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Cranberry
TheCranberry
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« Reply #4475 on: January 10, 2015, 11:32:18 AM »

QUITE A DIFFERENT AMERICA, PART THREE

Composition of 103rd United States Congress:
Red - 2 Democratic Senators
Blue - 2 Republican Senators
Grey - Split Senate Delegation


Republicans - 62
Democrats - 38

House:

Republicans -226

Democrats - 208


1994 Midterms:

Senate:


50% Shade - Retain seat
70% Shade - Pick-up open seat
90% Shade - Pick-up through defeat of incumbent




Republicans - 53 (-9)
Democrats - 47 (+9)

House:

Democrats - 234 (+26)
Republicans - 200 (-26)


1996:




Senator Joe Biden (D-DE) / Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) - 512 EVs
President Bob Dole (R-KS) / Senator Dan Quayle (R-IN) - 22 EVs
Mr. Pat Buchanan (I-VA) / Rep. Ron Paul (I-TX) - 4 EVs

Senate:



Democrats - 50 (+3)
Republicans - 50 (-3)

House:

Democrats - 234 (nc)
Republicans - 197 (-3)
Independents - 3 (+3) (VT-AL caucusing with Democrats, AK-AL and NE-3 caucusing with Republicans)


1998 Midterms:

Senate:



Democrats - 51 (+1)
Republicans - 49 (-1)

House:

Democrats - 226 (-8)
Republicans - 204 (+7)
Independents - 4 (+1) (VT-AL, ME-2 -Dem. Caucus; AK-AL, NE-3 Rep. Caucus)


2000:



President Joe Biden (D-DE) / Vice President Patty Murray (D-WA) - 277 EVs
Governor Mitt Romney (R-MA) / Senator John McCain (R-AZ) - 261 EVs

Senate:



Democrats - 52 (+1)
Republicans - 48 (-1)
House:

Democrats - 218 (-8)
Republicans - 215 (+11)
Independents - 1 (-3) (VT-AL caucusing with Democrats)
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Thomas D
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« Reply #4476 on: January 10, 2015, 11:43:43 AM »

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NHI
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« Reply #4477 on: January 12, 2015, 10:13:39 AM »

√ Gore/Lieberman: 287 (49.1%)
McCain/Bush: 251 (48.9%)

√ Gore/Lieberman: 316 (51.1%)
Bush/Cheney: 222 (47.8%)

√ Giuliani/Allen: 338 (52.4%)
Clinton/Bayh: 200 (46.1%)

√ Giuliani/Allen: 296 (50.7%)
Randell/Obama: 242 (48.1%)

√ Obama/Dean: 275 (49.5%)
Allen/Murkowski: 263 (49.3%)
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Maxwell
mah519
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« Reply #4478 on: January 14, 2015, 12:15:20 AM »

Only a Term

1964 - Scranton upsets Kennedy!
A brutal primary between Barry Goldwater and Nelson Rockefeller ended in a brokered convention. After a narrow win in California, Rockefeller held a minor lead, but not enough to win the nomination for himself. Rockefeller and Goldwater traded leads until the 10th ballot. Rockefeller, looking like a weak potential nominee, consoled with Pennsylvania Governor William Scranton, and Scranton, in a last minute effort, threw his name into the ring. Goldwater leads on the 11th, but by ballot 12, Scranton pulls ahead and takes the nomination by 13. Scranton, knowing his nomination is off putting to conservatives, meets with Goldwater and offers him VP. In a shocking move, Goldwater accepts, and the broadbase ticket moves forward.

Scranton is polling behind by 10 most of the campaign, but a combination of Scranton's support for civil rights, Kennedy's weak debate performances, and revelations into campaign corruption in 1960 caused a major shift into the race with a week left. Scranton pulled a major upset and defeated the young President.



Governor William Scranton (R-PA)/Senator Barry Goldwater (R-AZ) - 50.2%, 311 EV's
President John F. Kennedy (D-MA)/Vice President Lyndon Johnson (D-TX) - 47.9%, 227 EV's


1968 - McGovern knocks out Scranton
Unpopularity over decisions made in Vietnam caused Scranton's approvals to hit record lows. Facing a tough battle from the right and left, President Scranton faced a right-wing primary from Governor Ronald Reagan of California. Scranton faced some trouble when Reagan defeated Scranton in the controversial New Hampshire primary, but Vice President Goldwater rallied conservatives behind Scranton, and he managed to win re-nomination anyway, though significantly damaged.

Former President John Kennedy and Former Vice President Lyndon Johnson, seeing a new opportunity, duked it out in an extremely negative primary. It wasn't until late in the game that a new candidate, George McGovern, rose from the negativity and beat back both of them in the primaries. Strapped for cash, McGovern ran a grassroots campaign on opposition to the Scranton administration. McGovern, considered extremely liberal, needed a conservative to challenge the moderate Scranton, and picked Governor Roger Branigan of Indiana.

McGovern faced strong attacks for his ideology, called a "radical" and a "hippy", and Scranton began to close the gap, but as Vice President Goldwater butchered negotiations in Vietnam, McGovern won a convincing victory over the incumbent. With George Wallace nipping at his heels, Scranton not only came 1000 votes from losing his home state, but one electoral vote away from losing in the electoral college to George Wallace.



Senator George McGovern (D-SD)/Governor Robert Branigan (D-IN) - 45.6%, 313 EV's
President William Scranton (R-PA)/Vice President Barry Goldwater (R-AZ) - 36.4%, 113 EV's
Governor George Wallace (I-AL)/Fmr. Governor Happy Chandler (I-KY) - 17.3%, 112 EV's

1972 - Comeback Nixon wipes the floor with McGovern

McGovern's inability to get much done gave him troubles in his re-election bid. McGovern's VP, Robert Branigan, decided to abandon ship and not run with him for re-election. In an error of vetting, he picks Senator Thomas Eagleton for Vice President, but after scandal struck Eagleton, went on to pick Senator Gaylord Nelson to the ticket. Nelson, a staunch liberal, alienated the conservative wing of the Democratic party, who had the last straw when McGovern signed into law a couple of last civil rights legislation and the EPA.

Former Vice President Richard Nixon, still powerful after trying his hardest to get Scranton re-elected, had earned good will amongst the party elder. People were wanted a return of Scranton, but Scranton declined, and endorsed Nixon in his bid. He faced the strong conservative outlet of Ronald Reagan, but Reagan didn't have much reach beyond party conservatives, and Nixon's good will allowed him to defeat Reagan rather easily. Nixon, wanting nobody to jump ship, went with Governor Spiro Agnew of Maryland, a civil rights moderate, who, nevertheless, struck conservatives as a solid choice.

Nixon/Agnew and McGovern/Nelson was never really a close election, and McGovern was crushed, with Republicans winning the south for the first time since reconstruction (and Georgia for the first time ever). The race opened up even more when Branigan, on his death bed, endorsed Nixon. It was the worst defeat an incumbent President ever faced.



Former Senator Richard Nixon (R-CA)/Governor Spiro Agnew (R-MD) - 58.2%, 506 EV's
President George McGovern (D-SD)/Senator Gaylord Nelson (D-WI) - 40.1%, 32 EV's
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NHI
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4479 on: January 14, 2015, 10:55:14 PM »

√ Hubert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie: 369 (45.0%)
Nelson Rockefeller/George Romney: 103 (34.4%)
George Wallace/Curtis LeMay: 66 (19.6%)

√ Ronald Reagan/Spiro Agnew: 343 (53.9%)
Hubert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie: 195 (45.1%)

√ Ronald Reagan/Gerald Ford: 444 (56.4%)
Edmund Muskie/George McGovern: 94 (42.5%)

√ Gerald Ford/Jack Kemp: 448 (59.5%)
Ted Kennedy/Robert Bryd: 90 (40.0%)

√ Gerald Ford/Jack Kemp: 535 (62.5%)
Walter Mondale/Geraldine Ferraro: 3 (36.5%)

√ Mario Cuomo/Al Gore: 352 (54.9%)
Jack Kemp/George Bush: 186 (44.0%)

√ Bob Dole/Colin Powell: 293 (39.9%)
Mario Cuomo/Al Gore: 227 (34.5%)
Ross Perot/James Stockdale: 18 (24.8%)

√ Bob Dole/Colin Powell: 301 (46.0%)
Michael Dukakis/Dianne Feinstein: 233 (40.1%)
Ross Perot/Pat Choate: 4 (12.9%)

√ Colin Powell/John McCain: 271 (47.4%)
Bob Kerrey/Howard Dean: 267 (47.3%)
Pat Buchanan/Ezola Foster: 0 (4.3%)

√ Wesley Clark/John Kerry: 277 (49.1%)
Colin Powell/John McCain: 261 (48.9%)
Other: 0 (2.0%

√ Wesley Clark/John Kerry: 281 (50.0%)
John McCain/Kay Bailey Hutchison: 257 (48.8%)

√ John Kasich/Sarah Palin: 342 (51.2%)
John Kerry/Hillary Rodham: 216 (47.4%)
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Flake
Flo
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4480 on: January 17, 2015, 12:51:50 AM »

1964: Kennedy vs. Goldwater vs. Wallace



John F. KennedyBarry GoldwaterGeorge Wallace
Electoral Vote4942717
Popular Vote55%41%4%

Louisana was won by three thousand votes, Wyoming was decided by 31 votes.
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Flake
Flo
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4481 on: January 17, 2015, 01:14:12 AM »

1976: Carter vs. Reagan



Jimmy CarterRonald ReaganOthers
Electoral Vote2842540
Popular Vote49%51%0%

New York took the longest to call, it was decided by 400 votes. Ohio was decided by 500 votes, and Vermont was decided by 700 votes. Very close election, but Carter pulled it off even after losing the popular vote.
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badgate
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4482 on: January 17, 2015, 06:20:42 AM »
« Edited: January 17, 2015, 09:18:21 PM by badgate »

The Kennedy Cakewalk

"Rarely before had the American people been in such agreement."



President John F. Kennedy / Vice President Lyndon B. Johnson - 521 (63%)
Arizona Senator Barry Goldwater / New York Congressman William E. Miller - 17 (37%)




"After a tense night, Richard Nixon hit 269 with only California left to be called. At 5:02am EST California was called by a margin of XXXXX for New York Senator Robert F. Kennedy. Kennedy went on to be elected by the House of Representatives, and his running mate by the United States Senate.

The quixotic campaign of Alabaman George Wallace, which initially drew widespread attention, fizzled in the final month of the campaign. The candidate eventually won only the states that went to Barry Goldwater four years earlier."




New York Senator Robert F. Kennedy / Minnesota Senator Eugene McCarthy - 252 (48%; 32,569,240)
Frmr. Vice President Richard Nixon / Marlyand Governor Spiro Agnew - 269 (47%; 31,753,084)
Alabama Governor George Wallace / South Carolina Senator Strom Thurmond - 17 (5%; 3,518,657)




"No one was quite sure what caused such a landslide."



President Robert F. Kennedy / Vice President Eugene McCarthy - 497 (57%; 44,742,680)
California Governor Ronald Reagan / Connecticut Senator George H.W. Bush - 41 (43%; 33,672,644)




"We obviously had Kennedy fatigue."



Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy / Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter - 77 (48%; 38,271,500)
Majority Leader Gerald Ford / Kansas Senator Bob Dole - 461 (52%; 41,551,360)




"No one expected it. It was a come from behind like we'd never seen in American politics. The rematch of the century."



Massachusetts Senator Ted Kennedy / Texas Senator Lloyd Bentsen - 366 (45%; 37,249,268)
President Gerald Ford / Vice President Bob Dole - 172 (39%; 32,684,138)
Illinois Representative John Anderson / Frmr. Governor of Wisconsin Patrick Lucey - 0 (15%; 12,506,961)


Tennessee
√Kennedy - 44%; 680,841
Ford - 44%; 678,495

Texas
Kennedy - 44%; 1,900,196
√Ford - 44%; 1,900,333



"Last night American history was made. All three of the Kennedy brothers have secured reelection victories unparalleled in American history. The torch of the Kennedy dynasty burns bright tonight."



President Ted Kennedy / Vice President Lloyd Bentsen - 503 (58%; 51,706,652)
Frmr. Secretary of State George H.W. Bush / Indiana Senator Dan Quayle - 35 (42%; 37,410,344)




"America has elected its first woman President...and the Kennedy dynasty reigns on."



Massachusetts Senator Caroline Kennedy / Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton - 489 (55%; 53,409,860)
New York Representative Jack Kemp / Arizona Senator John McCain - 49 (45%; 43,925,296)




BONUS MAP: '84, Kennedy v. Dole



President Ted Kennedy / Vice President Lloyd Bentsen - 533 (62%; 55,629,064)
Frmr. Vice President Bob Dole / Connecticut Governor George H.W. Bush - 5 (37%; 33,182,774)
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Flake
Flo
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4483 on: January 17, 2015, 12:05:56 PM »

1984: Hollings vs. Connally



Fritz HollingsJohn ConnallyOthers
Electoral Vote53800
Popular Vote61%39%0%

In this scenario, Fritz was the incumbent, and I decided to pit him against Governor John Connally.

I've never seen a more beautiful map, he won Texas by 8%! Nebraska and Utah were the closest states, Fritz won them both by 2%.
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Flake
Flo
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4484 on: January 17, 2015, 02:28:24 PM »

1976: Nunn vs. Rockefeller



Sam Nunn/Frank LauscheNelson Rockefeller/Ed BrookeOthers
Electoral Vote451870
Popular Vote53%47%0%

Nearly every state was a tossup.
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Chunk Yogurt for President!
CELTICEMPIRE
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4485 on: January 17, 2015, 11:14:34 PM »

Johnson wins in '68!

Surprisingly, LBJ wins his second election.  He defeated Wallace and Nixon in two early debates and in a later debate Nixon made a serious gaffe which may have cost him the election.  Johnson was also not afraid to use the US military in the Middle East even with the Vietnam war raging on.  Almost all the states were close, especially the ones Nixon won.  Wallace only won Alabama, but strangely also campaigned hard in the Northeast.  His visit to Yugoslavia received good reviews (better than Johnson's trip to Switzerland), but apparently failed to help him in any meaningful way.



Johnson/Humphrey: 323 EV, 48% of Popular Vote
Nixon/Agnew: 205 EV, 45% of Popular Vote
Wallace/Thurmond: 10 EV, 7% of Popular Vote
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Chunk Yogurt for President!
CELTICEMPIRE
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4486 on: January 18, 2015, 01:01:03 AM »

LBJ wins a third term!

The Twenty-Second Amendment has been repealed!  Johnson can run for another term!  Nelson Rockefeller runs as the Republican candidate with William Scranton as his running mate.  Wallace is running again, but segregation will be downplayed this time and William Dyke of Wisconsin is running mate.  Johnson defeated Rockefeller in the first debate and destroyed him in the second.  The Johnson campaign did not even consider Wallace to be worth debating.  The Atlantic Southern states were all extremely close.  Also Wyoming was won by less than 1000 votes.  Wallace only cracked 1% in his home state of Alabama.



Johnson/Humphrey: 461 EV, 54% of Popular Vote
Rockefeller/Scranton: 77EV, 45% of Popular Vote
Wallace/Dyke: 0 EV, 0% of Popular Vote
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Chunk Yogurt for President!
CELTICEMPIRE
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4487 on: January 18, 2015, 11:38:01 AM »

LBJ died within days of his inauguration in 1973.  Herbert Humphrey was an unpopular President, and Reagan refused to appear on the debate stage with him.  Humphrey's decision to chose Carter as his running mate failed to get him the support of the South and he only won DC and the state of Massachusetts. 



Reagan/Buckley: 521 EV, 58% of popular vote
Humphrey/Carter: 17 EV, 42% of popular vote
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Chunk Yogurt for President!
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Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4488 on: January 18, 2015, 01:31:45 PM »

Reagan ran for reelection in 1980 expecting an easy victory like before.  The Democrats dominated Ted Kennedy for President and Robert Byrd for VP.  Barry Commoner ran as the Citizen's party candidate on a left-wing platform emphasizing environmentalism with Ralph Nader as his running mate.  Reagan in a gesture of politeness agreed to debate commoner and won soundly.  A few weeks later, all three candidates agreed to debate in which Reagan won.  Reagan still had a tough time, having to fight for California which he just barely won.  The race was decided when Washington was called for Kennedy around midnight.



Kennedy/Byrd: 281 EV, 50% of Popular Vote
Reagan/Buckley: 257 EV, 49% of Popular Vote
Commoner/Nader: 0 EV, 0% of Popular Vote
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Chunk Yogurt for President!
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Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4489 on: January 18, 2015, 02:15:25 PM »

1984 was a very easy election for Kennedy, not even bothering to debate Laxalt or Clark.



Kennedy/Byrd: 499 EV, 57% of Popular Vote
Laxalt/Bush: 39 EV, 42% of Popular Vote
Clark/Paul: 0 EV, 0% of Popular Vote
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SPC
Chuck Hagel 08
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« Reply #4490 on: January 20, 2015, 02:14:31 AM »



Willkie 1940 22,348,343 49.5% 280
Roosevelt 1932 22,821,513 50.5% 251
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badgate
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4491 on: January 20, 2015, 11:20:55 PM »
« Edited: January 21, 2015, 01:07:19 AM by badgate »



346 - 192

Guess what this map is.





434/103





516-22





259-279





460-78





505-21-12
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SPC
Chuck Hagel 08
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« Reply #4492 on: January 20, 2015, 11:36:23 PM »
« Edited: January 21, 2015, 12:16:03 AM by SPC »



Coolidge 51% 323
Davis 23% 126
LaFollette 25% 72



Hoover 48% 397
Smith 25% 69
Shipstead 26% 65


Borah 34% 238
Garner 37% 190
Hoover 28% 103
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Maxwell
mah519
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« Reply #4493 on: January 23, 2015, 01:42:43 PM »

The Rise and Fall of the American Independent Party

1968



Governor George Wallace (AI-AL)/Colonel Harland Sanders (AI-KY) - 38.3%, 205 EV's
Vice President Hubert Humphrey (D-MN)/Senator Edmund Muskie (D-ME) - 30.2%, 173 EV's
Governor Nelson Rockefeller (R-NY)/Senator Hiram Fong (R-HI) - 29.1%, 160 EV's

1972



President Harland Sanders (AI-KY)/Senator John Stennis (AI-MS)
- 47.6%, 335 EV's

Senator George McGovern (D-SD)/ Senator Claiborne Pell (D-RI) - 34.5%, 185 EV's
Former Governor Harold Stassen (R-MN)/Governor Winthrop Rockefeller (R-AR) - 17.4%, 18 EV's

1976



Senator Frank Church (D-ID)/Senator Dale Bumpers (D-AR) - 46.1%, 280 EV's
Senator Mark Hatfield (R-OR)/Governor Robert Ray (R-IA) - 44.7%, 242 EV's
Perennial Candidate George Mahoney (AI-MD)/Lieutenant Governor Charles Sullivan (AI-MS) - 7.7%, 16 EV's
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badgate
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4494 on: January 23, 2015, 06:49:08 PM »

Wait, you have Walkace's running mate as the KFC guy?
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BaconBacon96
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« Reply #4495 on: January 23, 2015, 07:20:12 PM »

Wait, you have Walkace's running mate as the KFC guy?
He was indeed considered for the ticket. He never showed any interest, though.
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Maxwell
mah519
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« Reply #4496 on: January 23, 2015, 07:57:53 PM »

Wait, you have Walkace's running mate as the KFC guy?
He was indeed considered for the ticket. He never showed any interest, though.

Yes, but he was considered. So I took into account that warped sense of history into my mischeavous vision of history where the Republicans go down a more neoliberal route, Democrats go nigh socialist, and the American Independents are a racist/fascist/right-wing populist type party.
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GLPman
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« Reply #4497 on: January 29, 2015, 12:05:48 AM »

Continued from my last post on p. 180

2060



President Clark L. Cross (D-NC) / Vice President Violet C. McCollough (D-NY)
Jed E. Walters (R-MT) / Thomas R. "Tom" Poole (R-NV)

2064


Francisco S. Valadez (R-CO) / Arnold M. Marshall (R-ME)
Linda B. Robinson (D-MA) / Sterling B. Brooks (D-CA)
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badgate
Junior Chimp
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« Reply #4498 on: January 29, 2015, 04:46:38 AM »

1960



Lyndon B. Johnson / Hubert H. Humphrey - 448 (53%; 32,339,032)
Richard Nixon / Henry C. Lodge - 89 (46%; 28,112,300)




1964



President Lyndon B. Johnson / Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey - 521 (59%; 37,191,084)
Nelson Rockefeller / Illinois - 17 (41%; 25,908,292)




1968



Eugene McCarthy / Robert Byrd - 287 (49%; 32,265,512)
Richard Nixon / Spiro Agnew - 241 (46%; 30,450,704)
George Wallace / Happy Chandler - 10 (5%; 3,111,738)




1972



President Eugene McCarthy / Vice President Robert Byrd - 526 (60%; 44,331,112)
William Scranton / California - 12 (40%; 29,533,752)




1976



Vice President Robert Byrd / Wisconsin - 187 (49%; 41,799,744)
Ronald Reagan / Virginia - 351 (50%; 42,584,576)




1980



Jerry Brown / Jimmy Carter - 3 (36%; 30,524,552)
Ronald Reagan / Virginia - 535 (51%; 43,290,268)
John Anderson / Wisconsin - 0 (13%; 11,017,554)




1984



Fritz Hollings / Bill Clinton - 39 (44%; 38,725,808)
Bob Dole / I Forgot - 499 (56%; 49,048,248)




1988 1/3: Dole Hangs On!



Al Gore / Mario Cuomo - 261 (49%; 47,471,832)
Bob Dole / I Forgot - 277 (51%; 48,763,056)


1988 2/3: Biden Blowout!



Joe Biden / Lloyd Bentsen - 418 (53%; 49,646,776)
Bob Dole / I Forgot - 120 (47%; 44,445,492)


1988 3/3: Republican Today, Republican Tomorrow, Republican Forever!



Mario Cuomo / Bill Clinton - 195 (49%; 45,513,040)
Bob Dole / I Forgot - 343 (51%; 47,423,544)
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TNF
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« Reply #4499 on: January 29, 2015, 10:40:56 AM »

2016



Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York and Sherrod Brown of Ohio (Democratic Party)
Jeb Bush of Florida and Scott Brown of New Hampshire (Republican Party)

2020



President Jeb Bush of Florida and Vice President Scott Brown of New Hampshire (Republican Party)
Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Tom Perriello of Virginia (Democratic Party)

2024



President Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Vice President Tom Perriello of Virginia (Democratic Party)
Rand Paul of Kentucky and Mia Love of Utah (Republican Party)
Raymond Cooke of Alabama and Beth Fort of Massachusetts (Tea Party)*

2028



Vice President Tom Perriello of Virginia and Cory Booker of New Jersey (Democratic Party)
Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania and Brian Calley of Michigan (Republican Party)

2032



President Tom Perriello of Virginia and Vice President Cory Booker of New Jersey (Democratic Party)
Victoria Pope of Missouri and Tony Castellano of Oregon (Republican Party)*

2036



Victoria Pope of Missouri and Tony Castellano of Oregon (Republican Party)*
Carrie Henderson of New Jersey and Harold Phillips of Minnesota (Democratic Party)*
Fred Hammond of Oklahoma and Joanne Parker of Missouri (Progressive Party)*

2040



Vice President Tony Castellano of Oregon and Jess Messer of South Carolina (Republican Party)*
Bill Anderson of Tennessee and Vanessa Capps of Connecticut (Democratic Party)*
Vincent Steele of New Jersey and Brenda Gold of Kentucky (We the People)*

2044



President Bill Anderson of Tennessee and Vice President Vanessa Capps of Connecticut (Democratic Party)*
Ken Jones of Virginia and Jim McCall of Tennessee (Republican Party)*
Izalea Ford of Georgia and Russ Gardner of Texas (We the People)*

2048



President Ken Jones of Virginia and Vice President Jim McCall of Tennessee (Republican Party)*
Ilene Viveros of Pennsylvania and Daniel Pearson of Oklahoma (Workers Party)*
Bill Anderson of Tennessee and Anthony Granger of Washington (Progressive Party/Democratic Party)*

2052



Vice President Jim McCall of Tennessee and Joe Holliday of Alaska (Republican Party)*
Kim Weber of Michigan and Michael Workman of New York (Workers')*
Elsie Rogers of New York and Tiffany Tong of California (Progressive Alliance)*
Sandy Lambert of California and Richard Gilchrist of Idaho (Life, Liberty, and Property)*

*Fictional person
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