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Author Topic: List of Alternate Presidents 2.0.  (Read 243928 times)
DKrol
dkrolga
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« on: May 14, 2017, 01:08:41 PM »

43. Jeb Bush/Lamar Alexander - 2001-2009
- 2000: Bush/Alexander (279) vs. Al Gore/Jeanne Shaheen (259)
- 2004: Bush/Alexander (277) vs. Joe Lieberman/Howard Dean (261)


44. Hillary Clinton/Tim Kaine - 2009-2013
- 2008: Clinton/Kaine (339) vs. Mike Huckabee/Sam Brownback (199)

45. George W. Bush/Mitt Romney - 2013-2017
- 2012: Bush/Romney (281) vs. Clinton/Kaine (257)

46. Bob McDonnell/Kelly Ayotte - 2017-2021
- 2016: McDonnell/Ayotte (306) v. Kaine/Sherrod Brown (232)

47. Caroline Kennedy/Jason Kander - 2021-2029
- 2020: Kennedy/Kander (279) vs. McDonnell/Ayotte (259)
- 2024: Kennedy/Kander (342) vs. Marco Rubio/Elise Stefanik (196)
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DKrol
dkrolga
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« Reply #1 on: July 11, 2017, 05:16:27 AM »

Just a bit more background for my UKNA TL

List of Prime Ministers since the Western Pact
1. Schuyler Colfax, Whig - 1870-1882
- Elected in 1870, 1875, 1880
2. Winfield Scott Hancock, Liberal - 1882-1890
- Elected in 1882, 1885
3. James G. Blaine, Whig - 1890-1896
- Elected in 1890, 1895
4. William McKinley, Whig - 1896-1907
- Elected in 1899, 1902
5. Theodore Roosevelt, People’s Party - 1907-1912
- Elected in 1907,
6. Charles Evans Hughes, Whig - 1912-1920
- Elected in 1912, 1916
7. William Gibbs McAdoo, Progressive - 1920-1925
- Elected in 1920, 1924
8. Hiram Johnson, Progressive - 1925-1929
- Never received own electoral mandate
9. Al Smith, Liberal - 1929-1930
- Elected in 1929
10. Herbert Hoover, Conservative - 1930-1931
- Elected in 1930
11. Herbert Hoover, National Government - 1931-1937
- Elected in 1931
12. Henry Wallace, Liberal - 1937-1945
- Elected in 1937, 1941
13. Thomas Dewey, Conservative leading a Conservative Minority Government - 1945-1950
- Elected in 1945
14. Harry Truman, Working Man’s Party - 1950-1959
- Elected in 1950, 1953, 1958
15. John F. Kennedy, Liberal - 1959-1969
- Elected in 1959, 1964
16. Richard Nixon, Conservative - 1969-1975
- Elected in 1969, 1972
17. Bob Dole, Conservative - 1975-1977
- Never received own electoral mandate
18. Jimmy Carter, Working Man’s Party leading a Working Man’s Party-Dixie Unionist Party Coalition - 1977-1982
- Elected in 1977
19. George H.W. Bush, Conservative - 1982-1991
- Elected in 1982, 1987
20. Jimmy Carter, Working Man’s Party leading a Working Man’s Party Minority Government - 1991-1993
- Elected in 1991
21. Michael Dukakis, Liberal - 1993-1997
- Elected in 1993
22. George W. Bush, Conservative - 1997-Present
- Elected in 1997, 2002, 2007
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DKrol
dkrolga
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« Reply #2 on: August 17, 2017, 05:21:12 AM »
« Edited: August 17, 2017, 05:22:56 AM by DKrol »

I may be going to be turning this into a TL down the road. Do you guys want to take a guess as to what leads to this list of Presidents occurring? I've left asterisks and notations to hint to you when important events or things worth noting take place. If I don't go ahead with the TL, I'll fill you in on the footnotes.

1. George Washington (Non-Affiliated-VA) 1789-1797 *
2. Patrick Henry (Anti-Federalist-VA) 1797-1799 **
3. Thomas Jefferson (Democratic Republican-VA) 1799-1805
4. James Madison (Democratic Republican-VA) 1805-1809

5. Charles C. Pinckney (Federalist-SC) 1809-1817
6. Daniel D. Tompkins (Federalist-NY) 1817-1825

7. Henry Clay (Democratic Republican-KY) 1825-1829
8. Andrew Jackson (Democratic Republican
/Whig-TN) 1829-1841 ***
9. Willie Person Mangum (Whig-NC) 1841-1849
10. Zachary Taylor (Whig-LA) 1849-1851
****
11. Daniel Webster (Whig-MA) 1851-1853
12. William Marcy (Democrat-NY) 1853-1857
13. James Buchanan (Democrat-PA) 1857-1861
+
14. Jefferson Davis (Democrat/National Unity-MS) 1861-1873 ++
15. Robert E. Lee (National Unity/National-VA) 1873-1877 +++
16. James D. Porter (National-TN) 1877-1885
17. Joseph Wheeler (National-AL) 1885-1889

18. Benjamin Harrison (Popular-IN) 1889-1897 ++++
19. William McKinley (Popular-OH) 1897-1905 #
20. Williams Jennings Bryan (Popular-NE) 1905-1909 ##
21. William Howard Taft (Justice-OH) 1909-1917 ###
22. Champ Clark (Justice-MO) 1917-1921
23. Leonard Wood (Republican-NH) 1921-1927 ####
24. Frank Orren Lowden (Republican-IL) 1927-1937
25. Strom Thurmond (National-SC) 1937-1941
26. Harry S. Truman (Popular-MO) 1941-1949 ^
27. Douglas MacArthur (Republican-NY) 1949-1957 ^^
28. Dwight D. Eisenhower (Non-Affiliated-PA) 1957-1961 ^^^
29. John S. McCain, Jr. (Non-Affiliated-IA) 1961-1969
30. George W. Romney (Republican-MI) 1969-1973
31. Al Haig (Non-Affiliated-PA) 1973-1985 ^^^^
32. John Glenn (Non-Affiliated-OH) 1985-1990 ~
33. Bob Dole (Non-Affiliated-KS) 1990-1995
34. James Stockdale (Non-Affiliated-CA) 1995-1998 ~~
- Robert Byrd (Democrat-WV) 1998-2000
36. Colin Powell (Non-Affiliated-VA) 2000-2005
37. John S. McCain, III (Non-Affiliated-AZ) 2005-2010
38. Mitt Romney (Non-Affiliated-MI) 2010-2015
39. Donald Trump (Non-Affiliated-NY) 2015-2017 ~~~
- Orrin Hatch (Conservative-UT) 2017-2020 ~~~~
40. Joe Heck (Non-Affiliated-NV) 2020-2025
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DKrol
dkrolga
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« Reply #3 on: December 30, 2017, 06:43:55 PM »

I may be going to be turning this into a TL down the road. Do you guys want to take a guess as to what leads to this list of Presidents occurring? I've left asterisks and notations to hint to you when important events or things worth noting take place. If I don't go ahead with the TL, I'll fill you in on the footnotes.

1. George Washington (Non-Affiliated-VA) 1789-1797 *
2. Patrick Henry (Anti-Federalist-VA) 1797-1799 **
3. Thomas Jefferson (Democratic Republican-VA) 1799-1805
4. James Madison (Democratic Republican-VA) 1805-1809

5. Charles C. Pinckney (Federalist-SC) 1809-1817
6. Daniel D. Tompkins (Federalist-NY) 1817-1825

7. Henry Clay (Democratic Republican-KY) 1825-1829
8. Andrew Jackson (Democratic Republican
/Whig-TN) 1829-1841 ***
9. Willie Person Mangum (Whig-NC) 1841-1849
10. Zachary Taylor (Whig-LA) 1849-1851
****
11. Daniel Webster (Whig-MA) 1851-1853
12. William Marcy (Democrat-NY) 1853-1857
13. James Buchanan (Democrat-PA) 1857-1861
+
14. Jefferson Davis (Democrat/National Unity-MS) 1861-1873 ++
15. Robert E. Lee (National Unity/National-VA) 1873-1877 +++
16. James D. Porter (National-TN) 1877-1885
17. Joseph Wheeler (National-AL) 1885-1889

18. Benjamin Harrison (Popular-IN) 1889-1897 ++++
19. William McKinley (Popular-OH) 1897-1905 #
20. Williams Jennings Bryan (Popular-NE) 1905-1909 ##
21. William Howard Taft (Justice-OH) 1909-1917 ###
22. Champ Clark (Justice-MO) 1917-1921
23. Leonard Wood (Republican-NH) 1921-1927 ####
24. Frank Orren Lowden (Republican-IL) 1927-1937
25. Strom Thurmond (National-SC) 1937-1941
26. Harry S. Truman (Popular-MO) 1941-1949 ^
27. Douglas MacArthur (Republican-NY) 1949-1957 ^^
28. Dwight D. Eisenhower (Non-Affiliated-PA) 1957-1961 ^^^
29. John S. McCain, Jr. (Non-Affiliated-IA) 1961-1969
30. George W. Romney (Republican-MI) 1969-1973
31. Al Haig (Non-Affiliated-PA) 1973-1985 ^^^^
32. John Glenn (Non-Affiliated-OH) 1985-1990 ~
33. Bob Dole (Non-Affiliated-KS) 1990-1995
34. James Stockdale (Non-Affiliated-CA) 1995-1998 ~~
- Robert Byrd (Democrat-WV) 1998-2000
36. Colin Powell (Non-Affiliated-VA) 2000-2005
37. John S. McCain, III (Non-Affiliated-AZ) 2005-2010
38. Mitt Romney (Non-Affiliated-MI) 2010-2015
39. Donald Trump (Non-Affiliated-NY) 2015-2017 ~~~
- Orrin Hatch (Conservative-UT) 2017-2020 ~~~~
40. Joe Heck (Non-Affiliated-NV) 2020-2025


Since this TL fizzled, here are the footnotes.

* - Washington was the only President elected unanimously.
** - Henry passed away in office a little under two years into his administration.
*** - After successfully annexing the Republic of Texas in 1835, Jackson was elected for a third term. The popularity of the annexation of Texas, and support for the later war with Mexico, secured almost two decades of Whig domination.
**** - Taylor passed away in office just over two years into his administration.
+ - Under Buchanan, the issue of the expansion of slavery came to a head after decades of bubbling up. The Administration tore up the Kansas-Nebraska Act and allowed the open expansion of slavery into Western Territories.
++ - Upon the election of Davis in 1860 over Illinois Senator Stephen Douglas, three Northern non-slave states announced their secession from the Union. Over the next four years, 9 states would completely secede from the Union over the issue of slavery as well as parts of 5 other states to cause the First American Civil War, which lasted from 1861 until 1870, when the Union Army forced the surrender of the Yankee Federation at Poughkeepsie, New York. Davis was re-elected President of the Union in 1864 and 1868 under the "National Unity" ticket.
+++ - Under Lee, the National Unity Party became the National Party, as it lost its focus on uniting the Yankee Federation and the Union and became more about squashing the remaining flames of rebellion in the North. Former rebel states did not fully regain voting rights until 1904.
++++ - Harrison had enlisted in the Yankee Federation Army in the early months of the war, but never saw active combat and instead spent the war in an administrative post in Yankee-aligned Northern Indiana. His Popular Party ran on a platform of reuniting the former rebel states and the Union more fully.
# - McKinley spent the war, like Harrison had, in an administrative position in the border state of Ohio. He pushed through Congress the Lee-Grant Bill (named after the two famous Generals-turned-Senators of the War) that restored full voting rights to all former rebel states.
## - Jennings Bryan attempted to push through a progressive agenda, built around agrarian reform and opposition to the Gold Standard of the National Party. He was punished by voters when he attempted to ban the sale and consumption of alcohol and was defeated for re-election in 1908.
### - The Justice Party was focused on weeding out corruption and reducing the role of monopolies on the American economy.
#### - Wood was the first president elected from the former rebel states who actively participated in the First American Civil War. His Republican Party was built around re-hashing the battle over slavery, rather than continuing with the status quo and won the most narrow Electoral College victory will losing the national popular vote. The war of words between North and South was getting so hot in his second term, talk of war was frequent. His death cooled tensions significantly, as his Vice President, Frank Orren Lowden, was much less radical. Many think Wood was poisoned by pro-slavery White House staff.
^ - Truman used his leverage as a Southerner to push through the Wallace-Nixon Act, which banned the distribution of federal tax dollars to any state that allowed the sale of slaves within its borders. Of the 48 states in the Union, 20 had already banned the sale of slaves by 1943, and 15 had banned the practice altogether. Truman was re-elected narrowly in 1944, which sparked the Second American Civil War, this time with 5 Southern states seceding from the Union. The Second American Civil War lasted from 1944 to 1949, with soldiers from almost every major world power fighting on the American continent for one side or the other. Even after the 13 state rebellious Southern Confederacy was put down, the global tensions continued for another 5 years as war spread across Latin America, Asia, and Europe.
^^ - MacArthur took a very hard stance against the Southern Confederacy rebel states, banning them from voting until 1960 and essentially placing the region under a military occupation for the duration of his term. He strong-armed the 17th Amendment, which formally and entirely banned the "holdings of persons in bondage or servitude" anywhere within the United States, the 18th Amendment, which defined citizenship and established equal protection under the law, and the 19th Amendment, which extended the right to vote to all persons over the age of 21.
^^^ -The election of Eisenhower in 1956, coupled with the elections of MacArthur and McCain, compose what is known as "the Decades of the Generals", when Americans turned to trusted military figures to lead the nation during some of the rockiest years across the globe. It was during this time, especially under Eisenhower and McCain, that the role of the President changed from a man actively involved in politics to a kind of "grandfather for the nation", a figure of national unity.
^^^^ - Under Haig, many of the traditions established in the Decades of the Generals were codified. In the 20th Amendment, Presidents were banned from being members of political parties or from campaigning with the support of political parties. The 21st Amendment removed the President's ability to veto budgetary bills, the 22nd Amendment gave the power to appoint Supreme Court Justices to the Senate, and the 23rd Amendment removed his ability to issue pardons or give clemency, vesting those powers in the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. The 24th Amendment changed the term of the President to a non-renewable five year term.
~ - The 25th Amendment, passed against Glenn's wishes, removed the office of Vice President and made the President Pro Tempore the acting President in case of vacancy.
~~ - After proposing an invasion of Iraq, prompted by Iraqi Dictator Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait in 1996, Stockdale was assassinated by an anti-war activist while visiting a memorial for the First American Civil War in Kansas. This was the first confirmed assassination of a sitting President, and the first instance of the 25th Amendment being invoked. The war was prosecuted by acting President Byrd and was a resounding success for the Americans.
~~~ - A businessman known for his brash but successful nature, Trump refused to step into the quiet and dignified role of the President, and he was impeached in 2017, a little over a year into his term. This was the first impeachment of a President of the United States.
~~~~ - Although only acting President, Hatch was the final President to have served in the Second American Civil War.
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DKrol
dkrolga
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« Reply #4 on: April 10, 2018, 02:21:36 PM »

26. Theodore Roosevelt (R-New York) 1901-1909
27. William H. Taft (R-Ohio) 1909-1913
28. Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive/Bull Moose-New York) 1913-1917
30. Charles E. Hughes (R-New York) 1917-1925
31. Robert M. La Follette (Prog.-Wisconsin) 1925-1933
32. Herbert Hoover (R-New York) 1933-1937
33. Hiram Johnson (Prog.-California) 1937-1945
34. Henry A. Wallace (Prog.-Iowa) 1945-1953
35. Harry S. Truman (D-Missouri) 1953-1961
36. Richard M. Nixon (R-California) 1961-1965
37. Robert F. Kennedy (Prog.-New York) 1965-1973
38. Nelson Rockefeller (Prog.-New York) 1973-1977
39. Ronald W. Reagan (Conservative-California) 1977-1989
40. Lloyd Bentsen (D-Texas) 1989-1993
41. Jack Kemp (Cons.-New York) 1993-1997
42. Paul Tsongas (Prog.-Massachusetts) 1997-2005
43. W. Mitt Romney (R-Massachusetts) 2005-2013
44. Joe Biden (D-Delaware) 2013-2021
45. Tom Cotton (Cons.-Arkansas) 2021-2029
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DKrol
dkrolga
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« Reply #5 on: August 24, 2019, 12:50:43 AM »

Presidents of the United States

27. William Howard Taft, Republican (1909-1917)
 - President Taft secured a second term in 1912 after former President Roosevelt's third-party campaign came to a tragic end when the Bull Moose fell to an assassin's bullet. President Taft pursued a policy of neutrality abroad, which some authors believed bordered on isolationism, and continued the anti-corruption crusades of his first term. He did not seek re-election in 1916.
28. Woodrow Wilson, Democrat (1917-1919)
 - New Jersey Governor Woodrow Wilson ran for office on a platform of non-involvement in the Great War. His opponent, Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, emphasized this difference as he campaigned on a draft and greater preparedness for American involvement in the war. On the domestic front, Wilson pushed through several progressive reforms, including banking reform and labor reform. After suffering a stroke, Wilson resigned from office in 1919 as he was preparing to declare war on the Central Powers and enter the war, citing a need to protect freedom.
29. Thomas R. Marshall, Democrat (1919-1921)
 - Assuming office upon President Wilson's resignation, President Marshall was faced with the difficult task of charting America's course in the Great War. Believing that America was not prepared to enter the war in 1919, President Marshall demurred and declined to enact the late President's war plans. As millions perished in Europe, Americans looked on in horror at the carnage. Marshall hoped that this would have spurred public support for the war. Instead, it spurred public opposition to his Presidency, losing in a 45-state sweep.
30. Leonard Wood, American (1921-1929)
 - General Leonard Wood, urged into running for President in 1920 by supporters of the late President Roosevelt, ran on his military expertise, forming the American Party and declaring boldly that America was not ready to enter the Great War. Instead, Wood turned his attention towards Mexico, decrying it as a "hotbed for insurgents, rebels, and communists". President Wood and Congress, with a Republican majority, declared war on Mexico in 1922. Opposition newspapers decried the war was "a proving ground for war in Europe" but the Second Mexican-American War was popular with the public and a success, given the weakness of the Mexican government. The Treaty of Mexico City, ratified in 1927, ceded the northern third of Mexico to the United States as the state of Sonora, and installed General John J. Pershing as President of the new Mexican Republican.
31. Charles G. Dawes, American (1929-1933)
 - The 1928 election was between Vice President Charles G. Dawes of the American Party and businessman Herbert Hoover of the Peace Party. Dawes narrowly won, ironically thanks to the electoral votes from Sonora, and pursued an alliance with the German Empire, which was rapidly closing in on a victory in Europe. With France fallen and the British forces being decimated across the Channel, Dawes saw no reason to antagonize Kaiser Wilhelm and signed the Treaty of Paris in 1930, finally entering the United States into the Generation's War, as it was now called, as a member of the Central Powers. The Americans launched a series of campaigns in Canada, dealing damage to the British Empire and its reserve forces. On January 5, 1933, King George V signed papers of abdication and newly-crowned King Edward VIII signed a peace accord with Kaiser Wilhelm the next day. Former President Taft was the American delegate to the peace conference.
32. Calvin Coolidge, Popular (1933-1937)
 - Americans abandoned the American Party in 1932, which many believe spurred President Dawes to push for peace in the Generation's War. His successor, Governor Calvin Coolidge, pledged large sums of money to be spent on rebuilding Canada after the war and attempting to build ties with the decimated British. Coolidge narrowly defeated Dawes in 1932 and found the Congress hostile to his plans. The nation was in a state of deadlock, with Coolidge refusing to colonize Canadian provinces and Congress refusing to fund Coolidge's reparations plan. In October of 1935, the stock market crashed, due to the deadlock, and sent about a run on banks. Coolidge and Congress could not agree on a plan to address the financial crisis, which only got worse, and cost Coolidge his job after one term.
33. Frank Orren Lowden, Republican (1937-1940)
 - President Lowden failed to win over support in Congress for his plan to address the Depression, as there were only two Republican Senators and sixteen Republican Congressmen elected in 1936. Lowden's plan, a bold call to national action that involved spending enormous sums of money on infrastructure projects and government-backed investment accounts, was popular with the public but couldn't find support in Congress. In 1940, he was murdered by a homeless man while the President was touring the slums of Boston as a show of sympathy.
34. Warren G. Harding, Republican (1940)
 - Vice President Harding, a little-known banker prior to being elected as Vice President in 1936, developed pneumonia and died, seventeen days after assuming office.
35. Charles Francis Adams, III, Independent (1940-1941)
 - Secretary of State Adams took charge of a country in deep turmoil and could do little to preserve it. Open rebellions were taking place in Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, and Boston when he took the oath of office. Wanting to avoid allegations of being a dictator, Adams rejected calls to order the military into those cities to put down the rebellions. On January 1, 1941, after seven months in office, President Adams was displaced in a coup.

Chairmen of the Central Organizing Committee
1. General John J. Pershing, Military (1941-1950)
 - General Pershing, having rejoined the U.S. Army after six years as President of the Mexican Republic, did not believe that President Adams could right the ills of the nation. After forcing Adams' resignation, Pershing consolidated control by having the Army disband the Congress and formed the Central Organizing Committee, a committee of seven military figures who would manage the country's affairs through the crisis. The first action of the COC was to put down the rebellions through a massive show of force. In 1941, more than 16,000 Americans were killed for taking part in "actions treasonous to the Government". Pershing's rule was long and bloody, as people protested the suspension of Congress and of elections almost daily. The worst was in March of 1949. Nearly a quarter of a million people marched through the District of Columbia towards the Executive Mansion, as the White House was renamed, in hopes of forcing Pershing to resign. Instead, Pershing ordered soldiers to open fire into the crowd, killing over a thousand and arrested as many. Pershing passed away from cancer in 1950.
2. General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Military (1950-1955)
 - The selection of General Eisenhower as the second Chairman of the COC came as a surprise to many. He had been critical of General Pershing's tactics and had urged Pershing to reintroduce elections as early as 1945. Eisenhower was selected as a compromise candidate between the hard-liner faction and the unifying faction. Eisenhower's first act of office was to arrest most of the hardliner faction and have them executed, following a military tribunal. In 1952, he announced plans for Congressional elections in 1954, followed by a Presidential election in 1956. With the country still facing a deep economic crisis, and stirrings of a revolution in Sonora, Eisenhower postponed the elections of 1954 to 1956, to happen concurrently with the Presidential election. Eisenhower was assassinated by a communist hand grenade during an inspection of anti-revolutionary military procedures in Texas.
3. Admiral Robert P. Briscoe (1955-1958)
 - A little known Admiral, Briscoe was the face of the unifying faction of the COC and served as Deputy Chairman under Eisenhower. He oversaw the first Congressional elections in 1956, which returned a Senate with 47 Democratic Socialists, 34 Conservatives, and 21 Independents and a House of Representatives with 197 Conservatives, 195 Democratic Socialists, and 46 Independents. A Presidential election was held in 1958, which saw farmer-turned-local agitator Orville Freeman elected as the first President of the Second Republic. Briscoe handed over power peacefully in on September 3, 1958.

I may finish this up at a later point.
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DKrol
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« Reply #6 on: September 11, 2019, 06:25:21 AM »

The Fifth American Republic

1. Dwight D. Eisenhower (1959-1969)
2. Richard M. Nixon (1969-1974)
3. James E. Carter (1974-1981)
4. Walter F. Mondale (1981-1995)
5. George W. Bush (1995-2007)
6. W. Mitt Romney (2007-2012)
7. Joseph R. Biden, Jr. (2012-2017)
8. Barack H. Obama (2017-2027)
9. Charles D. Baker, Jr. (2027-2033)
10. Peter P. M. Buttigieg (2033-2043)

Parties:

Union Party (1959-1994)
People's Rally (1994-2007)
The Republicans (2007-2025)
Conservative Union (2025-Onwards)


Independent Liberals (1964-1984)

Socialists (1959-2022)
The Left (2022-Onwards)


Forward, America! (2016-Onwards)
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DKrol
dkrolga
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« Reply #7 on: July 29, 2020, 10:45:54 PM »

A Woman's Place in the White House

37. Senator Margaret Chase Smith (R-ME)/Senator Hiram Fong (R-HI) - 1965-1973
 - 1964: Def. President Lyndon Johnson (D-TX)/Vice President Hubert Humphrey (D-MN)
 - 1968: Def. Governor George Wallace (D-GA)/General Curtis LeMay (D-CA) and Senator Robert Kennedy (I-NY)/Mayor Richard Daley (I-IL)
38. Senator Edward Kennedy (D-MA)/Representative Shirley Chisolm (D-NY) - 1973
 - 1972: Def. Vice President Hiram Fong (R-HI)/Governor Spiro Agnew (R-MD)
39. Vice President Shirley Chisolm (D-NY)/Justice William O. Douglas (D-WA) - 1973-1977
40. Governor Nelson Rockefeller (R-NY)/Representative Margaret Heckler (R-MA) - 1977-1985
 - 1976: Def. President Shirley Chisolm (D-NY)/Vice President William O. Douglas (D-WA)
 - 1980: Def. Governor Jimmy Carter (D-GA)/Representative Barbara Jordan (D-TX)
41. Senator Barbara Jordan (D-TX)/Representative Gerladine Ferraro (D-NY) - 1985-1993
 - 1984: Def. Governor Ronald Reagan (R-CA)/Representative Jerry Ford (R-MI)
 - 1988: Def. Secretary George HW Bush (R-TX)/Governor Lamar Alexander (R-TN)
42. Governor Christine Todd Whitman (R-NJ)/Governor George W. Bush (R-TX) - 1993-1997
 - 1992: Def. Governor Dianne Feinstein (D-CA)/Mayor David Dinkins (D-NY)
43. Governor Ann Richards (D-TX)/Senator Hillary Rodham (D-IL) - 1997-2005
 - 1996: Def. President Christine Todd Whitman (R-NJ)/Vice President George W. Bush (R-TX)
 - 2000: Def. Senator Elizabeth Dole (R-NC)/Secretary Dick Cheney (R-TX)
44. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX)/Governor Dan Quayle (R-AZ) - 2005-2013
 - 2004: Def. Vice President Hillary Rodham (D-IL)/Senator John Kerry (D-MA)
 - 2008: Def. Vice President Hillary Rodham (D-IL)/Senator John Kerry (D-MA)
45. Attorney General Kelly Ayotte (R-NH)/Governor Sarah Palin (R-AK) - 2013-2017
 - 2012: Def. Vice President Hillary Rodham (D-IL)/Governor Christine Gregoire (D-WA)
46. Senator Kirsten Gilibrand (D-NY)/Senator Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) - 2017-2025
 - 2016: Def. President Kelly Ayotte (R-NH)/Representative Marsha Blackburn (R-TN)
 - 2020: Def. Secretary Nikki Haley (R-SC)/Governor Ron DeSantis (R-FL)
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DKrol
dkrolga
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« Reply #8 on: January 16, 2021, 01:12:25 PM »

45. Donald John Trump (Republican, 2017-2021)*
46. Michael Richard Pence (Republican, 2021) +
47. Joseph Robinette Biden, Jr. (Democrat, 2021-2025)
48. Kamala Devi Harris (Democrat, 2025-2029)
49. Benjamin Eric Sasse (Conservative, 2029-2037)
50. Marco Antonio Rubio (Conservative, 2037-2041)
51. Jessica Cisneros (Progressive, 2041-2049)
52. David Madison Cawthorn (Republican, 2049-2051)*
53. Jacob Andrew Joseph LaTurner (Republican, 2051-2053) +

* - Impeached, Convicted, and Removed from Office
+ - Assumed Office Following Impeachment
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DKrol
dkrolga
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« Reply #9 on: January 28, 2024, 02:45:25 PM »

47. Joe Biden/Kamala Harris, Democratic (2021-2029)
48. Pete Buttigieg/Gretchen Whitmer, Democratic (2029-2033)
49. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez/Maxwell Frost, Democratic-Socialist (2033-2037)
50. Josh Hawley/Kristi Noem, National Republican (2037-2041)
51. Maxwell Frost/Wes Moore, Democratic-Socialist-Labor (2041-2049)
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