Alternative History
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Presidents of the United States

      Democratic Party (4)       Republican Party (6)

No. President Term   Vice President Term No.
33 Harry Truman (The Old Right Victorious) Harry S. Truman 12 April 1945


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20 January 1949

  Vacant 12 April 1945 - 20 January 1949 .
After the death of Franklin Roosevelt, Harry Truman became President of the United States. Truman was not as popular as Roosevelt and so as expected lost the '48 election.
34 Douglas MacArthur crop Douglas MacArthur 20 January 1949


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2 September 1954

  John W. Bricker John Bricker 20 January 1949 - 2 September 1954 35
The MacArthur administration was hailed by conservatives as the best since Lincoln's. In 1948 the famed former liberator of the Philippines took it upon himself to de-seat the incumbent President Truman. He easily gained the GOP nomination and cruised to victory in the general election. MacArthur is remembered for going into Korea and using nuclear weapons along the border of China and North Korea. He won re-election in '52 against Adlai Stevenson but the Democratic Congress had already began attempts to impeach him. MacArhur was removed from office in September 1954 to the delight of Liberals and horror of Conservatives.
35 John W. Bricker John Bricker 2 September 1954


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20 January 1957

Vacant 2 September 1954 - 20 January 1957 .
John Bricker had the unfortunate task of re-uniting the country following the successful impeachment of MacArthur. Whilst he did his best to heal the nation's wounds, it was perhaps inevitable that a Democrat would re-claim the White House in '56.
36 Happy Chandler - Harris and Ewing Crop Happy Chandler 20 January 1957


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20 January 1961

  Kefauver1 Estes Kefauver 20 January 1957 - 20 January 1961 36
Albert "Happy" Chandler was not the man most of the Democratic establishment would have liked to have seen in the White House after the doors were left wide open after MacArthur's impeachment. A Conservative with a loyal following within the party, Chandler stormed the nomination as moderates could only sit and watch in horror. After defeating President Bricker, he set to work trying to turn the clocks back and return the Democrats to their southern roots. He faced imence scrutiny from his own party and was crushed in the election of 1960.
37 It’s Nixon for me Richard Nixon 20 January 1961


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16 October 1966

  Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. Henry Cabot Lodge 20 January 1961 - 16 October 1966 37
Richard Milhous Nixon was for many years the face of new America. He had brought America and the Republican Party into the Swinging '60s. His administration brought a new cleanness that had not been seen since before the confusion of the 1950s. The Cuban Misile Agreement escalated the Cold War as it was agreed that the Soviets could keep misiles in communist Cuba if the Americans continued to keep nuclear weapons in Turkey. Nixon won re-election in the election of 1964 but it was later revealed he had used criminal methods to secure victory. Rather than face the same fate as MacArthur, Nixon voluntarily vacated the Presidency to his deputy.
38 Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. Henry Cabot Lodge 16 October 1966


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20 January 1973

Vacant 16 October 1966 - 20 January 1973 .
Despite having no desire to sit in the Oval Office, Henry Cabot Lodge ascended to the Presidency following Nixon's fall from grace. For the next two years he followed the same routine as Bricker: heal the nation and then make a half hearted attempt at re-election. However by some miracle, Lodge found his opponent in the 1968 election would be the unpopular George Wallace. Lodge hammered away at the Democratic Nominees past support of segregation and won a second term. America conceded the Space Race to the Soviet Union not long afterwards and the nation suffered a crisis from a lack of oil. Lodge did see the economy somewhat recover in 1972, but by this point the Republicans were so unpopular, Nelson Rockefeller was butchered in the election that year.
39 JFK President John F. Kennedy 20 January 1973


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20 January 1981

  Edmund Muskie 1972 Crop Edmund Muskie 20 January 1973 - 20 January 1981 38
John Fitzgerald Kennedy was thrust into a position of leadership for a country in turmoil. One of his first acts as President was to sign the 1973 Civil Rights Act, which had been vetoed by Nixon and ignored by Lodge. Kennedy attempted to solve the Oil Crisis by funding Israel to invade Jordan and Lebanon in hopes of extracting oil from those regions, but the war backfired when Syria got involved and Israel was defeated, making way for Palestine. Kennedy won a solid second term against John Connally. He survived an assassination attempt not long afterwards. However his health quickly deteriorated with rumour that Kennedy was dead not being too far from the truth. Kennedy would die in his sleep only days after he managed to shamble his way to the podium to hand over the presidency to his successor.


40 Edmund Muskie 1972 Crop Edmund Muskie 20 January 1981


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20 January 1985

John Glenn young John Glenn 20 January 1981 - 20 January 1985 39
Edmund Muskie's premiership is not one that lingers in the public imagination. Muskie had been Vice President to Kennedy and had relied on his boss' popularity to get elected. He was unable to get most of his social reforms through Congress but maintained a loyal base of support until the Iran Hostage Crisis. Iran had overthrown the Shah in favour of a bolshevik government and had taken several Americans working in their embassy hostage. Eventually Muskie conceded several important and major demands to the Iranians and his popularity plummeted. He failed to secure his re-election bid and went down to a major defeat in 1984.
41 Old Gerald Ford Gerald Ford 20 January 1985


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20 January 1993

  Donald Rumsfeld Donald Rumsfeld 20 January 1985 - 25 December 1995 40
Often sited as the most direct factor in the collapse of America is the Ford Administration. Starting his Presidency as a moderate Republican, Ford's success in the 1986 mid-terms gave him and his administration enough courage to persue a more radical approach to governing. The privatisation of National Parks in 1987 drew wide spread criticism form both sides of the aisle, including from Reagan and Goldwater. After the election of 1988 was sent to the house, Vice President Rumsfeld and Secretary of State Cheney are believed to have bribed or murdered any congressmen who could have prevented another Ford victory. Secured for another 4 years in the White House, Ford (or rather Rumsfeld and Cheney) set about deporting "illegal" immigrants who were later found to have emigrated legally, shut down the last Indian Reservations and sold off the White House Lawn for advertising space. Ford was not to be seen for the last 6 months of his premiership with orders being made in his name by Cheney and Rumsfeld. He was legally declared dead the moment his term ended.
42 Dick cheney Dick Cheney 20 January 1993


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25 December 1995

Donald Rumsfeld Donald Rumsfeld 20 January 1985 - 25 December 1995 40
Cheney was declared the Republican nominee in 1992 after the apparent suicide of his only other challenger in the Primaries, Jack Kemp. Officially, President Ford had dissolved the Democratic Party in 1991 meaning that Cheney would coast to victory with 538 electoral votes, a record. Almost immediately protests sprung up around the country comparing Cheney to Hitler and Stalin. Despite sending in the military to deal with the riots, the military soon turned on Cheney and arrested him. Several militias declared their own independcne and so on Christmas Day 1995, the military officially dissolved the United States of America.
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