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Atlas Has Shrugged
ChairmanSanchez
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« Reply #1000 on: December 23, 2011, 07:54:07 PM »
« edited: December 23, 2011, 09:27:25 PM by ChairmanSanchez »

The World of 2021
Presidents
1988: Mario Coumo (D-NY)/Al Gore (D-TE)
1992: Mario Cuomo (D-NY)/Al Gore (D-TE)

1996: William Weld (R-MA)/Pete Wilson (R-CA)
2000: William Weld (R-MA)/Pete Wilson (R-CA)

2004: Wesley Clark (D-AR)/Howard Dean (D-VT)
2008: John McCain (R-AZ)/George Allen (R-VA)
2012: John McCain (R-AZ)/George Allen (R-VA)

2016: Andrew Cuomo (D-NY)/Brian Schweitzer (D-MT)
2020: Andrew Cuomo (D-NY)/Gavin Newsom (D-CA)


Failed Tickets
1988: George H.W. Bush (R-TX)/Dan Quayle (R-IN)
1992: Dan Quayle (R-IN)/Slade Gorton (R-WA)

1996: Al Gore (D-TE)/Bennett Johnston (D-LA)
2000: John Kerry (D-MA)/Paul Wellstone (D-MN)

2004: Rudy Giuliani (R-NY)/George Voinovich (R-OH)
2008: Wesley Clark (D-AR)/Howard Dean (D-VT)
2012: Joe Manchin (D-WV)/Russ Feingold (D-WI)

2016: George Allen (R-VA)/Charlie Crist (R-FL)
2020: Charlie Crist (R-FL)/Kelly Ayote (R-NH)


41. Mario Cuomo: Mario Cuomo rose to prominence after giving the 1984 Democratic convention keynote address. The liberal New York governor was the early favorite in the race, and despite resistance from Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis, and Reverend Jesse Jackson, Cuomo easily took the nomination, adding one of his former rivals, Al Gore (who dropped out early on) as his running mate. The Republicans nominated VP Bush and Senator Dan Quayle, and a brutal campaign between the two began. Cuomo eventually won out. The Cuomo Presidency was marked by Operation Just Cause against Panama, and Operation Desert Storm, which saw the US expel Iraqi troops from Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and the removal of Saddam Hussein from power. In Eastern Europe, Communism falls, peacefully in Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Poland, and with much bloodshed in Yugoslavia (which breaks apart), and East Germany. President Cuomo wins reelection in 1992, over Senator Dan Quayle, who attacks his foreign policy as weak. During his second term, Cuomo enters the USA into NAFTA, and passes the Spending and Stability Act of 1993, which mandated that the Federal government fully fund all social and defense programs. In 1994, Republicans, led by Newt Gingrich, take back the House of Representatives and pass the Balanced Budget Amendment. Unfortunately for the GOP, most states refuse to adopt it, and it fails in mid 1995. President Cuomo will leave office in 1997 with mixed approval ratings. President Cuomo retired to New York, where he as of 2020 lives, albeit in poor health.

42. William Weld: The 1996 Republican primaries saw the surprise victory of Massachusetts Governor William Weld, over a field of rivals, including Senator John McCain, Senator Arlen Specter, Secretary of Defense Collin Powell, Senator Phil Gramm, and Speaker Newt Gingrich. Picking California Governor Pete Wilson as his running mate, Governor Weld faces up against Vice President Gore, who faced only a minor challenge from former Senator Mike Gravel, and Lyndon LaRouche in the 1996 Democratic Primaries. On election night, Weld narrowly wins the Presidency, by less than 10,000 votes in his home state of Massachusetts. During his first term, President Weld passed the Fair Trade is Free Trade Act, which saw low tariffs on imported goods (mainly from the Asian Tiger's, such as Thailand, China, Taiwan, and South Korea) and putting profits into the Treasury, as well as lowering the Corporate Tax rate to historically low levels. The repeal of President Cuomo’s Spending and Stability Act was the last major domestic victory for the Weld Administration. President Weld faced no opposition in the 2000 GOP primaries, and faced off against his fellow Massachusettian, John Kerry. Kerry led briefly in the polls, but after revelations about his service in Vietnam were released by RNC head Karl Rove, Kerry sank in the polls. He lost the election by 5% to President Weld. In 2001, President Weld ordered US troops in Afghanistan to assist the Northern Alliance, after the RIAA (Revolutionary Islamist Army of Afghanistan) took power. In April of 2002, the US launched Operation Warpig after the CIA revealed the Libyan government was sponsoring the RIAA, and were behind the Kabul Embassy bombing, which killed 35 Americans, as well as the bombing of TWA Flight 800 in 1996. Libyan leader Mummar Qaddafi was killed in the early hours of the operation by US commandos in a controversial raid on his Sirte Compound. President Weld left office in 2005 with high approval ratings, and retired to Boston, where he died in 2018.

43. Wesley Clark: Wesley Clark took the American political scene by storm in 2004 when he beat Russ Feingold, Evan Bayh, and John Edwards for the Democratic nomination. Once serving as the Supreme Allied Commander of NATO, General Clark was highly critical of American involvement in Libya, and Afghanistan. After winning the Democratic nomination, he picked Howard Dean, of Vermont to be his running mate. Clark ran against Republican nominee Rudy Giuliani, the former Mayor of New York, and defeated him in a 40 state landslide. Clark took office in 2005, and by the end of the year, had completely withdrawn US troops from Afghanistan, and Libya. In 2006, the Democrats took control of the House of Representatives for the first time since 1994. But President Clark's popularity faded with the economic collapse of 2007. The trade war that started under the Weld administration also heated up when the Peoples Republic of China, Thailand, and Vietnam formed the Shanghai Pact, which put all of their trade under the Chinese yen, set tariffs on the same level, and allow China to jointly develop industry in the region. With Secretary of State John Kerry's help, the Russian Federation, which had been in recession since the collapse of the USSR in 1991, formed the Moscow Protocol, which brought most of the former Soviet Republics back under Russian influence. Republicans charged that the policies of the Clark administration were harming US economic interest in Asia. President Clark lost reelection in 2008, and retired to Arkansas, where he currently lives, and is a frequent contributor to MSNBC.

44. John McCain: Senator John McCain defeated a large field of Republicans, including former Vice President Pete Wilson, Senator Elizabeth Dole, Senator Bill Frist, Senator George Allen, and Governor Jon Huntsman for the nomination. He picked Virginia Senator George Allen and his running mate, and defeated President Clark by 7% in the 2008 election. Immediately after taking office in 2009, the Russian army invaded Georgia, after tensions in Ossetia flared. Decrying what he saw as Socialist Imperialism, McCain led an international effort to oust the Russians from Georgia, going so far as to demand sanctions, and an arms embargo. After a three month occupation, the Russians withdrew. In June, violence flared in Iran after the presidential election was thought to be stolen. Operation Fairvote was conducted, resulting in the US air force launching airstrikes on the Iranian military, and embargo of Irans ports. By August, the regime had fallen. In 2010, President McCain signed the Bipartisan Healthcare Reform Act, which opened up state lines for insurance companies, and created federally administered health insurance cooperatives. In 2011, the Santorum/Paul Act was introduced by Pennsylvania Senator Rick Santorum and Senator Ron Paul of Texas. The bill allowed for Americans to opt out of social security and Medicare, and made it illegal for money in the Social Security trust fund to be used by the federal government for other purposes. President McCain defeated West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin to win reelection in 2012. In 2013, the US economy began to recover as the Shanghai pact broke. The US signed free trade treaties with South Korea, Japan, Chile, Brazil, Columbia, and Taiwan that year. In 2014, President McCain negotiated peace between India and Pakistan after years of minor conflicts. The Kashmir borders were redrawn to be split between Pakistan and India, and both sides agreed to destroy their nuclear programs. In 2015, the Iran-Pakistan-India pipeline was constructed, allowing Iranian oil to flow into both countries, creating an economic boom.  President McCain left office in 2017 with high approval ratings.

45. Andrew Cuomo: The son of President Mario Cuomo, and former Governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo was elected to the Presidency in 2016, defeating Vice President George Allen in the election. While Allen led for most of the race, comments made by him about race were brought to light, and it brought him down. Cuomo would govern much like his father did, with an interventionist foreign policy, and a progressive social policy. In 2018, the US military launched Operation North Shore, occupying Uganda, and overthrowing the regime of President Yoweri Museveni, and forcing the Lord’s Resistance Army out of the country. In 2019, the trade embargo on Cuba was ended, and American companies poured in to invest. President Cuomo was reelected over Florida Senator Charlie Crist in 2020, and a month later, passed the Marriage Equality Act, which legalized Gay Marriage at a federal level.


The world now looks on into 2021….





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« Reply #1001 on: December 23, 2011, 08:11:08 PM »

#41 Michael S. Dukakis (D-MA) (1989-1993)
#42 Robert J. Dole (R-KS) (1993-2001)
#43 Jack F. Kemp (R-NY) (2001-2009)
#44 Barack H. Obama (D-IL) (2009-present)

Wow!!!! What a comprehensive list. Took me five minutes to read the whole thing

That was uncalled for dude.
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« Reply #1002 on: December 23, 2011, 09:41:39 PM »

35. Richard Nixon (R-CA)/Henry Cabot Lodge (R-MA)-1961-1965
36. Hubert Humphrey (D-MN)/Terry Sanford (D-NC)-1965-1973
37. Nelson Rockefeller (R-NY)/Howard Baker (R-TN)-1973-1976*
38. Howard Baker (R-TN)/vacant-1976-1977

39. Robert F. Kennedy (D-NY)/Reubin Askew (D-FL)-1977-1985
40. Reubin Askew (D-FL)/Walter Mondale (D-MN)-1985-1989

41. Bob Dole (R-KS)/Jack Kemp (R-NY)-1989-1997
42. Tom Harkin (D-IA)/Bob Casey (D-PA)-1997-2001/Howard Dean (D-VT)-2001-2005
43. Richard Cheney (R-WY)/Mitt Romney (R-UT)-2005-2009
44. Mitt Romney (R-UT)/John Kasich (R-OH)-2009-2013

45. Kathleen Kennedy Townsend (D-MD)/Barack Obama (D-HI)-2013-2021

*died in office
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« Reply #1003 on: December 24, 2011, 02:49:33 PM »

44 - Barack H. Obama of Illinois / Joseph R. Biden of Delaware - January 20, 2009 - January 20, 2013*
45 - Newton L. Gingrich of Georgia** / Rick Perry of Texas - January 20, 20013 - January 20, 2017
46 - Barack H. Obama of Illinois / Kirsten Gillibrand of New York - January 20, 2017 - January 20, 2021
47 - Kirsten E. Gillibrand of New York / Jack Reed of Rhode Island - January 20, 2021 - January 20, 2029
48 - Jeffrey L. Flake of Arizona / Susan Martinez of New Mexico - January 20, 2029 -

*President Barack Obama won the popular vote in the 2012 Presidential Election 52-47, but lost the electoral college. The President conceded the election saying "Even though I believe the American people have spoken in my favor, the Constitution says otherwise and the Constitution is the law of the land."

** - After two cabinet officials being impeached, record low popularity, and an inability to work with the the split Congress, President Gingrich lost reelection to former President Obama in a record 63-35 landslide in the popular vote. The Electoral College had been abolished in 2014 by state legislatures.


Losing Tickets

2012 - President Barack Obama / Vice President Joseph R. Biden
2016 - President Newt Gingrich / Vice President Rick Perry
2020 - Governor Chris Christie / Senator Marco Rubio
2024 - Governor Paul Ryan / Senator Jeff Flake
2028 - Governor Corey Booker / Governor Andrew Romanoff
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« Reply #1004 on: December 30, 2011, 04:00:38 PM »

35. Richard M. Nixon/Gerald R. Ford 1961-1965
36. George Smathers/Robert F. Kennedy 1965-1969
37. Nelson Rockefeller/Spiro T. Agnew 1969-1973
38. Robert F. Kennedy/Henry M. Jackson 1973-1981
39. Robert S. Dole/Meldrim Thompson Jr. 1981-1989
40. Walter Mondale/Lloyd Bentsen, Edward J. King 1989-1997
41. Edward J. King/Robert P. Casey 1997-2001

42. Elizabeth Dole/William Weld 2001-2009
43. Brian Schweitzer/Albert Gore Jr. 2009-Present
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« Reply #1005 on: January 02, 2012, 12:56:41 AM »

Presidents of the United States / Vice President

44 - John S. McCain (R-AZ) / Sarah L. Palin (R-AK) - January 20, 2009 - January 20, 2013
45 - Hillary R. Clinton (D-NY) / Mark Warner (D-VA) - January 20, 2013 - May 20, 2013
46 - Mark Warner (D-VA) / Wesley Clark (D-OK) - May 20, 2013 - October 8, 2014
47 - Wesley Clark (D-OK) / Patrick Leahy (D-VT) - October 8, 2014 - July 12, 2015
48 - Patrick Leahy (D-VT) / David Freudenthal (D-WY) - July 12, 2015 - July 12, 2016
49 - George J. Mitchell (D-ME) / vacant - July 12, 2016 -January 20, 2017

50 - Rand Paul (R-KY) / Aaron Schock (R-IL) - January 20, 2017 -
51 - Andrew M. Cuomo (D-NY) - January 20, 2017 -
51 - Eric Cantor (R-VA) - March 18, 2017 -
51 -  Martin E. Dempsey (I - NY) - July 30, 2017 -

45 - Hillary R. Clinton was elected in a landslide over Vice President Sarah Palin. Barack Obama's loss against McCain in 2008 made Democrats vicious in the 2012 election cycle because they felt that Obama's predictions of a failed McCain Presidency had come to fruition. McCain left office with a record 17% unemployment rate and massive poverty across the United States. Hillary Clinton would come into office promising hope and change from the past 12 years of Republican rule but unfortunately would be assassinated while visiting a "McCainville" in Tennessee.

46 - President Mark Warner would continue Clinton's Democratic policies until riots began to broke out across the United States as the Occupy Movement turned violent. Warner would be killed after small-arms fire managed to take down Marine One.

47 - President Wesley Clark would decrease the public role of the President but unfortunately his policies did not stem the growth of unemployment now at 22% and died in office of what doctors said was exhaustion.

48 - President Leahy, who the Republican opposition labeled a socialist and said his Presidency would end America, would resign after a year in office after Republicans who controlled both houses of Congress, agreed that Leahy/Freudenthal would resign for a George Mitchell Presidency.

49 - George Mitchell gained the Presidency by a political deal brokered by the Republicans in Congress. The Republicans would hit Mitchell for the deal as soon as he got in office making it hard to get anything passed due to the sideshow. Unemployment would rise to 27% with underemployment at 50%.

50 - President Paul defunded and dismantled most of the executive branch of the federal government. Social welfare would cease to exist, Social Security was put "into the hands of the people" Massive urban riots would continue making President Paul make hard choices between civil liberties and order in society. Paul ultimately would  ultimately backtrack on a campaign promise not to use military police --by using them extensively.

51 - The Democratic Party would nominate Andrew Cuomo to challenge President Paul in 2016 but widespread election fraud and voter intimidation would hurt the legitimacy of a win on either side. Ultimately both would claim that they won. The country would further break down into partisan, geographical and class-based factions while the government went into shambles as Cuomo established his own government and Paul tried to continue his.

51 - Speaker Eric Cantor, the master of slick maneuvers, would try to impeach "the President" and did so using parliamentary tricks to remove "the President" (whoever it was) to make himself President. More moderate Republicans would come to his support but it would be significantly less than the other two factions. President Paul had previously called Congress a "corrupt melting pot for criminals" and dismissed them.

51 - General Martin Dempsey would try to seize complete control of the United States military after fearing for the safety of the nation itself. Many Americans did not see these actions as legitimate and failed to gain public support.
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« Reply #1006 on: January 02, 2012, 12:02:24 PM »

WJB elected in 1896

25. William Jennings Bryan (Democratic): 1897-1905
26. William Randolph Hearst (Democratic): 1905-1909
27. William Jennings Bryan (Democratic): 1909-1913

28. Theodore Roosevelt (Republican): 1913-1921
29. Herbert Hoover (Democratic): 1921-1923*
30. Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic): 1923-1933

31. Fiorello La Guardia (Republican): 1933-1945**
32. Henry A. Wallace (Republican): 1945-1953
33. Adlai Stevenson (Democratic): 1953-1961
34. John F. Kennedy (Democratic): 1961-1969
35. George McGovern (Republican): 1969-1977
36. Henry M. Jackson (Democratic): 1977-1978**
37. Daniel P. Moynihan (Democratic): 1978-1986***
38. Lloyd M. Bentsen (Democratic): 1986-1989
39. Paul Tsongas (Republican): 1989-1997
40. Robert P. Casey (Democratic): 1997-2000**
41. Jesse Jackson (Democratic): 2000-2005
42. Howard Dean (Republican): 2005-2013
43. Jim Webb (Democratic): 2013-2021
44. Condoleezza Rice (Democratic): 2021-2029
45. Barack Obama (Republican): 2029-2037

*Assassinated.
**Died in office of natural causes.
***Resigned.
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« Reply #1007 on: January 04, 2012, 01:53:25 PM »


Richard M. Nixon (R-CA) (1961-1969)
Hubert H. Humphrey (D-MN) (1969-1973)
Ronald W. Reagan (R-CA) (1973-1981)
George H.W. Bush (R-TX) (1981-1985)
Walter F. Mondale (D-MN) (1985-1993)
George W. Bush (R-TX) (1993-2001)
Albert A. Gore (D-TN) (2001-2009)
Willard M. Romney (R-MA) (2009-present)
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« Reply #1008 on: January 04, 2012, 03:01:23 PM »

A Failed FDR Presidency

With the failure of the New Deal, Roosevelt becomes a one-term President. With the Republicans taking over, World War II ends in victory for Nazi Germany and results in a much different world.

32. Franklin D. Roosevelt (D-NY): 1933-1937
33. Alfred M. Landon (R-KS): 1937-1945
34. Philip F. LaFollette (R-WI): 1945-1949

35. Sheridan Downey (D-CA): 1949-1950
36. Spessard Holland (D-FL): 1950-1953

37. Thomas Dewey (R-NY): 1953-1961
38. Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. (D-MA): 1961-1969
39. Hubert H. Humphrey (R , P-MN): 1969-1975
40. Stewart Udall (P-AZ): 1975-1981
41. Robert Rickover (D-VA): 1981-1989
42. Thomas Kean (R-NJ): 1989-1993
43. Newton L. McPherson* (R-PA): 1993-1997

44. Olympia Snowe (P-ME): 1997-2005
45. Sam Brownback (CD-KS): 2005-Present

Notes:
35. Assassinated by Puerto Rican nationalists during campaign stop in Florida.

38. Hero of Japanese-American War (1941-1943) (no Lend Lease Act during the Landon administration and no German declaration of war on the USA), Kennedy parlayed his war hero status with his election to the US House of Representatives in 1946. After two terms, JPK was elected Governor of Massachusetts in 1950. In 1953, Kennedy was elected to the US Senate in a special election to fill the seat of Vice President Henry Cabot Lodge. In 1960, Kennedy became the first Roman Catholic President. Upon taking office, JPK ordered Marines withdrawn from the Philippines in response to Dewey’s unpopular policies to quell a revolt there. In 1962, Filipinos overwhelmingly voted for independence. Also during this time, Kuomintang (Nationalist) China granted autonomy to Manchuria, Hong Kong and Korea. However, Indonesians would begin their rebellion against its Fascist Dutch rulers. On the domestic front, Kennedy achieved funding in space exploration and cuts in income taxes from its top rate of 90 percent down to 35 percent. This resulted in the greatest job creation of the century. Historians rate Kennedy in the Top Ten of greatest Presidents.

39. Other than astronaut John Glenn landing on the moon in 1970, President Humphrey’s greatest achievement was the Civil Rights Act of 1971 which outlawed lynching and the Jim Crow laws that existed in the South. Conservatives, fuming that the GOP was moving further to the left, endorsed Senator Barry Goldwater who campaigned on increased property rights and ending the Progressive Society laws passed during the LaFollette and Dewey administrations.

Goldwater’s upset victory in the New Hampshire primary set the stage for subsequent victories in the southwestern and Great Plains states. Facing the prospect of losing the nomination to Goldwater, Humphrey and Vice President Stewart Udall joined the revived Progressive Party. Many liberal Republicans in Congress followed suit. The Republicans did nominate Goldwater and he selected Congressman Meldrim Thompson of New Hampshire as his running mate (Goldwater remarked that Thompson “drove Humphrey nuts”). Humphrey was reelected in a landslide over Goldwater and the Democratic nominee Senator George Wallace (who won most of the South while Goldwater carried just four states).

Humphrey’s second term would experience the start of World War III which started in November 1973 with the assassination of Secretary of State Richard Nixon during an official visit to London and nerve gas attacks in New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago and Sydney which killed over 5,000 people; this event known as the “Thanksgiving Day Massacre” was traced to German undercover agents with diplomatic immunity inside the United Kingdom, USA and Australia (CIA documents revealed that German Fuehrer Arthur Seyss-Inquart ordered the attacks).

Sadly, Humphrey would not live to see the war end. In early 1975, he discovered that he had inoperable stomach cancer. That and the stress of being Commander-in-Chief during a war contributed to his death on September 11, 1975.

40. Udall became the first Mormon President of the United States upon Humphrey’s death. Under his watch, the tide turned in favor of the American-led alliance (Canada, Newfoundland, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, China, and Persia). On December 24, 1975, the last Dutch troops left (actually retreated from) Indonesia and rebel leader Suharto declared the Republic of Indonesia. With the Melbourne Project resulting in a successful testing of nuclear energy in the Australian outback, the Allies had a weapon that would end the war and save the lives of millions of troops. On June 30, 1976, British fighter jets dropped the world’s first atomic bomb on Munich, birthplace of Hitler’s Beer Hall Putsch and home of most of its defense industries.  On July 2, as atomic bombs fell on Bonn, Frankfurt and Danzig, President Udall publicly addressed the nation and gave Fuehrer Seyss-Inquart 24 hours to surrender or the next bomb would fall on Berlin. On July 3 and two hours before the deadline, General Franz Josef Strauss announced in a television address that the Fuehrer was removed in a military coup and summarily executed. He announced an unconditional surrender of the German Reich and ordered all troops to stand down. Nazism came to an end after 43 years.

President Udall’s victory was assured with the victorious end to the war. By the end of his second term, all countries in Europe had democratic elections and Korea was granted independence in 1978 (Manchuria and Hong Kong elected to stay in China). The United Nations was founded in London in 1977 and would house its headquarters there. In its first session, the member countries voted to recognize the birth of the State of Israel (fewer Arabs and Muslims than OTL as many perished in the concentration camps in Egypt, Lebanon and the West Bank). However, the end of war led to a recession going into 1980. After twelve years of Progressives (former Republicans) in the White House and a Republican Party splintered with conservatives leaving to form the Conservative Party, the Democrats were poised to win back the Presidency.

41. US Army General Robert Rickover was the son of Navy Admiral Hyman Rickover and Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces during World War III. With favorability ratings as high as 95 percent, Rickover had retired from the military in 1979. He had very few problems seeking the Democratic nomination.  Winning the 1980 election with 62 percent of the popular vote and winning 45 states, Rickover entered office with a mandate. During this period, America ended its historical isolationism. The Warner Plan, named after Secretary of State John Warner, provided economic aid to the countries of Europe devastated by Nazism and World War III. By the end of Rickover’s term, Europe was completely rebuilt.

42. Despite the exodus of many moderates and liberals from the GOP, Thomas Kean chose to remain a Republican. As the only Republican freshman entering the Senate from the 1978 elections, Kean slowly led the Party’s rebuilding efforts especially in New England and the Northeast. The Republicans became the de facto official opposition after the 1986 midterm elections. In 1988, Kean and his running mate Governor Newt McPherson of Pennsylvania became the first Republican ticket in 20 years to win the White House. Despite high popularity ratings going into 1992, Kean decided to retire from politics.

43. The highlights of McPherson’s Presidency were pension reform, the Armed Services Reform Act of 1994 and a landmark European American Free Trade Agreement (EURAFTA). These successes were overshadowed by the resignation of Attorney General Clarence Thomas in a sexual harassment scandal and McPherson’s marital infidelities leading to his divorce in 1995. Vice President John Danforth’s decision not to run for reelection was a big blow for McPherson.

44. First female and first Greek-American President

45. Brownback was elected to the US House of Representatives in 1994 as a Conservative. During this time, the Democrats experienced realignment after the Rickover Presidency as its moderates were leaving for the Republican and Progressive parties. With the Democrats reduced to its southern base after placing third in the 1996 and 2000, and fourth place in the 2004 Presidential elections, the Conservatives and Democrats merged itself into the Conservative Democratic Party in 2005. Brownback and his running mate Governor Robert Kennedy Jr. of New York swept to victory over Vice President Dennis Kucinich (P-OH) and Republican nominee Linda Lingle (R-HI).

*OTL Newt Gingrich
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« Reply #1009 on: January 04, 2012, 05:20:51 PM »

A Paultard's Dream

1988-2017 Ron Paul (L-TX)
2017-end of time Rand Paul (R-KY)
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« Reply #1010 on: January 04, 2012, 11:31:42 PM »

Theodore Roosevelt wins in '12

28. Theodore Roosevelt (Progressive): 1913-1919*
29. Hiram Johnson (Progressive): 1919-1929
30. Irvine Lenroot (Progressive): 1929-1933

31. Al Smith (Democratic): 1933-1937
32. Fiorello La Guardia (Progressive): 1937-1945
33. John W. Bricker (Democratic-Republican): 1945-1953
34. Thomas Dewey (Progressive): 1953-1961
35. Robert F. Kennedy (Democratic-Republican): 1961-1969
36. George McGovern (Progressive): 1969-1977
37. Ronald Reagan (Democratic-Republican): 1977-1981**
38. John Connally (Democratic-Republican): 1981-1985
39. Charles Mathias (Progressive): 1985-1993
40. George Deukmeijan (Democratic-Republican): 1993-2001
41. Howard Dean (Progressive): 2001-2009
42. Hillary Rodham (Democratic-Republican): 2009-2017
43. Sherrod Brown (Social Democratic): 2017-2025
44. Rand Paul (Democratic-Republican): 2025-2033

*Died in office.
**Assassinated.
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« Reply #1011 on: January 05, 2012, 01:09:06 PM »

California Dreaming: Hughes Makes His Appointment With Johnson

28. Woodrow Wilson (D-NJ): 1913-1916
29. Thomas Marshall (D-IN): 1916-1917

30. Charles Evans Hughes (R-NY): 1917-1921
31. Franklin D. Roosevelt (D-NY): 1921-1929
32. Charles Bryan (D-NE): 1929-1933

33. Hiram Johnson (R-CA): 1933-1941
34. Alfred E. Smith (D-N): 1941-1943
35. Claude Pepper (D-FL): 1943-1949

36. Earl Warren (R-CA): 1949-1957
37. Quentin Roosevelt (R-NY): 1957-1963
38. Edward Arn (R-KS): 1963-1965

39. John F. Kennedy (D-MA): 1965-1973
40. Nelson Rockefeller (R-NY): 1973-1977
41. Ronald Reagan (D-CA): 1977-1981
42. George H.W. Bush (R-CT): 1981-1989
43. Howard Baker (R-TN): 1989-1993

44. Mike Sullivan (D-WY): 1993-1994
45. Joseph Manchin III (D-WV): 1994-2001

46. Scott Romney (R-MI): 2001-2009
47. Robert Casey Jr. (D-PA): 2009-Present


Notes:
28. Died a month before the 1916 election at the same time that Governor Hughes met in San Francisco with Governor Johnson.

31. Elected to the US Senate in 1914, FDR was the leading choice of the Democrats for the 1920 nomination. Due to his young, the ticket was balanced with Ohio Governor James Cox running for Vice President. Roosevelt became the youngest President of the United States at the age of 39.

34. First Roman Catholic President. Died in office from the stress of World War II

44. Died from injuries sustained in crash of Air Force One flying to his ranch in Wyoming.

46. First Mormon President
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« Reply #1012 on: January 11, 2012, 10:02:23 PM »

Continuation of a previous list, sometime later as I can't think of filler. Note that this is not the same Republican party, but one founded as the National Republican Party of Hamilton and John Quincy split between North-Eastern and Western/Southern factions in the period between the 1830's to the 1840's. With the Southern Whig Democrat party being destroyed during the Civil War that began in 1848 with the election of Free Soil candidate Martin Van Buren, the Republican party, comprised of voters in the upper south and mid-west, as well as some traditional north-eastern states, became the  main opposition to the free soilers.

William Jennings Bryan (Republican-NE)/______________ 1897-1905
Henry Cabot Lodge (Free Soil-MA)/_______________ 1905-1913
Hiram W. Johnson (Republican-CA)/Woodrow Wilson (Republican-New Jersey) 1913-1921
Woodrow WIlson (Republican-New Jersey)/Franklin D. Roosevelt (Republican-New York) 1921-1922
Franklin D. Roosevelt (Republican-New York)/vacant, John W. Davis (Republican-West Virginia) 1922-1929

David I. Walsh (Free Soil-Massachusetts)/______________ 1929-1937
Arthur H. Vandenberg (Free Soil-Michigan)/______________ 1937-1941

[color=]Robert LaFollette Jr. (Republican-Wisconsin)/Harry S. Truman (Republican-Missouri) 1941-1945[/color]
Thomas Dewey (Free Soil-New York)/John W. Bricker (Free Soil-Ohio) 1945-1949
Harry S. Truman (Republican-Missouri)/_______________ 1949-1961
Stuart Symington (Republican-Missouri)/Lyndon B. Johnson (Republican-Texas) 1961-1965

Barry Goldwater (Free Soil-Arizona)/John Volpe (Free Soil-Massachusetts) 1965-1973
John Volpe (Free Soil-Massachusetts)/Robert Taft Jr. (Free Soil-Ohio) 1973
Robert Taft Jr. (Free Soil-Ohio)/vacant 1973-1977
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« Reply #1013 on: January 12, 2012, 05:33:59 PM »

The Donkey Goes Extinct

President Grant cleans up corruption in his administration following a pledge to do so on the campaign trail in 1872, the Republicans continue to make gains thanks to a different fiscal policy on the part of the President that prevents the Panic of 1873, and the Democrats end up falling apart in the same way that the Federalists did in the early 1800s...

18. Ulysses S. Grant (Republican): March 4, 1869 - March 4, 1877
19. James G. Blaine (Republican): March 4, 1877 - March 4, 1885
20. Chester A. Arthur (Republican): March 4, 1885 - March 4, 1889

21. Grover Cleveland (Liberal): March 4, 1889 - March 4, 1897
22. Adlai Stevenson (Liberal): March 4, 1897 - March 4, 1901

23. William McKinley (Unionist): March 4, 1901 - September 15, 1901*
24. Theodore Roosevelt (Unionist): September 15, 1901 - March 4, 1909

25. George Dewey (Liberal): March 4, 1909 - October 13, 1912*
26. William Jennings Bryan (Liberal): October 13, 1912 - March 4, 1913

27. Theodore Roosevelt (Unionist): March 4, 1913 - January 6, 1919**
28. Hiram Johnson (Unionist): January 6, 1919 - March 4, 1921

29. Eugene V. Debs (Socialist): March 4, 1921 - October 26, 1926**
30. Seymour Stedman (Socialist): October 26, 1926 - March 4, 1929
31. Smedley Butler (Socialist): March 4, 1929 - March 4, 1937

32. Theodore Roosevelt, Jr. (Liberal Unionist): March 4, 1937 - March 4, 1941
33. Al Smith (Socialist): March 4, 1941 - October 14, 1943**
34. Henry A. Wallace (Socialist): October 14, 1943 - March 4, 1945

35. Thomas Dewey (Liberal Unionist): March 4, 1945 - March 4, 1949
36. Norman Thomas (Socialist): March 4, 1949 - March 4, 1953
37. Quentin Roosevelt (Liberal Unionist): March 4, 1953 - March 4, 1957
38. Darlington Hoopes (Socialist): March 4, 1957 - November 25, 1961**
39. Frank P. Zeidler (Socialist): November 25, 1961 - March 4, 1969
40. Michael Harrington (Socialist): March 4, 1969 - March 4, 1973

41. George Bush (Liberal Unionist): March 4, 1973 - March 4, 1981
42. David McReynolds (Socialist): March 4, 1981 - March 30, 1981*
43. Diane Drufenbrock (Socialist): March 30, 1981 - March 4, 1989
44. Ron Ehrenreich (Socialist): March 4, 1989 - March 4, 1993

45. George Deukmeijan (Liberal Unionist): March 4, 1993 - March 4, 2001
46. Hillary Rodham (Liberal Unionist): March 4, 2001 - March 4, 2009

47. Bernie Sanders (Socialist): March 4, 2009 - present

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« Reply #1014 on: January 12, 2012, 07:45:06 PM »

39. Jimmy Carter: 1977-1985
40. George H.W. BUsh: 1985-1993
41. Andrew Cuomo: 1993-1997
42. Jack Kemp: 1997-2001
43. Al Gore: 2001-2005
44. Newt Gingrich: 2005-2006
45. Jeb Bush: 2006-2009
46. Howard Dean: 2009-2013
47. Michael Bloomberg: 2013-2017
48. Jon Huntsman: 2017-2025


1980: Pres. Jimmy Carter narrowly defeats Ronald Reagan and is reelected. 49.1%-49.0%
1984: George H.W. Bush defeats Vice Pres Walter Mondale in a landslide: 58.8%-40.0%
1988: Pres. Bush is reelected easily against Gov. Bill Clinton. 59.9%-39.1%
1992: Vice Pres. Bob Dole is defeated by Gov. Andrew Cuomo. 51.1%-48.4%
1996: Pres. Cuomo is defeated by Gov. Jack Kemp after a lousy first term. 55.5%-43.6%
2000: Pres. Kemp forgoes reelection and in a stunning upset, Sen. Al Gore defeats VP. Lamar Alexander. 48.9%-48.5%
2004: Pres. Gore successfully leads the US to in the War on Terror in Afghanistan. Despite a high approval rating and booming economy Gore wins the popular vote, but is defeated by Minority Leader Newt Gingrich in one of the closest elections in American history. 49.0%-48.7%
2008: Following a scandal involving an extramarital affair coverup Pres. Gingrich resigned, promoting Vice Pres. Bush to the to the Presidency. A once promising star Bush decided against reelection. 2004 runner up George Pataki ran against Howard Dean and lost. 53.3%-45.5%
2012: Following a rough term for Pres. Dean and the failure of the Republican Congress Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced his campaign to run as a third party. He tapped Gov. Jon Huntsman as his running mate and went onto narrowly defeat Dean and the Republican challenger Gov. Mike Huckabee. 34.4%-34.1%-30.8%
2016: Pres. Bloomberg decided against running for reelection, making him the sixth US President to either not serve or be defeated for a second second term. Vice Pres. Huntsman ran against the Democrat Russ Feingold and Republican Marco Rubio. Both lost to the Vice President. 36.9%-31.5%-30.0%
2020: Pres. Huntsman ran for reelection and easily won over his Democrat and Republican challengers. 40.0%-29.9%-29.8%
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JohanusCalvinusLibertas
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« Reply #1015 on: January 12, 2012, 09:21:39 PM »

Reagan picks DuPont

40. Ronald Reagan (R-IL)/Pierre DuPont IV (R-DE) 1981-1989
41. Pierre DuPont IV (R-DE)/Allen Keys (R-NY) 1989-1993
42. Al Gore (D-TN)/Paul Wellstone (DFL-MN) 1993-1996*
43. Paul Wellstone (DFL-MN)/Tom Daschle  (D-SD) 1996-2001
44. Patrick J. Buchanan (R-VA)/ James Danforth Quayle (R-IN)** Dr. Ron Paul (R-PA) 2001-2009
45. Ron Paul (R-PA)/ Mike Pence (R-IN) 2009-2013
46. Mike Pence (R-IN)/ Sarah Palin (R-AK) 2013-2021
47. Andrew Cuomo (D-NY)/ Joe Manchin (D-WV) 2021-

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« Reply #1016 on: January 12, 2012, 11:34:59 PM »

A Slightly Better World

Same presidential terms, except I get to choose amongst the candidates placed in nomination for President or Vice President at the conventions by the winning parties, then retain them in consecutive elections that party won.

1. George Washington (Independent Federalist) 1789-1797
2. John Adams (Federalist) 1797-1801

3. Thomas Jefferson (Democratic-Republican) 1801-1809
4. George Clinton (Democratic-Republican) 1809-1817
5. William H. Crawford (Democratic-Republican) 1817-1825

6. John Quincy Adams (National Republican) 1825-1829
7. Andrew Jackson (Democratic) 1829-1837
8. Martin Van Buren (Democratic) 1837-1841

9. William Henry Harrison (Whig) 1841
10. John Tyler (Independent Democrat) 1841-1845
11. Martin Van Buren (Democratic) 1845-1849
12. John McLean (Whig) 1849-1850
13. Andrew Stewart (Whig) 1850-1853

14. Franklin Pierce (Democratic) 1853-1861
15. Cassius M. Clay (Republican) 1861-1865
16. Andrew Johnson (Independent Democrat) 1865-1869
17. Ulysses S. Grant (Republican) 1869-1877
18. Rutherford B. Hayes (Republican) 1877-1881
19. James G. Blaine (Republican) 1881
20. Chester Arthur (Republican) 1881-1885

21. Grover Cleveland (Democratic) 1885-1889
22. Walter Gresham (Republican) 1889-1893
23. Grover Cleveland (Democratic) 1893-1897
24. Thomas Reed (Republican) 1897-1901
25. Theodore Roosevelt (Republican) 1901-1909
26. Joseph Cannon (Republican) 1909-1913

27. Champ Clark (Democratic) 1913-1921
28. Warren Harding (Republican) 1921-1923
29. Calvin Coolidge (Republican) 1923-1933

30. John Nance Garner (Democratic) 1933-1945
31. David Walsh (Democratic) 1945-1953

32. Douglas MacArthur (Republican) 1953-1961
33. George Smathers (Democratic) 1961-1963
34. Lyndon Johnson (Democratic) 1963-1969

35. George Romney (Republican) 1969-1973
36. Pete McCloskey (Republican) 1973-1974
37. Gerald Ford (Republican) 1974-1977

38. Jerry Brown (Democratic) 1977-1981
38. Ronald Reagan (Republican) 1981-1989
39. George H.W. Bush (Republican) 1989-1993

40. Jerry Brown (Democratic) 1993-2001
41. Alan Keyes (Republican) 2001-2009
42. Barack Obama (Democratic) 2009-present
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« Reply #1017 on: January 13, 2012, 12:35:42 PM »

Hughes succeeds T.R. in 1908

25. William McKinley (Republican): 1897-1901*
26. Theodore Roosevelt (Republican): 1901-1909
27. Charles Evans Hughes (Republican): 1909-1917

28. Woodrow Wilson (Democratic): 1917-1923**
29. Thomas R. Marshall (Democratic): 1923-1929
30. Franklin D. Roosevelt (Democratic): 1929-1933

31. Herbert Hoover (Republican): 1933-1941
32. Wendell Willkie (Democratic): 1941-1943**
33. Harry S. Truman (Democratic): 1943-1945

34. Thomas E. Dewey (Republican): 1945-1953
35. Adlai Stevenson (Democratic): 1953-1961
36. Richard M. Nixon (Republican): 1961-1963*
37. Nelson A. Rockefeller (Republican): 1963-1969

38. Robert F. Kennedy (Democratic): 1969-1977
39. Gerald R. Ford (Republican): 1977-1981
40. Ronald W. Reagan (Democratic): 1981-1989
41. Lloyd Bentsen (Democratic): 1989-1993

42. Paul Tsongas (Republican): 1993-1997**
43. Dick Gephardt (Socialist-Farmer-Labor): 1997-2001***
44. John McCain (Democratic): 2001-2009
45. Hillary Rodham (Republican): 2009-2017
46. Marco Rubio (Democratic): 2017-2025
47. Rand Paul (Independent Democrat): 2025-2033****
48. Kirsten Gilibrand (Republican): 2033-

*Assassinated.
**Died in office of natural causes or stress.
***Gephardt was elected Vice President by the Senate following the chaotic 1996 Presidential election which saw no candidate from the Republican, Democratic, Socialist, or Independence parties win a majority of the electoral vote. With the death of President Tsongas shortly before his inauguration to a second term, Vice President-elect Gephardt became the first (and thus far, only) socialist ever to hold the position of President of the United States.
****Merger of the Democratic and Independence parties into the Independent Democrats.

Defeated Tickets, 1896-present
1896: William Jennings Bryan (D / Populist)
1900: William Jennings Bryan (D), John G. Woolley (Prohibition)
1904: Alton B. Parker (D), Eugene V. Debs (Socialist), Silas C. Swallow (P)
1908: William Jennings Bryan (D), Eugene V. Debs (S), Eugene W. Chafin (P)
1912: Woodrow Wilson (D), Eugene V. Debs (S), Eugene W. Chafin (P)
1916: John W. Weeks (R), Allan L. Benson (S), Frank Hanly (P)
1920: Leonard Wood (R), Eugene V. Debs (S), Parley P. Christiansen (Farmer-Labor)
1924: Robert M. La Follette (R)
1928: Frank Lowden (R)
1932: Franklin Roosevelt (D), Norman Thomas (Socialist Farmer-Labor)
1936: Al Smith (D), William Lemke (SFL)
1940: Thomas Dewey (R), Henry A. Wallace (SFL)
1944: Harry S. Truman (D), Norman Thomas (SFL)
1948: Harry S. Truman (D), Henry A. Wallace (SFL)
1952: Robert Taft (R), Darlington Hoopes (SFL)
1956: Harold Stassen (R), Darlington Hoopes (SFL)
1960: John F. Kennedy (D), Hubert H. Humphrey (SFL)
1964: Barry M. Goldwater (D)
1968: George W. Romney (R), Eugene McCarthy (SFL)
1972: George McGovern (R)
1976: Jimmy Carter (D), Eugene McCarthy (SFL)
1980: Gerald Ford (R), John Anderson (Independence), David McReynolds (SFL)
1984: Walter Mondale (R)
1988: Michael Dukakis (R), Ron Paul (I), Jesse Jackson (SFL)
1992: Lloyd Bentsen (D), Ross Perot (I), Tom Harkin (SFL)
1996: Bill Clinton (D), Ross Perot (I), Bob Casey (SFL)
2000: Bill Bradley (R), Pat Buchanan (I), Paul Wellstone (SFL), Ralph Nader (Green)
2004: John Kerry (R), Ralph Nader (G)
2008: John Edwards (D), Ron Paul (I), Bernie Sanders (SFL), Ralph Nader (G)
2012: Newt Gingrich (D), Ron Paul (I), Bernie Sanders (Green-Socialist-Farmer-Labor)
2016: Jon Huntsman (R), Rand Paul (I), Sherrod Brown (GSFL)
2020: Jon Huntsman (R), Rand Paul (I),
Sherrod Brown (GSFL)
2024: Kirsten Gillibrand (R), Bruce Braley (GSFL)
2028: Debbie Wasserman-Schultz (R), Bruce Braley (GSFL)
2032: Justin Amash (Independent Democrat), Anthony Weiner (GSFL)
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« Reply #1018 on: January 18, 2012, 12:23:09 AM »

Presidents of the United States

35 - Richard M. Nixon: 1961 - 1965 VP - Henry Cabot Lodge
36 - Lyndon B. Johnson: 1965 - 1971 VP - George McGovern
37 - George McGovern: 1971 - 1973 VP - Stuart Symington

38 - Spiro Agnew: 1973 -  1975 VP: Nelson Rockefeller
39 - Nelson Rockefeller: 1975 - 1977 VP - Ronald Reagan   

40 - John F. Kennedy 1977 - 1985 VP: James Carter
41 - James E. Carter - 1985 - 1989 VP - Gary Hart

42 - Howard Baker - 1989 - 1997 VP -  John S. McCain
43 - Mario Cuomo - 1997 - 2005 VP - Edward M. Kennedy
44 - Elizabeth Dole - 2005 - 2013 VP - Tommy Thompson
45 - Andrew Cuomo - 2013 - 2021 VP - Debbie Wasserman-Schultz 


Defeated Tickets

1960 - JFK/LBJ
1964 - Nixon/Lodge
1968 - Lodge/Goldwater
1972 - McGovern/Symington
1976 - Rockefeller/Reagan
1980 - Reagan/Ford
1984 - Ford/Dole
1988 - Carter/Hart
1992 - RFK/William J. Clinton
1996 - McCain/George H.W Bush
2000 - Forbes/Keyes
2004 - William J. Clinton/Howard Dean
2008 - Hillary Rodham/Bill Nelson
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« Reply #1019 on: January 18, 2012, 06:50:50 AM »

Russian List from "Bull Moose" TL:
Boris Yeltsin (July 10, 1991 - December 31, 1999)
Vladimir Putin (December 31, 1999 - May 7, 2008)
Dmitry Medvedev (May 7, 2008 - December 27, 2011)*
Sergei Mironov (December 27, 2011 - April 17, 2012)**
Mikhail Prokhorov (April 17, 2012 - )***

Black - Unaffilated
Blue - ER (United Russia)
Red - RSDRP - (Russian Workers' Social Democratic)
Green - RNDS (Russian People's Democratic Union)
* - Removed with all cabinet by Duma after protests related to 2011 election fraud
** - Succeeded Medvedev as Duma Speaker
*** - defeated Mironov in run-off
Prime Ministers
Vladimir Putin (May 8, 2008 - December 27, 2011)
Igor Shuvalov (December 27, 2011 - January 10, 2012)
Gennady Semigin (January 10, 2012 - April 24, 2012)
Alexey Kudrin (April 24, 2012 - )
Yellow - Patriot
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« Reply #1020 on: January 18, 2012, 07:08:33 AM »

Duma Speakers
Sergei Naryshkin (December 21, 2011 - December 27, 2011)
Sergei Mironov (December 27, 2011)
Ivan Melnikov (December 27, 2011 - )
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« Reply #1021 on: January 18, 2012, 06:55:19 PM »

43. John McCain: 2001-2005 *
44. Hillary Clinton: 2005-2009 *
45. Mitch Daniels: 2009-2013 **
46. Tim Pawlenty: 2013-2021
47. Andrew Cuomo: 2021-2029

* Defeated for Reelection
** Served only one term
2000: McCain defeats Gore easily. 50.9%-48.6%
2004: Clinton defeats McCain in an upset. 49.5%-48.4%
2008: Daniels defeats Clinton as the economy crumbles. 53.0%-45.9%
2012: Pawlenty succeeds Daniels as he decides against running for reelection. With a recovering economy and popular president VP Pawlenty beats Sen. Barack Obama. 55.9%-44.3%
2016: Pawlenty defeats Brian Schweitzer in a landslide. 58.9%-40.0%
2020: Andrew Cuomo defeats Vice President Sarah Palin, despite a booming economy. 51.1%-47.9%
2024: Cuomo wins reelection against Sen. Paul Ryan. 53.2%-45.9%
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« Reply #1022 on: January 18, 2012, 09:05:56 PM »

1913-1921: Theodore Roosevelt / Warren G. Harding (R) (Taft promised chief justice)
1921-1925: Alton B. Parker / John W. Davis * Declined Second Term
1925-1933: Winston Churchill / Calvin Coolidge (R)
1933-1941: Calvin Coolidge / Douglas MacArthur (R)
1941-1949: Winston Churchill / Thomas E. Dewey (R)
1949-1957: Joseph P. Kennedy, Sr. / Wendell Willkie (D)
1957-1961: Robert Taft / Theodore Roosevelt III (R)
1961-1965: John F. Kennedy / Terry Sanford (R)
1965-1977: Barry M. Goldwater / James L. Buckley (R)
1977-1981: Robert F. Kennedy / James E. Carter (D)
1981-1989: Mark O. Hatfield / Jack F. Kemp (R)
1989-1997: Jack F. Kemp / Maureen Reagan (R)
1997-2001: Ann Richards / Bill Clinton (D)
2001-present: Elvis Presley / John Engler (R)
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« Reply #1023 on: January 20, 2012, 04:38:40 PM »

30. Calvin Coolidge: August 2, 1923 - January 5, 1933
31. Charles Dawes: January 5, 1933 - March 4, 1933
32. Franklin Roosevelt: March 4, 1933 - April 12, 1945
33. Harry Truman: April 12, 1945 - January 20, 1949
34. Robert Taft: January 20, 1949 - July 31, 1953
35. Richard Nixon: July 31, 1953 - January 20, 1961
36. Lyndon Johnson: January 20, 1961 - January 20, 1969
37. John F. Kennedy: January 20, 1969 - April 19, 1971
38. Hubert Humphrey: April 19, 1971 - January 20, 1973
39. Ronald Reagan: January 20, 1973 - January 20, 1981
40. Phil Crane: January 20, 1981 - January 20, 1989
41. Jack Kemp: January 20, 1989 - January 20, 1993
42.  Edward Kennedy: January 20, 1993 - January 20, 1997
43. Colin Powell: January 20, 1997 - January 20, 2001
44. Newt Gingrich: January 20, 2001 - January 20, 2009
45. Hillary Rodham Clinton: January 20, 2009 - present


1928: Pres. Calvin Coolidge/Charles Dawes vs. Gov. Al Smith/Joseph Taylor Robinson

R: 481
D:  50

1932: Sec. Herbert Hoover/Charles Curtis vs. Gov. Franklin Roosevelt/John Nance Garner

D: 483
R:   48

1936: Pres. Franklin Roosevelt/John N. Garner vs. Gov. Alf Landon/Frank Knox

D: 531
R:    0

1940: Pres. Franklin Roosevelt/Henry Wallace vs. Gov. Wendell Wilkie/Arthur Vandenberg

D: 463
R:  68

1944: Pres. Franklin Roosevelt/Harry Truman vs. Gov. Thomas Dewey/Robert Taft

D: 424
R: 106

1948: Pres. Harry Truman/Alben Barkley vs. Sen. Robert Taft/Richard Nixon

R: 279
D: 252

1952: Pres. Robert Taft/Richard Nixon vs. Adlai Stevenson/Johnsparkman

R: 456
D:  75

1956: Pres. Richard Nixon/Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr. vs. Adlai Stevenson/John F. Kennedy

R: 496
D:  35

1960: Vice Pres. Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr./Barry Goldwater vs. Sen. Lyndon Johnson/John F. Kennedy

D: 299
R: 238

1964: Pres. Lyndon Johnson/John F. Kennedy vs. Sen. Barry Goldwater/Nelson Rockefeller

D: 377
R: 161

1968: Vice Pres. John F. Kennedy/Hubert Humphrey vs. Gov. George Romney/Spiro Agnew vs. George Wallace/Curtis LeMay

D: 270
R: 224
I:   45

1972: Pres. Hubert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie vs. Gov. Ronald Reagan/Phil Crane

R: 485
D:  53

1976: Pres. Ronald Reagan/Phil Crane vs. Gov. Jimmy Carter/Walter Mondale

R: 489
D:  49


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« Reply #1024 on: January 20, 2012, 04:39:37 PM »


1980: Vice Pres. Phil Crane/Bob Dole vs. Sen. Walter Mondale/Gary Hart

R: 477
D:  61

1984: Pres. Phil Crane/Bob Dole vs. Sen. Gary Hart/Lloyd Bentsen

R: 483
D: 100

1988: Rep. Jack Kemp/Pete DuPont vs. Sen. Al Gore/Bill Bradley

R: 355
D: 183

1992: Pres. Jack Kemp/Pete DuPont vs. Sen. Edward Kennedy/Bill Clinton vs. Ross Perot/James Stockdale

D: 388
R: 189
I:   11

1996: Pres. Edward Kennedy/Bill Clinton vs. Colin Powell/Lamar Alexander

R: 285
D: 253

2000: Speaker of House Newt Gingrich/John McCain vs. Sen. John Kerry/Howard Dean

R: 274
D: 264

2004: Pres. Newt Gingrich/John McCain vs. Gov. Bill Richardson/John Edwards

R: 345
D: 193

2008: Vice Pres. John McCain/Mike Huckabee vs. Gov. Hillary Clinton/Barack Obama

D: 335
R: 203
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