This article relates to New California.

2048 Californian presidential election: Difference between revisions

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| image1            = Kayse Jama.jpg
| image1            = Kayse Jama.jpg
| colour1          = FF9500
| colour1          = FF9500
| candidate1        = [[Theodore Hendricks]]
| candidate1        = '''[[Theodore Hendricks]]'''
| party1            = [[New Socialist Party (New California)|NSP]]
| party1            = [[New Socialist Party (New California)|NSP]]
| home_state1      = {{wp|Sacramento County, California|Sacramento}}
| home_state1      = {{wp|Sacramento County, California|Sacramento}}
| running_mate1    = [[Eric Brinson]]
| running_mate1    = '''[[Eric Brinson]]'''
| popular_vote1    = 15,653,139
| popular_vote1    = '''15,653,139'''
| percentage1      = 63.21%
| percentage1      = '''63.21%'''


| image2            = Angela_Paxton_(53805316919)_(cropped).jpg
| image2            = Angela_Paxton_(53805316919)_(cropped).jpg
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| percentage2      = 36.79%
| percentage2      = 36.79%


| map_image        = 2048 New California election map blank.png
| map_image        = 2048 New California election map.png
| map_size          =  
| map_size          =  
| map_alt          =  
| map_alt          =  

Latest revision as of 20:25, 9 November 2024

2048 Californian presidential election

← 2044 November 3, 2048 2052 →
TurnoutIncrease 65.41%
  upright=24,763,707 upright=24,763,707
Candidate Theodore Hendricks Susan Nicholas
Party NSP POP
Home state Sacramento San Mateo
Running mate Eric Brinson Jamie Gordon
Popular vote 15,653,139 9,110,568
Percentage 63.21% 36.79%

2048 New California election map.png

The 2048 Californian presidential election was the 5th quadrennial presidential election in New California. It took place on November 3, 2048. Candidates ran under a nonpartisan blanket primary in May, with Theodore Hendricks and Susan Nicholas receiving the most and second-most votes, respectively. Hendricks ultimately prevailed over Nicholas by a margin of around 12 points. As expected, Hendricks and Nicholas both decisively won their respective home counties.

Hendricks received almost 41% of the popular vote in the primary election, the strongest showing by far by any candidate in the nation's 16-year history. It was the third time in a row that a candidate for the Progressive, Libertarian, Christian Democratic, or Republican parties did not advance to the general election in November. This election was the third time in a row there was a female candidate for one of the two parties in November.