 
Presidents of the United States:
Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic-NY) (1933-1945)
*Great Depression, New Deal, World War 2*
Henry Wallace (Democratic-IA) (1945-1953)
*Nuking of Japan, End of WW2, founding of NATO, Korean and German Reunification*
Dwight Eisenhower (Republican-NY) (1953-1961)
*Franco-Soviet Rapprochement, Suez War, atomic bombing of Cairo*
Richard Nixon (Republican-CA) (1961-1969)
*Vietnam War, Egyptian Civil War, formation of the European Defense Coalition*
Ronald Reagan (Republican-CA) (1969-1973)
*Vietnam War, Anti-War strikes, University of Chicago Massacre*
Spiro Agnew (Republican-MD) (1973-1981)
*Assassination of Ronald Reagan, Operation Just Cause, Disbandment of NATO*
George Wallace (Democratic-AL) (1981-1983)
*Israel-South Africa nuclear tests, Dixie Riots*
Jimmy Carter (Democratic-GA) (1983-1993)
*Capital Bombings, Return to Civility, American Reentry into the United Nations*
Jerry Brown (Democratic-CA) (1993-1997)
*American Spring, Nuclear Disarmament, Pacific Economic Treaties*
Bob Dole (Republican-KS) (1997-2001)
*End of the Cold War, Reformation of the Soviet Union, Unification of the EDC*
Al Gore (Democrat-TN) (2001-2009)
*Technocratic Revolution, Reformation of the United States, Disbandment of the Electoral College*

just a cursed idea i had (it gets worse before it gets better)
 
1909-1915: H.H. Asquith (Liberal)
1909 (Majority) def. Lord George Hamilton (Conservative); John Redmond (IPP); Austen Chamberlain (Unionist Liberal); David Shackleton (Labour)
1909 – Theodore Roosevelt’s second inauguration, the first Republican to serve two terms in office; Anglo-Russian Agreement signed, resolving differences in Central Asia; the increasingly weak Unionist government collapses, the Liberals form a new government under Asquith; Woodrow Wilson is elected Confederate President, a Progressive ‘New Whig’; New French naval plan scales back dreadnought production, concentrating on commerce raiders
1911 – Russian Prime Minister Pytor Stolypin is assassinated creating a power vacuum; Revolution topples the Qing dynasty in China; King-Emperor Albert I dies, succeeded by his son Albert II, his funeral is the largest assembly of crowned heads in History
1912 (Wartime Coalition) def. Arthur Steel-Maitland (Conservative); John Redmond (IPP); David Shackleton (Labour)
1912 – Unionist Liberals officially integrate with the Conservative Party; The May Days – after a failed coup in Serbia leads to the assassination of Nikola Pašić, and Europe spirals into war between the Triple Alliance (Britain, Germany and Russia) and the Entente (France, Spain, Turkey and Austria); Emperor Maximillian of Mexico, his adopted son Agustín II succeeds him, but the country is plunged into chaos; a French advance to outflank the German armies leads to a full invasion of Belgium, the B.E.F. lands at Antwerp but cannot save the country and evacuate the Belgian army out through the port; Russia’s advance into Galicia stalls around the fortress of Przemyśl; Britain seizes Italian dreadnoughts under construction and presses them into service; Germany withdraws from Alsace-Lorraine after Chief of Staff von Moltke panics and falls back to the Rhineland; Progressive Democrat William Jennings Bryan is elected President of the United States
1913 – Japan enters the war, seizing France’s eastern colonies; Austria’s advance into Saxony is driven back by Generals Hindenburg and Ludendorff; the Conservatives enter the British war government; Curragh Mutiny leads to fears in Britain of Irish insurrection; Battle of the Tonkin Gulf; Polish Legions formed by Dmowski and Piłsudski to fight for the Entente; Bohemia Offensive leads to the fall of Prague and Krakow; Lord Kitchener arrives in Egypt to manage Britain’s war against the Turks; Italy joins the Entente, the influx of Italian troops in Bohemia and the Alps causes stalemate in the East; Battle of Ceylon inaugurates the voyages of the French commerce raider Charlamagne; Spain declares war on Portugal after British ship base at the Azores; Dardanelles campaign begins with allied landings to try capture Constantinople; Serbia collapses under allied pressure, Italy invades Albania to interne the retreating Serb army; Siege of Gibraltar ends in Spanish victory, closing the Mediterranean to British reinforcements west of Suez; Fall of Saigon to Japanese troops, the last Entente holdout in South East Asia; Fall of Tbilisi, Tsar Nicholos leaves Petrograd and assumes personal command of the Russian army
1914 – An insurrection in the Spanish Philippines gains British and Japanese support; End of the Dardanelle Campaign; France ends all restrictions on its commerce raiding; Victoriano Huerta launches a coup that removes Agustín II, but instability continues in Mexico; President Bryan’s Neutrality Acts begin restricting American trade of war materials to the Triple Alliance; Battles of the Ushant and Ría de Ortigueira sees the British bloody the Entente’s nose at sea, securing the Atlantic against the threat of dreadnoughts; Battle of the Balearics; Third Battle of Aachen, the B.E.F.’s first major engagement on the Western Front; the Canadian Corps distinguishes itself by turning the Spanish Army away from Lisbon; the Munich Advance creates a salient around the city, leading to the bloodiest battle of the war; British troops land in Mesopotamia and advance up the Tigris; Start of the Arab Revolt; Battle of Turks and Caicos ends with the sinking of Charlamagne, having crossed the Pacific, its location was betrayed by Confederate agents after illegally transiting the Panama Canal; Battle of Malta ends in disaster as the Entente attempts to land on the island is defeated by the British and Serb exiles; Second Battle of Bonn, the bloodiest day of the war for the British Army; Casement Affair, the British diplomat is exposed as a French agent, embarrassment and the revelation of his diaries lead him to be tried with “gross indecency” rather than treason; Dixie Occupation of Haiti; Revolution breaks out against President Huerta


1915-1922: Winston Churchill (Liberal)
1915 (Wartime Coalition) def. Arthur Steel-Maitland (Conservative); John Redmond (IPP); David Shackleton (Labour)
1915 – Lenin and Trotsky arrive in Russia with a blank cheque from France and Austria; Umberto I of Italy dies, his son Vittorio Emmanuel III begins seeking a means to withdraw from the war; Woodrow Wilson is the first Confederate President elected to a second six year term; Titanic is sunk with all hands by a French submarine, with many Americans onboard and further neutrality acts are killed in the U.S. Senate; the Confederacy declares war on France, seizing the Panama Canal and French Caribbean; Secretary of War Winston Churchill leads a Cabinet revolt against Asquith, replacing him as Prime Minister; Confederate troops begin arriving in Portugal; the Ulster Compromise leads to the passage of Home Rule for Ireland, exempting the three eastern counties of Ulster, and the Irish Nationalists join the War Cabinet; the Anglo-Canadian-Portuguese Army ejects the Spanish from Portugal; France launches the first armoured attack in history at the Battle of Landau, German troops abandon their positions and the General Staff considers how to adapt to this new threat; Battle of Kut ends with the withdraw of British troops back to Basra; Battle of Badajoz, Britain’s first use of armoured warfare; Start of the Channel Bombing Campaign, the world’s first air campaign by aircraft and airship; Confederate Navy occupies the Canary Islands and joins the Atlantic Blockade; Anglo-Confederate troops land on Sicily from Malta
1916 – Caucus Offensive led by Mustafa Kemal breaks through and captures Baku, throwing the Russian army into chaos; Battle of Gaza, British troops breakout of Sinaia into Palestine; March Revolution topples Tsar Nicholas II, establishing a duopoly between the Duma and Soviets; Fall of Manila; Brusilov-Mackensen Offensives aims to knock Austria out the war; Fall of Aqaba; Barcelona Uprising leads to the dethronement of Alfonso XIII; Confederate troops capture Palermo; Toledo Armistice, Spanish Republic exits the war; Kitchener’s March on Jerusalem; Sykes-Weizemann Agreement, Britain promises a Jewish homeland in Palestine; Tenth and Final Battle of Przemyśl; Fall of Brno; Greece and Romania declare war on the Entente; Bolshevik November Revolution seizes power in Russia; Ludendorff splits the Italians and Austrians at Innsbruck; Death of Emperor Franz Josef, succeeded by his son Rudolf; Canada occupies Russian Alaska
1917 – Italy withdraws all troops to the Isonzo; Arab Revolt captures Damascus, British troops capture Baghdad; Battle of Krasnodar, the furthest extent of the Turkish advance; Budapest Uprising; Soviet Russia halts all advances; Allied armies withdraw from Iberia to the Western Front; Treaty of Lemberg, peace between Soviet Russia and the Entente; Battle of Linz; Siege of Cluj; Zapatista rebels capture Mexico City, toppling Victoriano Huerta; Romanov family flees Russia for Germany; Liberation of Belgrade by Greek and Romanian troops; Treaty of San Marino, Italy defects from the Entente to the Allies; Rhine-Ruhr Offensive, the French Army throws everything to break the western stalemate, ejecting British troops from ‘Bloody’ Bonn, Confederates from Cologne, before the Germans hold the line at Dusseldorf; Battles of Cannes and Trieste, Italy’s first offensives against her former allies; Allied landings in Dalmatia; Emperor Rudolf signs the Salzburg Armistice; King Constatine of Greece marches with his army into Constantinople; Leverkusen and Wiesbaden Offensives break the French army in the Rhineland; Generals Kornilov and Denikin mutiny against the Soviets, start of the Russian Civil War; Battle of Aleppo, Turkish troops hold the British-Arab advance; National uprisings in Poland, the Baltics and Ukraine, Allied troops ship in to support them against the Bolsheviks; Royal and Japanese navies take Arkhangelsk and Vladivostok in support of the White Armies; Battle of Strasbourg leads the French to withdraw from Germany entire; Hungary declares its independence; Czech National Congress founded in Prague; Liberation of Belgium; Battle of Lillie; Nancy Mutiny of French troops; French Prime Minister Count Bernard de Vésins is assassinated, Philippe VIII tries to replace him with Marshal Foch who refuses so long as Philippe remains King, Philippe abdicates and makes Foch Regent of France; Armistice of November 11th; Foch appoints Radical Republican Georges Clemenceau as Prime Minister

Treaty of Lisbon (1917) – Peace Treaty with the Spanish Republic

  • Galicia to be occupied by the Portuguese, for 10 years with all revenues paid as reparations to Portugal.
  • Balearic Islands placed under British administration for 20 years.
  • British troops and ships allowed to base at Algeciras and Tangiers until facilities at Gibraltar restored.
  • Sultan of Morrocco restored to his throne, his Kingdom remains a protectorate of the Spanish Republic.
  • The Philippines will be an autonomous republic under the protection of Japan.
1918 – Dmowski and Piłsudski split after Germany invites the Polish Legions to help maintain order in Poland; Indian and Australian cavalry reach Lake Van; Greek troops cross the Bosphorus; the Ottoman Sultan surrenders to the allies; The Coupon Elections keeps the Liberal-Conservative Coalition in Parliament; Spanish Flu epidemic starts; Czech National Congress declare an independent Bohemia; Battle of Yekaterinburg, Admiral Kolchak is defeated by the Red Army; Home Rule act comes into force, most Ireland will be governed as an independent Dominion from Dublin; Treaty of Potsdam recognizes an independent Kingdom of Poland; Jacobin Uprising and the Paris Commune are supressed; Soviet-German War begins when the Red Army storms White Ruthenia; Fourth French Republic declared; the Royal Navy occupies Sevastopol to support the White Army; Bela Kun’s short-lived Soviet Hungary is destroyed when the Czechs, Romanians, Serbs and Germans invade; Siberian Offensive ends in failure, Admiral Kolchak is executed by the Red Army

Treaty of Versailles (1918) – Peace Treaty with France

  • French Congo, Madagascar and Ivory Coast ceded to Germany. Cambodia placed under German protectorate; Indochina partitioned with Japan.
  • Savoy and Nice ceded to Italy.
  • Pas de Calais demilitarised zone established and occupied by the Belgian Army, with all revenues paid directly to Brussels.
  • French Indian and Pacific Ocean Territory, Djibouti and Caribbean islands ceded to Great Britain. Chad added to the Anglo-Egyptian administration of Sudan.
  • France agreed to pay extensive reparations to Belgium and Germany for damage during the occupation of Belgium and the Rhineland.
  • European Recognition of the Confederate States of America’s occupation of Haiti.
  • Japan maintains possession of Hainan and the Leizhou Peninsula.
  • The Panama Canal enters the custody of the Confederate States of America.
1919 – Britain withdraws from Arkhangelsk; Miklós Horthy restores order in Hungary, ruling as “Regent” on behalf of Emperor Rudolf; Treaty of Gothenburg, Denmark, Norway and Sweden enter a customs union and sign a joint defence agreement; King Albert II Victor of Britain dies of the Spanish Flu, childless, his brother the Admiral and Duke of York, succeeds as George V; The White Offensive on Moscow in defeated by Leon Trotsky; Kurdish Uprising repressed by British and Arab troops; Treaty of Linderhof; Emperor Rudolf abdicates, Austria declares itself a Republic; Second Chinese Revolution topples the dictatorship of Yuan Shikai
Treaty of Linderhof (1919) – Peace Treaty with Austria-Hungary

  • Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary officially dissolved.
  • Bohemia annexes Slovakia to form the Kingdom of Czechoslovakia with expectation it will elect its own monarch.
  • Galicia ceded to Poland; Archduke Charles Stephen allowed to contend with Prince August Wilhelm of Prussia for the Polish Crown before the Sejm.
  • Transylvania and Bukovina ceded to the Kingdom of Romania.
  • Albania restored as an independent nation, under Italian protection.
  • Independent Serbia restored, with Montenegro and Bosnia-Herzegovina annexed to its territory.
  • Italy granted custody of South Tyrol, Trieste, and the Dalmatian coast.
1920 – Battle of Tsaritsyn, Josef Stalin is killed defending the city, soon renamed in his honour; Treaty of Smyrna; the Allies launch an offensive against the Red Army from Poland, but are stopped short of Minsk; Petain’s Putsch, revanchist soldiers fail to overthrow the Fourth Republic; Battle of Voronezh, the last major field engagement between Red and White armies; Emiliano Zapata inaugurated as President of Mexico; Treaty of Riga, the Romanov family leaves Germany for France in protest, most White Exiles join them; Britain divides its Arab mandates between the Hashemite Princes, Palestine remains under direct rule; the Republicans win back the White House under Henry Cabot Lodge; Bonapartist claimant to France, Prince Louis-Napoleon, dies at 64, the claim passes to his grandson, 20 year-old Charles-Napoleon.

Treaty of Smyrna (1920) – Peace with the Ottoman Empire

  • The Sultan renounces all claims on European territory.
  • All Turkish troops withdraw from Arabia and Hejaz is granted sole custody of Mecca and Medina.
  • Persia and the Gulf Emirates fall solely into the British Sphere of influence.
  • Thrace, Constantinople, Crete, and the Aegean Islands are ceded to Greece.
  • Palestine, Syria, and Mesopotamia are placed under Mandate, with custody awarded to the British Empire.
  • An allied Garrison is placed in Smyrna and on the Anatolian side of the Straits.
  • Tripolitania and Cyrenaica are granted to Italy, who administer Libya as a colony.
Treaty of Riga (1920) – Peace with the Soviet Union
  • The Soviet Union recognizes the independence of the Baltic Free States, Lithuania, and the Kingdom of Poland
  • The Western Allies will cease their backing of any remaining White Forces in Russia, Ukraine, and the Caucasus.
  • The Soviet Union renounces its claims on Bessarabia, which is annexed by Romania, and the Territory captured by the Allies in the Spring Offensives.
  • The Royal Navy and the Japanese will evacuate Sevastopol and Vladivostok by years end.
  • A non-intervention agreement in Hungary and Austria is signed by the Soviets, the Allies in turn will not intervene in the Caucasus.
  • Alaska is recognized as a possession the Dominion of Canada.
1921 – Czechoslovakia choose Prince Arthur of Connaught as its King, Albert II; the Ottoman Empire declares war on the Soviet Union with British encouragement; the Red Army occupies Kiev, ending an independent Ukraine; Tulsa Massacre, the worst act of post-slavery racial violence in the Confederacy; Augustus IV (Prince Auwi) of Poland abdicates, the Polish Sejm elect the old Habsburg candidate Archduke Charles as King; Trotsky smashes the Ottoman army, occupying most of the Caucuses; the Allies withdraw from Smyrna; Georges Clemenceau elected President of France; Secretary of State Edward M. House succeeds Woodrow Wilson as Confederate President; Secret Committee of Revolutionary Action is established by Eugène Deloncle; Exiled Tsarevich Alexei dies of complication with his haemophilia

1922-????: F. E. Smith, 1st Viscount of Birkenhead (Conservative)
1922 (Minority) def. Winston Churchill (Liberal), Ramsay MacDonald (Labour)
1922 – Second Mexican-American War; the Soviet Union invades Anatolia; Lord Kitchener is assassinated in Jerusalem; the March of the Fascisti on Rome end in failure; the British Cabinet revolts when Churchill prepares to dispatch troops to assist the Ottomans; Lord Birkenhead becomes the first elected Conservative Prime Minister in 40 years; the Soviet Union declares an independent Kurdistan out of Turkish territory; the Kuomintang become the dominant power in China; Mustafa Kemal deposes the Sultan with Soviet support, establishing the Turkish Republic; Britain returns to the gold standard; Charles-Napoleon marries Romanov Princess Anastasia
1922-1923: F. E. Smith, 1st Viscount of Birkenhead (Conservative)
1922 (Minority) def. Winston Churchill (Liberal), Ramsay MacDonald (Labour)
1922 – Second Mexican-American War; the Soviet Union invades Anatolia; Lord Kitchener is assassinated in Jerusalem; the March of the Fascisti on Rome end in failure; the British Cabinet revolts when Churchill prepares to dispatch troops to assist the Ottomans; Lord Birkenhead becomes the first elected Conservative Prime Minister in 40 years; the Soviet Union declares an independent Kurdistan out of Turkish territory; the Kuomintang become the dominant power in China; Mustafa Kemal deposes the Sultan with Soviet support, establishing the Turkish Republic; Britain returns to the gold standard; Charles-Napoleon marries Romanov Princess Anastasia


1923-1926: David Lloyd George (Liberal)
1923 (Minority w/ Labour supply) def. F. E. Smith, 1st Viscount of Birkenhead (Conservative), J.R. Clynes (Labour)
1923 – the German and Belgian armies occupy the Somme, Aisne, and Oise in lieu of reparations; the United States annexes the Baja Peninsula and makes peace with Mexico; Hyperinflation racks the French economy; the Four Power Treaty between U.K., Germany, C.S.A. and Japan to oppose U.S.A.’s efforts to restrict Naval power; Churchill resigns as Liberal leader after refusing to rely on Labour support; Croix-de-Feu found by François de La Rocque
1924 (Coalition w/ Labour) def. Austen Chamberlain (Conservative), J.R. Clynes (Labour)
1924 – King Constantine of Greece dies, he is succeeded by his eldest son Alexander; Reichstag elections produce Germany’s first SPD government; Vladimir Lenin dies, Leon Trotsky becomes Soviet leader; after a snap election fails to resolve the deadlock, Lloyd George invites Labour into a coalition; the Hoover Plan resolves French war reparation payment; Belgium and Germany end their occupation of Northern France
1925 – After succeeding President Cabot Lodge, Orren Lowden is inaugurated President in his own right; Hejaz-Nejd War ends in victory for the Hashemites; Pan-Germanist Adolf Hitler leads an uprising in Munich hoping to topple the SPD, he is exiled to his native Austria; Socialist General Maurice Sarrail is elected French President; Third Anglo-Afghan War; Locarno Treaties lead to general disarmament in Europe and America; Churchill enters the House of Lords


1926-1928: Christopher Addison (Liberal)
1926 – Lloyd George resigns amidst financial scandal; Sino-Soviet War, the NRA defeats the Red Army and invades Mongolia; Charles Maurras is released from prison, and soon takes leadership of Action Française; the mobilized Chinese army turns west to smash the remaining warlords; Pennsylvania Miners’ strike spirals into a General Strike; Emperor Hirohito succeeds his father, Taishō; Philippe VIII dies in exile in the U.S.A., the Bourbon claim to France passes to Jean, Duke of Guise; Statute of Westminster, Britain’s dominions are acknowledged as autonomous and independent states; Churchill expelled from the Liberal party for suggesting they abandon the Labour coalition and merge with the Tory Party
1927 – The C.S.A. intervenes in Nicaragua; Chinese Communists begin the Shanghai Bombings against foreign legations; Leon Trotsky appoints Tukhachevsky head of the Red Army; Pancho Villa leads a coup against Zapata; Charles-Napoleon begins funding Deloncle’s activities; Portugal withdraws from Galicia


1928-1931: Austen Chamberlain (Conservative)
1928 (Majority) def. J.R. Clynes (Labour); Christopher Addison (Liberal)
1928 – Social Democratic Party of America formed by Progressive Democrats, the Socialist and Communist Parties and Farmer-Labour; Churchill officially joins the Conservative Party; France’s Secret Committee of Revolutionary Action becomes the National Action Party; Socialist Chancellor of Germany Otto Braun falls, and is replaced by the Nationalist Alfred Hugenberg; conservative Republican Andrew Mellon win the U.S. election, the SDP shock everyone by coming second; François de La Rocque founds the French Social Party; Japan founds the East-Asia Prosperity Sphere, aiming to remodel its Empire on the Statute of Westminster
1929 – Leon Trotsky begins the centralisation of power in his office; ’29 riots between Jews and Arabs in Palestine; Left-wing Republican Aristede Briand elected President of France, the French Right is split three ways between Maurras (AF), La Rocque (FSP) and Eugène Deloncle (NAP); The London Stock exchanges crashes, start of the Great Slump as the global economy enters a depression
1930 – Bank failures sweep the U.S.; the All-India Muslim League declares support for an independent Pakistan; Start of Gandhi’s Civil Disobedience campaign; Stanley Bruce’s United Oceania Party wins its first election, the start of the country’s longest premiership; U.S. Midterms lead to a mass breakout for the SDP; Trotsky starts the liquidation of the Kulaks; Paramilitarism in France spikes as the economy collapses; Sun-Yat Sen falls ill and dies, a power vacuum restores China’s uncertainty; North America becomes struck by the Dust Bowl; Finland is admitted to the Scandinavian customs union; the exiled Romanov family begin publicly funding Eugène Deloncle and Charles Maurras


1931-1935: Sir Arthur Griffith-Boscawen (Conservative)
1931 (National Government w/ Labour and Liberal) def. Ramsay MacDonald (Labour); Rufus Isaacs, 1st Marquess of Reading (Liberal); Oswald Mosley (Ind. Labour)
1931 – The French Right forms the National Bloc, and actively begins undermining the Fourth Republic; Mustafa Kemal dissolves the Turkish Assembly amidst a rise in Communist activity; Exiled Tsar Nicholas II dies in Paris, Grand Duchess Olga succeeds as head of the Romanov family; Hugenberg resigns as Chancellor, Reichstag elections lead to the formation of the “Stresemann Front”, a coalition of liberal/centre parties; Charles-Napoleon illegally stands and wins a seat in the National Assembly elections; under mounting pressure, Austen Chamberlain resigns; with Western approval, Japanese troops occupy Shanghai to protect the foreign legations against mounting violence; Mao Zedong announces the Chinese Soviet Republic, start of the Chinese Civil War; Britain’s political parties form a National Government in response to the economic crisis; Varela-Irwin Agreement, Britain returns the Balearic Islands early, in exchange for an extend lease on its base on Minorca
1932 – The Conservative Party of the Confederacy disbands, its membership split between younger populists like Huey Long and older reactionaries; World disarmament conference in Geneva ends in failure; the National Bloc secure a majority in the French Assembly; Norway, Denmark and Sweden enter a federal political union, uniting them all for the first time since 1524; Democrats and Republicans agree to form a joint ticket for the Presidential election; Edward, Prince of Wales, weds the widowed Princess Isabelle Orléans in a morganatic ceremony – the match is deeply unpopular on both sides of the Channel; French President Briand is assassinated, the National Bloc declare a state of emergency and appoint Marshal Petain his replacement; start of the Turnip Winter, as Food stocks collapse in Europe due to the collapse in imports from America and the Soviet Union; the Dominion of Ireland assumes sole responsibility for the upkeep of the Irish Army; President Mellon denounces the results of the election with a clear win for the SD, he invites Army Chief MacArthur to form an emergency government
1933 – King Charles I of Poland dies, despite the popularity of the new King Charles II, the monarchy begins to fall in popularity; Strikes and protest sweep the U.S. in protest of Mellon and MacArthur, start of the Second American Revolution; the National Front passes an Enabling law, empowering Petain to restore order by any means; Pan-Germanist Adolf Hitler seizes power in Austria, many of his supporters in Germany cross the border to defend the new regime; attempt on the life of Leon Trotsky, purges and crackdowns sweep the Soviet Union; Socialist Republic of America declared in New York, most states have rival ‘Soviet’ governments; France bans all political parties not part of the National Front; Socialist General Smedley Butler seizes Columbus, but MacArthur flee and sets up in Denver; former PM, Churchill makes his radio broadcast calling for re-armament; Charles Maurras publicly denounces the Orléans, shocking France and endorses the Bonapartist claim; Huey P. Long is elected President of the C.S.A. promising a fusion of strongman leadership and wealth distribution; Maryland, Missouri and New Mexico secede from the U.S. and join the Confederacy
1934 – Governors of New England, Washington state and Michigan appeal to Canada for protection, London approves the Canadian Army crossing the border to occupy them; Austrian Civil War, fighting breaks out across the country but Hitler retains his rule, despite Chancellor Stresemann closing the border and applying sanctions; Start of the London Conferences, aimed to resolve the debate about Indian self-rule; in conjunction with the Spanish military and the far-right, Carlist claimant Xavier de Borubon-Parma marches on Madrid and is crowned King; a Japanese fleet steams into Pearl Harbour; the socio-economic “Mosley Memorandum” is rejected by the British Cabinet, Oswald resigns and wins a challenge for Labour leader, withdrawing the party from the National government; the Second Continental Army is victorious and the Union of American Soviets declared amidst the ashes of the U.S.A.; Alexander of Serbia and Adolf Hitler sign a treaty, aimed at dividing Hungary; the Great Slump officially ends in Great Britain, though unemployment remains high and the global economy still totters


1935-????: Oswald Mosely (Labour)
1935 (Minority) def. Sir Arthur Griffith-Boscawen (Conservative); F. Kingsley Griffith (Liberal); Henry Page Croft (National); James Maxton (Ind. Labour)
1935 – Huey Long withdraws Confederate troops from Nicaragua; the Jarrow March leads to the General Strike, faith in the National government plumets; Mao Zedong is killed as the Chinese Red Army retreats to Shaanxi; Marshal Petain asks to step down from his post, Maurras and Deloncle successfully negotiate the Bonaparte restoration in return for La Rocque as Premier; with the backing of the Press Barons, Oswald Mosley brings down the National Govt. and wins minority in the election, the first Labour government in history; Józef Piłsudski dies, the multi-ethnic, pro-monarch coalition dominant in Poland quickly collapses; Mustafa Kemal dies, and the Turkish Communist Party establishes control with Soviet help; the London Conferences end, and the Government of India is passed, dividing the subcontinent into four independent Dominions (Burma, Bengal, India, and Pakistan-Punjab); Trotsky visits to the new U.A.S., and promises the world revolution is near; Governor of Libya, Italo Balbo, attempts to launch a coup to seize power in Rome, start of the Italian Civil War; the French Empire renounces the disarmament clauses of the Versailles Treaty; the Rif War, joint French-Spanish action to put down a rebellion on Morocco
1936 (Majority) def. Sir Arthur Griffith-Boscawen (Conservative); Henry Page Croft (National); F. Kingsley Griffith (Liberal); James Maxton (Ind. Labour)
1936 – George V dies, his son, the unpopular Edward VII succeeds; 1936 Olympics held in Tokyo, China boycotts; the Turkish-Soviet backed Kurdish Uprising is successful, the Arab army withdraw from the region after they fail to put it down swiftly, despite British support; The ‘coronation elwction; Mikhail Tukhachevsky arrests and exiles Leon Trotsky to Siberia, control of the Soviet Union passes to a more conservative triumvirate with Nikolai Bukharin and Sergei Kirov; Anglo-Egyptian Treaty, Britain withdraws all its troops from Egypt besides Suez; the U.A.S. appoints Trotskyist Franklin Roosevelt as General Secretary, relations between the two Soviet nations quickly breakdown; while carrying King Edward VII to India, HM Airship R303 explodes over the Persian Gulf, the Empire goes into mourning and the Duke of York succeeds as Albert III
1937 – Charles-Napoleon and Anastasia are Crowned Emperor and Empress of France in Notre-Dame Cathedral in Paris; Non-intervention agreements around the Italian Civil War break down, arms quickly begin flooding from abroad to both sides; under British encouragement, Hashemites Princes agree to merge their Emirates into a united Arabia with Faisal of Syria as King; the British and German government actively begin rearming; Anglo-Iranian Treaty, Britain reduces its influences in Persia to secure its support against the Soviet Union; the Bombing of Florence shocks the world, Balboist forces enter the ascendency; March on Peking; the Great Purge, the Triumvirate mandate the shooting of many Trotskyists which escalates into antisemitic violence across Russia; the Imperial Conference in Ottawa ends with defence and economic integration within the British Empire, Ireland and India opt of the agreements citing the Statute of Westminster; Roosevelt names Trotsky a “Russian Lafayette” and demands his release, in response the Triumvirate has him shot
1938 – Second Sino-Japanese War, after Peking falls to the Red Army, Japan invades Manchuria aiming to restore the Qing Dynasty; the Soviet Triumvirate begin implementing Russification policies, targeting the Unions religious and ethnic minorities; Italo Balbo promises France Nice and Savoy in return for support in the Italian Civil War; Oswald Mosely tours North America, soothing tensions between Dixie and the Soviets; Charles de Gaulle is made French Chief of Staff and oversees the mechanisation and expansion of the French Army; the Balkan War, the Vienna-Belgrade Axis invades Hungary, Croatia is annexed by Serbia and a puppet regime under Austria set up in Budapest; Treaty of Jerusalem settles boundaries between Britain and Arabia, King Faisal also agrees to the principle of a Jewish state in Palestine; Roman Dmowski comes to power in Poland and issues a warrant for the arrest of the Habsburg monarch, the Polish State becomes a republic as Charles II flees to London; Francois de La Rocque is assassinated in Algiers, responsibility is disputed, but many suspect his replacement, Eugène Deloncle; Balboists capture Milan, ending the Italian Civil War; National Service Act passed by Parliament, requiring all males unemployed or under-25 to register for service
1939 – The Pact of Fire, an anti-communist, anti-democratic alliance signed between France, Austria and Serbia; British and German foreign ministers Nicholson and Goerdeler resign after leaked telegrams about appeasing the French are published; the Nanking Armistice, Japan concludes a peace with the Kuomintang ending the War in China, but retains the Qing in Northern China, skirmishes with the Communists continue; Germany supervises the Pact of Bucharest, aligning Romania, Czechoslovakia, Bulgaria and Greece against the Pact of Fire; Britain and Japan agree to renew the Anglo-Japanese alliance; Hindu nationalists assassinate Mahatma Gandhi as he hosts talks at Lucknow about reuniting Bengal and Pakistan with India; Spain and Poland become observers of the Pact of Fire; multi-ethnic, pro-monarchist demonstrations in Lwów and Krakow are viciously put down by the Polish Army; Huey Long becomes the second Confederate President to win a second time
1940 – Rotterdam Agreement, Britain and Germany guarantee the independence of the Benelux; Committee of Revolutionary Islam founded in Mosul; Italo Balbo summons Vittorio Emmauel III back from exile; the Kuomintang expels all Soviet citizens, competition between the allies and America for influence increases; France demands Belgium withdraw from Pas de Calais and a referendum on Alsace-Lorraine; Antwerp Summit, Mosley urges compromise but Stresemann refuses to negotiate on Alsace; the French Army storms Belgium without a formal declaration of war; Huey Long establishes a permanent peacetime draft, and signs off on the enlistment of black soldiers; Britain and Germany declare war on the French Empire
 
Redo of this idea. I still have no idea about American politics

Found this in my notes from last year. Perhaps my only US Presidents list to date. Hence some of the tickets

2001-2005: Al Gore/Joe Lieberman (Democrat)
Def: George W. Bush/Dick Cheney (Republican)
2005-2009: John McCain/Rudy Giuliani (Republican)
Def: Al Gore/Joe Lieberman (Democrat)
2009-2017 : Hilary Clinton/ Tim Kaine
Def: John McCain/Rudy Giuliani (Republican)
Def: Mitt Romney/Olympia Snow (Republican)
2017-2021: Marco Rubio/Betsy DeVos (Republican)
Def: Kathleen Sebelius/ Sherrod Brown (Democrat)
2021: Bernie Sanders/ Tammy Baldwin (Democrat)
Def: Marco Rubio/Betsey DeVos (Republican)

2001-2009: Al Gore/John Edwards (Democrat)
Def 2000: George W. Bush/Dick Cheney (Republican)
Def 2004: John McCain/Rudy Guliani (Republican)
2009-2013: Mike Huckabee/Sarah Palin (Republican)
Def 2008: John Edwards/Jeanne Shaheen (Democrat)
2013-2021 : Bernie Sanders/Tammy Baldwin (Democrat)
Def 2012: Mike Huckabee/Sarah Palin (Republican)
Def 2016: Mitt Romney/Lisa Murkowski (Republican) Donald Trump/Sarah Palin (Independent)
2021-Present: Tammy Baldwin/Cory Booker (Democrat)
Def 2020: Marco Rubio/Nikki Haley (Republican) Donald Trump/Kari Lake (American)

The idea is from 2006 onwards Gore is a lame duck president. This combined with the financial crisis and Edwards marriage scandal leads to Huckabee winning in 2008. He mishandles the financial crisis and bailout of banks leading to a democrat victory in 2012. Seeing a potential left wing run Bernie runs in 2012 and narrowly beats a more establishment candidate (Hilary for the lols?) although once in power is hamstrung by more moderate democrats. Despite that he does well enough to be reelected against a divided GOP.

This is where I'm not sure.
a) Not sure about Baldwin as a Bernie Veep. Would America accept an LGBT+ person on the ticket. I am open to suggestions (Hilary for the lols?)
b) Would she run in 2020. Assuming Bernie handles COVID well they might get reelected. I figured Trump runs again out of stubborness, possibly on a vanity vehicle

Alternatively: Trump runs for the GOP nomination in 2020 (having run independent in 2016) and secures it
 
Last edited:
Redo of this idea. I still have no idea about American politics



2001-2005: Al Gore/John Edwards (Democrat)
Def 2000: George W. Bush/Dick Cheney (Republican)
2005-2009: John Edwards/Jeanne Shaheen (Democrat)
Def 2004: John McCain/Rudy Guliani (Republican)
2009-2013: Mike Huckabee/Sarah Palin (Republican)
Def 2008: Jeanne Shaheen/John Kerry (Democrat)
2013-2021 : Bernie Sanders/Tammy Baldwin (Democrat)
Def 2012: Mike Huckabee/Sarah Palin (Republican)
Def 2016: Mitt Romney/Lisa Murkowski (Republican) Donald Trump/Sarah Palin (Independent)
2021-Present: Tammy Baldwin/Cory Booker (Democrat)
Def 2020: Marco Rubio/Nikki Haley (Republican) Donald Trump/Kari Lake (American)

The idea is from 2006 onwards Edwards is a lame duck president. This combined with the financial crisis and Edwards marriage scandal leads to Huckabee winning in 2008. He mishandles the financial crisis and bailout of banks leading to a democrat victory in 2012. Seeing a potential left wing run Bernie runs in 2012 and narrowly beats a more establishment candidate (Hilary for the lols?) although once in power is hamstrung by more moderate democrats. Despite that he does well enough to be reelected against a divided GOP.

This is where I'm not sure.
a) Not sure about Baldwin as a Bernie Veep. Would America accept an LGBT+ person on the ticket. I am open to suggestions (Hilary for the lols?)
b) Would she run in 2020. Assuming Bernie handles COVID well they might get reelected. I figured Trump runs again out of stubborness, possibly on a vanity vehicle

Alternatively: Trump runs for the GOP nomination in 2020 (having run independent in 2016) and secures it
Why does Gore quit after a term?
 


Prime Ministers of the United Kingdom
2022-2024: Rishi Sunak (Conservative)
2024: Penny Mordaunt (Conservative)
2024-2034: Sir Keir Starmer (Labour)

2024 (Majority): def. Sir Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats), Humza Yousaf (SNP), Penny Mordaunt (Conservative), Carla Denyer/Adrian Ramsay (Green), Nigel Farage (Reform UK)
2028 (Majority): def. Steve Barclay (Conservative), Sir Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats), Humza Yousaf (SNP), Nigel Farage (Reform UK), Carla Denyer (Green)
2031 (Majority): def. Mark Reckless (Reform UK), Sir Ed Davey (Liberal Democrats), Humza Yousaf (SNP), Amelia Womack (Green), George Osborne (Conservative)
2034-2037: Wes Streeting (Labour)
2035 (Minority): def. John Tennant (Conservatives Forward!), Humza Yousaf (SNP), Layla Moran (Liberal Democrats), Rosi Sexton (Green)
2037-2046: John Tennant (Conservatives Forward!)
2037 (Minority): def. Wes Streeting (Labour), Humza Yousaf (SNP), Layla Moran (Liberal Democrats), Rosi Sexton (Green)
2039 (Majority): def. Jonathan Reynolds (Labour), Humza Yousaf (SNP), Layla Moran (Liberal Democrats), Rosi Sexton (Green)
2042 (Majority): def. Layla Moran (Liberal Democrats), Steve Reed (Labour), Rosi Sexton (Green)
2046-20xx: John Brown (Labour)
2046 (Majority): def. John Tennant (Conservatives Forward!), Richard Foord (Liberal Democrats), Rosi Sexton (Green)
 
United States presidents since 1933 in one of my countless OC timelines:

32. Henry C. Ellis (1933–1941)
33. Arthur Vandenberg (1941–1949)
34. Thomas E. Dewey (1949–1953)
35. Estes Kefauver (1953–1961)
36. Nelson Rockefeller (1961–1963)
37. Hugh Scott (1963–1969)
38. Birch Bayh (1969–1981)
39. George H. W. Bush (1981–1989)
40. Robert P. Griffin (1989–1997)
41. Bob Graham (1997–2005)
42. Mike Huckabee (2005–2009)
43. Birch Bayh (2009–2017)
44. Donald Trump (2017–2021)
45. Jack Reed (2021–)
 
"Fun with the Parliamentary seat bonuses"

PRIME MINISTERS OF GREECE:
Antonis Samaras (ND) - June 20, 2012 - January 29, 2015
'12
def. OTL
Alexis Tsipras (SYRIZA) - January 29, 2015 - August 5, 2015
'15 (144 Seats)
def. ND (72 Seats), XA (31 Seats), TP (16 Seats), KKE (15 Seats), ANEL (13 Seats), PASOK (9 Seats)
Sotirios Rizos (IND) - August 5, 2015 - September 23, 2015
Vangelis Meimarakis (ND) - September 23, 2015 - December 1, 2015
'15 (134 Seats)
def. SYRIZA (60 Seats), XA (43 Seats), KKE (26 Seats), TP (20 Seats), ANEL (10 Seats), PASOK (7 Seats)
Sotirios Rizos (IND) - December 1, 2015 - December 23, 2015
Vangelis Meimarakis (ND) - December 23, 2015 - January 15, 2016
'15 (124 Seats)
def. XA (64 Seats), SYRIZA (58 Seats), KKE (28 Seats), TP (19 Seats), PASOK (7 Seats)
Vassiliki Thanou-Christophilou (IND) - January 15, 2016 - February 23, 2016
Nikolaos Michaloliakos (XA) - February 23, 2016 - November 13, 2016
'16 (167 Seats)
def. ND (67 Seats), SYRIZA (54 Seats), KKE (36 Seats), TP (17 Seats), PASOK (9 Seats)
Kyriakos Mitsotakis (ND) - November 13, 2016 - December 15, 2016
Moses Elisaf (FB) - December 15, 2016 - Incumbent
'16 (252 Seats)
def. XA (72 Seats), KKE (23 Seats), OAKKE (3 Seats)
 
32- Franklin Roosevelt (D, then L), 1933-1945
{With John N. Garmer (D) 1933-1941, Henry Wallace (D) 1941-1945, Wendell Wilkie (L) 1945-1945}

33- Wendell Wilkie (L), 1945-1949

{Vacant}

34- William O. Douglas (L), 1949-1957
{With Earl Warren (L)}


[Feel free to add if you want :)]
 
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