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Fubart Solman
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« Reply #4825 on: November 11, 2015, 05:10:16 PM »

2000




President Jean Chretien-New York (D)-362 EV
Idaho Governor Stockwell Day    - Reform 75Ev
Rep from Texas Gilles Duceppe - Bloc South 62 Ev
Vermont Senator Alexa McDonough Progressive 32  EV
Former President Joe Clark from Texas  (R)   7 EV  


Interesting idea. I'm looking forward to seeing the rest.
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Pragmatic Conservative
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« Reply #4826 on: November 11, 2015, 07:36:24 PM »

2004


VIce President (D) Paul Martin-Maryland 252 EV
Stephen Harper Representative for Texas  Conservative- 134 EV
Rep from Texas Gilles Duceppe - Bloc South 92 EV
Jack Layton NYC Mayor Progressive-60 EV



2008 Election

Stephen Harper Representative for Texas  Conservative- 218 EV
President- Maryland (D) Paul Martin 176 EV
Jack Layton NYC Mayor Progressive-74 EV
Rep from Texas Gilles Duceppe - Bloc South 70 EV
 
2012


President Stephen Harper Texas  Conservative- 320 EV
Michael Ignatieff -NYC Businessman 38 EV
Jack Layton NYC Mayor Progressive-165 EV
Rep from Texas Gilles Duceppe - Bloc South 15 EV
 
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GPORTER
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« Reply #4827 on: November 11, 2015, 08:40:21 PM »
« Edited: November 28, 2016, 06:18:35 PM by GPORTER »

Different 1964 election and onward John Kennedy (1961-1963)
Lyndon Johnson (1963-1965)
Robert Kennedy (1965-1969)
Barry Goldwater (1969-1973)
Ted Kennedy (1973 - present) 1972 election Senator Ted Kennedy versus President Barry Goldwater

Barry Goldwater: 244 Ted Kennedy: 294 270 to win
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Oldiesfreak1854
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« Reply #4828 on: November 13, 2015, 12:28:39 PM »

2016 President

Fmr. Sen Hillary Clinton (D-NY)/Fmr. Gov. Martin O'Malley (D-MD): 446 EVs, 57% PV
Mr. Donald Trump (R-NY)/Gov. Chris Christie (R-NJ): 92 EVs, 40% PV

2016 Senate

Democratic: 55 seats (+8)
Republican: 45 seats (-8)

2016 Governor

Republican: 29 states (-2)
Democratic: 21 states (+1)

(This is assuming Edwards wins the Louisiana runoff.)
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Maxwell
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« Reply #4829 on: November 15, 2015, 10:17:19 PM »

ELECTION SERIES

2000 - Gore crushes Bush
Drunk driving, the disastrous pick of J.C. Watts, and Gore's steady defense of the Clinton economy caused Gore to win solidly against his challenger.



Vice President Al Gore (D-TN)/Senator Bob Graham (D-FL) - 52.3%, 392 EV's

Governor George W. Bush (R-TX)/Congressman J.C. Watts (R-OK) - 44.9%, 146 EV's

2004 - Is the Republican Party in a rut?

John McCain was viewed as the Republican Party's top candidate, but the catching of Osama Bin Laden and the relatively stable economy saves Al Gore despite legendary losses in 2002 midterms.



President Al Gore (D-TN)/Vice President Bob Graham (D-FL) - 50.5%, 322 EV's
Senator John McCain (R-AZ)/Former Governor Tom Ridge (R-PA) - 48.2%, 216 EV's

2008 - Nope, the Republican Party is fine

The aging Vice President Graham narrowly edged Senator John Edwards for the Democratic nomination, as he faces very moderate Republican Senator Jim Webb. Webb, not an economic policy mind, picks Willard Mitt Romney, a fellow moderate with some economic conservative appeal, to be a VP.



Senator Jim Webb (R-VA)/Governor Mitt Romney (R-MA) - 53.5%, 382 EV's

Vice President Bob Graham (D-FL)/Congressman Barack Obama (D-IL) - 44.9%, 156 EV's

2012 Election - Can't Ebb the Webb

Despite slow recovery, Webb convinces America to give him a second term thanks to an increasingly left-wing Democratic Party (forcing Senator Hillary Clinton to the left) as the Republican Party remains strongly in the center. Polls predict the first very close election in decades, but President Webb's margin of victory surprises most pundits, including a surprising pick-up of the House of Representatives.



President Jim Webb (R-VA)/Vice President Mitt Romney (R-MA) - 51.6%, 321 EV's

Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY)/Congressman Brad Miller (D-NC) - 47.2%, 217 EV's

2016 - Romney crushes Sanders

A contentious Democratic nominating process allows for Bernie Sanders to edge his way into becoming the nominee. Many Democrats view his disdain for foreign policy and his radical economic policies as dangerous to their chances. Even then - enthusiasm for Republicans is low. Until the debates, Bernie is thought to be surging, as his crowd sizes dwarf that of VP Romney, who won the GOP nomination in a low key, boring process. During the first debate, however, VP Romney offered an intense defense of the Webb administration and harsh critique of Sanders. Sanders gave a poor defense. Three weak performances combined with increasing calls to stay with Republican leadership, Romney wins an unexpected landslide, carrying with him a Republican house and huge gains in the Senate.



Vice President Mitt Romney (R-MA)/Former Governor Scott Walker (R-WI) - 57.2%, 403 EV's
Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT)/Senator Keith Ellison (D-MN) - 40.9%, 135 EV's
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Oldiesfreak1854
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« Reply #4830 on: November 18, 2015, 08:06:10 AM »
« Edited: November 18, 2015, 08:07:52 AM by Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite »


Gov. John Kasich (R-OH)/Fmr. Gov. Mike Huckabee (R-AR): 452 EVs (55% PV)
Sen. Bernie Sanders (D-VT)/Fmr. Gov. Martin O'Malley (D-MD): 86 EVs (42% PV)
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Stan
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« Reply #4831 on: November 22, 2015, 11:09:39 AM »



Arnaldo Forlani, Christian Democracy, 29,6 Blue
Achille Occhetto, Democratic Party of Lefy, 16,1 Red
Bettino Craxi, Socialist Party, 13,6 Yellow
Umberto Bossi, Northern League, 8,6 Green
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bagelman
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« Reply #4832 on: November 22, 2015, 01:39:35 PM »

Some maps based on these maps



400+



319-206, 6 undergoing recount



312-216, 3 undergoing recount



369-162



366-159, 6 undergoing recount



305-201, 15 undergoing recount




345-186



339-192
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bagelman
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« Reply #4833 on: November 25, 2015, 08:38:18 PM »
« Edited: November 25, 2015, 08:40:10 PM by bagelman »



328-210

Closest states: NV and MA were very close, and VT was originally considered a Dem state due to inaccurate polling.

The Democrat in this race is a big gov type that wants to increase regulation and the Republican is an economic libertarian type. Obviously internal state dynamics are very different to allow MI to vote to the right of ID. Based on this map.
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MK
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« Reply #4834 on: November 26, 2015, 07:07:00 AM »




Business man/ real estate mogul: Donald J Trump
County Sheriff: Joe Arpaio   



Former NY Senator and SOS: Hillary Clinton
Gov: Tim Kaine
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Clark Kent
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« Reply #4835 on: November 26, 2015, 12:05:00 PM »

I don't really see any Republican losing Kansas or Kentucky.




Republican: Warren Harding (Ohio)/Calvin Coolidge (Massachusetts) - 33.55%, 243 EVs
Republican: Richard Nixon (California)/Spiro Agnew (Maryland) - 33.75%, 239 EVs
Republican: Ronald Reagan (California)/George H.W. Bush (Texas) - 32.70%, 46 EVs


The only two states where anybody wins a majority are South Carolina and Mississippi, both won by Nixon. Reagan never breaks 40% in any of his states, and his best states are, ironically, South Carolina, Mississippi, and Texas. Harding breaks 40% in Massachusetts and Minnesota, and Nixon does very well in the South, usually with Reagan in second and Harding in a distant third.
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MadmanMotley
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« Reply #4836 on: November 27, 2015, 04:03:04 PM »


Sen. Ron Paul (R-TX)
Fmr. VP. Dan Quayle (R-IN)
Fmr. Sec. Elizabeth Dole (R-NC)


Sen. Ron Paul (R-TX)/Fmr. Sec. Elizabeth Dole (R-NC) 289EV 48.5%
VP. Al Gore (D-TN)/Sen. Bob Graham (D-FL) 249EV 46.4%
Mr. Ralph Nader (G-CT)/CEO Donald Trump (I-NY) 0EV 5.1%
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bagelman
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« Reply #4837 on: November 27, 2015, 09:01:12 PM »

1960:



The most hotly disputed election since 1876, Senator Jim Lfoofez (D-RI) "defeated" Henry C. Ojyo (R-MA)

1964:



Easy relection win for Lfoofez

1968:



R-VA defeats D-IA and I-FL

1972:



D-NE fails to put up a fight against inc. R-VA. But R-VA is later forced to resign.

1976



D-FL defeats incumbant R-IN

1980:



R-NY defeats D-FL (inc.)

1984:



R-NY re-elected vs. D-IA

1988:



R-KY defeats D-RI

1992:



D-LA defeats R-KY (inc)

1996:



D-LA (inc) defeats R-OK

2000:



R-CO "defeats" D-GA

2004:



R-CO defeats D-CT

2008:



D-MO defeats R-WA

2012:



D-MO (inc.) vs. R-CT

A recount in PA will decide winner.
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Chunk Yogurt for President!
CELTICEMPIRE
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« Reply #4838 on: November 28, 2015, 09:19:18 PM »



What are the circumstances that led to this?
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JonathanSwift
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« Reply #4839 on: November 28, 2015, 09:56:23 PM »
« Edited: November 28, 2015, 09:58:05 PM by عبدالله الحظرد »


Donald Trump is elected President in 2016, with Ted Cruz as his running mate. After President Trump implements Single-Payer Health Care in 2019, Cruz resigns and unsuccessfully challenges Trump in the Primary, before launching an Independent bid with Utah Senator Mike Lee as his running mate. On Election Day, he carries his home state of Texas; in Idaho and Utah, Lee is at the top of the ticket and is listed as the official Republican nominee.

Trump chooses former New Mexico Governor Susana Martinez to be his new Vice President and makes a play for the Hispanic vote.

Meanwhile, the Democrats nominate former Virginia Senator Jim Webb. Webb improves a bit in the South compared to previous Democratic nominees, but severely depresses liberal and minority turnout and ends up losing swing states like Colorado and New Hampshire. Kanye West runs as an Independent and wins a great deal of support from African-Americans, allowing him to win D.C.
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Chunk Yogurt for President!
CELTICEMPIRE
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« Reply #4840 on: December 01, 2015, 05:36:54 PM »


Donald Trump is elected President in 2016, with Ted Cruz as his running mate. After President Trump implements Single-Payer Health Care in 2019, Cruz resigns and unsuccessfully challenges Trump in the Primary, before launching an Independent bid with Utah Senator Mike Lee as his running mate. On Election Day, he carries his home state of Texas; in Idaho and Utah, Lee is at the top of the ticket and is listed as the official Republican nominee.

Trump chooses former New Mexico Governor Susana Martinez to be his new Vice President and makes a play for the Hispanic vote.

Meanwhile, the Democrats nominate former Virginia Senator Jim Webb. Webb improves a bit in the South compared to previous Democratic nominees, but severely depresses liberal and minority turnout and ends up losing swing states like Colorado and New Hampshire. Kanye West runs as an Independent and wins a great deal of support from African-Americans, allowing him to win D.C.

That's actually more interesting than what I originally had in mind.
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darthebearnc
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« Reply #4841 on: December 01, 2015, 05:58:04 PM »



Try to solve this one. It's both political and historical in nature (the colors represent parties and the shades are relevant).
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Pragmatic Conservative
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« Reply #4842 on: December 03, 2015, 08:36:08 PM »

Can you guess what Scenarios I meant by each map. I will list a few possible scenario please   choose 1 for each map, they may be used only once and not all possible Scenario will be used. If you want, you may name your own possible scenario for each map.

 Bush vs Clinton, Kasich vs Saunders (Bad Economy), Trump vs Clinton vs Webb(I), Carson vs Clinton,   Trump vs Clinton, Fiorina vs Clinton, Rubio Vs Clinton (Bad Economy),   Rubio vs Clinton vs Trum (I), Kasich vs Clinton vs Cruz (I), Trump Vs Saunders.


 
1.


Democrat 250
GOP 288



401 Democrat
137 GOP



392 GOP
146 Democrat






437 Democrat
101 GOP

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mencken
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« Reply #4843 on: December 04, 2015, 03:48:31 PM »



Try to solve this one. It's both political and historical in nature (the colors represent parties and the shades are relevant).

The political party of the previous incumbent governor? (and number of predecessors of the same political party for shade?)
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Maxwell
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« Reply #4844 on: December 06, 2015, 12:43:24 AM »

1988
Despite a very aggressive strategy, H.W. Bush was no match for Mario Cuomo.



Governor Mario Cuomo (D-NY)/Governor Bill Clinton (D-AR) - 50%, 282 EV's
Vice President George H.W. Bush (R-TX)/Senator Dan Quayle (R-IN) - 48%, 256 EV's

1992
Cuomo faced difficulty with a Republican congress, a recession, and a worsening foreign policy zone. Republicans, meanwhile, overthrew their establishment wing with H. Ross Perot, a businessman advocating fair trade policies as opposed to the Cuomo administration's free trade policies. Even with his unconventionial style, Perot came out of the convention with 20+ point lead, but Cuomo steadily kept reducing Perot's lead to the point of a tie. Perot's debate performances, however, put him back squarely in the lead, and he strongly defeated Cuomo.



Businessman Ross Perot (R-TX)/Former Senator Bill Armstrong (R-CO) - 54%, 383 EV's
President Mario Cuomo (D-NY)/Vice President Bill Clinton (D-AR) - 45%, 155 EV's

1996
Multiple Government shutdowns, the Great Democratic Recovery, and an even worsening economy put Perot at odd ends. A vicious primary between Former VP Bill Clinton and Former President Mario Cuomo created hope for Republicans, but Perot's petulent attitude toward the American people caused Cuomo to cruise to become a modern day Grover Cleveland.



Former President Mario Cuomo (D-NY)/Senator Al Gore (D-TN) - 55%, 396 EV's
President Ross Perot (R-TX)/Vice President Bill Armstrong (R-CO) - 44%, 142 EV's
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Maxwell
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« Reply #4845 on: December 06, 2015, 01:39:58 AM »

2000
Cuomo left the Presidency with a recovered economy, high approval ratings, and a surprisingly strong midterm behind him. But unfortunately for him, the nominating process didn't go the way he had hoped. Cuomo pinned his hopes on Senator John Kerry, who had been primed as the New England successor to the Cuomo legacy. Sadly enough, he was overtaken by Former Vice President Bill Clinton, whose contentious relationship with Cuomo caused Cuomo to endorse Kerry outright before the Iowa caucuses. That endorsement was widely criticized and may have contributed to Kerry's defeat. Even then, though, Clinton knew the importance of keeping the North and South together, and thus kept Kerry on the ticket.

The Republican primary finally opened up after nearly a decade of domination of President Perot. However, Senator Richard Lugar, Governor Bill Weld, nor Senator John McCain had the stuff to compete with a President Perot, especially one who had about 38% of the primary electorate already locked up. Perot swept the primaries and once again primed for a match-up against the Democrats. This proved disasterous for the Republicans - Business Republicans endorsed the Moderate Clinton, who had a wide fundraising advantage over Perot. Perot's debating skills had faded with the years, and Clinton managed to connect with voters in a new way. A third way. Clinton slaughtered Perot in the general. The end of the Perot era in the United States.



Former Vice President Bill Clinton (D-AR)/Senator John Kerry (D-MA) - 60%, 503 EV's

Former President Ross Perot (R-TX)/Former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld (R-IL) - 38%, 35 EV's
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MATTROSE94
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« Reply #4846 on: December 08, 2015, 11:07:24 AM »

2016 (Clinton vs. Rubio)

Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL)/Governor John Kasich (R-OH): 288 EV (50%)
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton (D-NY)/ HUD Secretary Julian Castro (D-TX): 250 EV (48%)
Others: 0 EV (2%)

The closest states are Pennsylvania, Virginia, Nevada, New Hampshire, Iowa, Ohio, Colorado, Wisconsin, and Florida.
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Crumpets
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« Reply #4847 on: December 09, 2015, 02:29:18 AM »
« Edited: December 09, 2015, 02:35:46 AM by Thinking Crumpets Crumpet »

1965



President De Gaulle (UNR) 451 EV 55.2%
Senator Mitterand (FGDS) 87 EV 44.8%

1969



Vice President Pompidou (UDR) 499 EV 58.2%
Senator Poher (DC) 39 EV 41.8%

1974



Secretary of the Treasury Giscard (IR) 273 EV 50.8%
Senator Mitterand (PS) 265 EV 49.2%
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Unconditional Surrender Truman
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« Reply #4848 on: December 09, 2015, 06:13:22 PM »

1796: No Jefferson

Vice President John Adams [Federalist] 74 Electoral Votes
Governor Thomas Pinckney [Federalist] 59 Electoral Votes
Governor George Clinton [Democratic-Republican] 42 Electoral Votes
Fmr. Governor Patrick Henry [Democratic-Republican] 20 Electoral Votes
Governor Samuel Adams [Democratic-Republican] 15 Electoral Votes
Congressman James Madison [Democratic-Republican] 8 Electoral Votes
Others [Various] 58 Electoral Votes

1800

President John Adams [Federalist] 73 Electoral Votes
Vice President Thomas Pinckney [Federalist] 72 Electoral Votes
Fmr. Governor George Clinton [Democratic-Republican] 65 Electoral Votes
Congressman James Madison [Democratic-Republican] 63 Electoral Votes
Others [Various] 3 Electoral Votes
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Unconditional Surrender Truman
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« Reply #4849 on: December 11, 2015, 12:15:20 AM »

2016 U.S. Presidential Jungle Primary - Results

Sec. Hillary Clinton [DEM] 27.9% votes, 37 States + DC
Sen. Bernie Sanders [IND] 15.4% votes, 5 States
Mr. Donald Trump [IND] 15.2%, 7 States
Sen. Ted Cruz [REP] 8.1%, 1 State
Dr. Ben Carson [REP] 7.1%, 0 States
Sen. Marco Rubio [REP] 7.1%, 0 States
Others [Various] 19.2%

With the right divided, Independent Senator Bernie Sanders managed to win the second spot in the runoff, narrowly defeating fellow independent Donald Trump. Had the old primary system remained in place, commentators speculated, Sanders and Trump might have chosen to run as candidates of one of the two major parties, but the adoption of the 28th Amendment - which replaced the old electoral college with a "jungle primary" system - allowed them to gain traction outside the two-party system.

2016 U.S. Presidential Runoff - Results


Sec. Hillary Clinton [DEM]  72.6% votes, 45 States + DC
Sen. Bernie Sanders [IND] 28.4% votes, 5 States

The strong support of the DNC and low conservative turnout hands the election to Clinton, though Sanders manages to improve upon his primary performance.
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