This article relates to a Reformed States election.

2032 United States presidential election: Difference between revisions

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| electoral_vote1  = '''240''' (+1 invalidated){{efn|name=Maine|{{wp|Maine}}, a state in the separatist nation of [[New England (RSA)|New England]], was the only seceding state that held elections. DeSantis won {{wp|Maine's 2nd congressional district|Maine's 2nd district}} and Cortez Masto won its {{wp|Maine's 1st congressional district|1st district}} and the statewide election, but the results were invalidated and Maine sent no electors.}}
| electoral_vote1  = '''240''' (+1 invalidated){{efn|name=Maine|{{wp|Maine}}, a state in the separatist nation of [[New England (RSA)|New England]], was the only seceding state that held elections. DeSantis won {{wp|Maine's 2nd congressional district|Maine's 2nd district}} and Cortez Masto won its {{wp|Maine's 1st congressional district|1st district}} and the statewide election, but the results were invalidated and Maine sent no electors.}}
| states_carried1  = '''25''' (+ ME-02 invalidated)
| states_carried1  = '''25''' (+ ME-02 invalidated)
| popular_vote1    = '''64,396,282'''
| popular_vote1    = '''58,816,685'''
| percentage1      = '''51.59'''
| percentage1      = '''47.12'''


<!--        Catherine Cortez Masto        -->
<!--        Catherine Cortez Masto        -->
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| electoral_vote2  = 190 (+3 invalidated){{efn|name=Maine|{{wp|Maine}}, a state in the separatist nation of [[New England (RSA)|New England]], was the only seceding state that held elections. DeSantis won {{wp|Maine's 2nd congressional district|Maine's 2nd district}} and Cortez Masto won its {{wp|Maine's 1st congressional district|1st district}} and the statewide election, but the results were invalidated and Maine sent no electors.}}
| electoral_vote2  = 190 (+3 invalidated){{efn|name=Maine|{{wp|Maine}}, a state in the separatist nation of [[New England (RSA)|New England]], was the only seceding state that held elections. DeSantis won {{wp|Maine's 2nd congressional district|Maine's 2nd district}} and Cortez Masto won its {{wp|Maine's 1st congressional district|1st district}} and the statewide election, but the results were invalidated and Maine sent no electors.}}
| states_carried2  = 15 + {{wp|Washington, D.C.|DC}} + {{wp|Nebraska's 2nd congressional district|NE-02}} (+1 invalidated)
| states_carried2  = 15 + {{wp|Washington, D.C.|DC}} + {{wp|Nebraska's 2nd congressional district|NE-02}} (+1 invalidated)
| popular_vote2    = 50,266,297
| popular_vote2    = 55,770,999
| percentage2      = 40.27%
| percentage2      = 44.68%


<!--        Brian Fitzpatrick        -->
<!--        Brian Fitzpatrick        -->
Line 89: Line 89:
{{wp|Presidential elections in the United States|Presidential elections}} were held in the {{wp|United States}} on November 2, 2032. [[Ron DeSantis]], incumbent president and [[Republican Party (Reformed States)|Republican Party]] nominee, alongside running mate [[Tim Scott]], defeated the [[Democratic Party (Reformed States)|Democratic]] ticket of {{wp|Catherine Cortez Masto}}, the senior {{wp|U.S. Senator}} from {{wp|Nevada}}, and {{wp|John Fetterman}}, the senior U.S. Senator from {{wp|Pennsylvania}}. [[Brian Fitzpatrick]], member of the [[Reformed States House of Representatives|House of Representatives]] from {{wp|Pennsylvania's 1st congressional district|Pennsylvania's 1st district}}, ran alongside entrepreneur {{wp|Andrew Yang}} for the [[Forward Party (Reformed States)|Forward Party]], receiving over 6% of the national popular vote.
{{wp|Presidential elections in the United States|Presidential elections}} were held in the {{wp|United States}} on November 2, 2032. [[Ron DeSantis]], incumbent president and [[Republican Party (Reformed States)|Republican Party]] nominee, alongside running mate [[Tim Scott]], defeated the [[Democratic Party (Reformed States)|Democratic]] ticket of {{wp|Catherine Cortez Masto}}, the senior {{wp|U.S. Senator}} from {{wp|Nevada}}, and {{wp|John Fetterman}}, the senior U.S. Senator from {{wp|Pennsylvania}}. [[Brian Fitzpatrick]], member of the [[Reformed States House of Representatives|House of Representatives]] from {{wp|Pennsylvania's 1st congressional district|Pennsylvania's 1st district}}, ran alongside entrepreneur {{wp|Andrew Yang}} for the [[Forward Party (Reformed States)|Forward Party]], receiving over 6% of the national popular vote.


{{wp|JD Vance}} initially [[JD Vance 2032 presidential campaign|ran for re-election]] (which would have been disallowed if not for the passage of the [[United States Term Limits Act]] in March of 2031), facing little opposition and securing enough delegates to become the {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party's}} {{wp|presumptive nominee}} on March 12; [[Assassination of JD Vance|his assassination]] three days later forced the party to find another nominee, marking the first time since [[2024 United States presidential election|2024]] that a party's nominee did not run in the general election after winning enough delegates. [[Ron DeSantis]], having been inaugurated president the previous day, announced his campaign and received widespread support among Republicans. {{wp|Ben Sasse}}, former senator from {{wp|Nebraska}}, also announced his campaign, but withdrew shortly after. DeSantis chose Tim Scott, the junior senator from {{wp|South Carolina}}, to be his running mate.
{{wp|JD Vance}} initially [[JD Vance 2032 presidential campaign|ran for re-election]] (which would have been disallowed if not for the passage of the [[United States Term Limits Act]] in March of 2031), facing little opposition and securing enough delegates to become the {{wp|Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party's}} {{wp|presumptive nominee}} on March 12; [[Assassination of JD Vance|his assassination]] three days later forced the party to find another nominee, marking the first time since [[2024 United States presidential election|2024]] that a party's nominee did not run in the general election after winning enough delegates. DeSantis, having been inaugurated president the previous day, announced his campaign and received widespread support among Republicans. {{wp|Ben Sasse}}, former senator from {{wp|Nebraska}}, also announced his campaign, but withdrew shortly after. DeSantis chose Tim Scott, the junior senator from {{wp|South Carolina}}, to be his running mate.
 
DeSantis employed a strategy of {{wp|appeal to emotion|appealing to emotion}}, describing his former running mate's assassination as a "national tragedy," and implored Americans to vote for him to "end political violence." As a former governor and a long-time member of the Republican establishment, DeSantis was significantly better-known by voters than his opponent. Cortez Masto drew parallels from DeSantis to {{wp|Donald Trump}}, including calling DeSantis a "wannabe fascist" and giving him the nickname "Ronald Trump". Cortez Masto's running mate John Fetterman was picked in an attempt to gain support in {{wp|swing state}}s, and her campaign consequently won both Nevada and Pennsylvania, as well as several other battleground states; this was overshadowed by the fact that the seceding [[Free States (Second American Civil War)|Free States]] did not cast electoral votes, thus making a Cortez Masto victory improbable. Though the seceded state of {{wp|Maine}} held elections, its electoral votes were invalidated due to its allegiance to [[New England (RSA)|New England]].
 
According to polls, the most important issues for voters were [[Second American Civil War (RSA)|national stability]], {{wp|democratic backsliding in the United States|democracy}}, {{wp|Economy of the United States|the economy}}, {{wp|climate change}}, {{wp|education in the United States|education}}, and {{wp|LGBTQ rights in the United States|LGBTQ rights}}. {{wp|Abortion in the United States|Abortion}} and {{wp|Illegal immigration to the United States|illegal immigration}} were also major issues focused on by each candidate. Polled voters consistently cited national stability and unity during the Second American Civil War as being the single most important issue.
 
DeSantis achieved victory in the {{wp|Electoral College of the United States|Electoral College}}, winning 240 electoral votes to Cortez Masto's 190. Though Cortez Masto won every swing state except {{wp|Georgia (U.S. State)|Georgia}}, the seceding Free States made a victory impossible without also flipping Georgia, {{wp|Alaska}}, and {{wp|Texas}}, the latter of which voted for DeSantis by about 6 percentage points. DeSantis won the national popular vote with a plurality of 47.12%, which would be the last time a Republican did so until [[Joseph Clarke]] in [[2044 Reformed States presidential election|2044]]. Cortez Masto improved upon {{wp|Gavin Newsom}}'s 2028 campaign among {{wp|working class}} voters, minorities (particularly {{wp|Hispanic and Latino Americans}}), and those with college degrees. This was the first of two elections won by DeSantis, the second being in [[2036 Reformed States presidential election|2036]] against {{wp|Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez}}.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


DeSantis employed a strategy of {{wp|appeal to emotion|appealing to emotion}}, describing his former running mate's assassination as a "national tragedy," and implored Americans to vote for him to "end political violence." As a former governor and a long-time member of the Republican establishment, DeSantis was significantly better-known by voters than his opponent. Cortez Masto drew parallels from DeSantis to {{wp|Donald Trump}}, including calling DeSantis a "wannabe fascist" and giving him the nickname "Ronald Trump". Cortez Masto's running mate John Fetterman was picked in an attempt to gain support in {{wp|swing state}}s, and her campaign consequently won both Nevada and Pennsylvania, as well as several other battleground states; this was overshadowed by the fact that the seceding [[Free States (Second American Civil War)|Free States]] did not cast electoral votes, thus making a Cortez Masto victory improbable.


According to polls, the most important issues for voters were [[Second American Civil War (RSA)|national stability]], {{wp|democratic backsliding in the United States|democracy}}, {{wp|Economy of the United States|the economy}}, {{wp|climate change}}, {{wp|education in the United States|education}}, and {{wp|LGBTQ rights in the United States|LGBTQ rights}}. {{wp|Abortion in the United States|Abortion}} and {{wp|Illegal immigration to the United States|illegal immigration}} were also major issues focused on by each candidate. Polled voters consistently cited national stability during the Second American Civil War as being the single most important issue.


DeSantis achieved victory in the {{wp|Electoral College of the United States|Electoral College}}, winning 240 electoral votes to Cortez Masto's 190.





Revision as of 23:01, 29 December 2024

2032 United States presidential election
Flag of the United States.svg
← 2028 November 2, 2032 (2032-11-02) 2036 →

430 members (+4 invalidated)[a] of the Electoral College
216 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout124,823,186
56.97% (Increase 7.80 pp)
  Ron DeSantis, Official Portrait, 113th Congress (cropped 2).jpg Catherine Cortez Masto portrait red ( 4x5 crop).jpg Brian Fitzpatrick official congressional photo (3x4 cropped).jpg
Nominee Ron DeSantis Catherine Cortez Masto Brian Fitzpatrick
Party Republican Democratic Forward
Alliance Green
Home state Florida Nevada Pennsylvania
Running mate Tim Scott John Fetterman Andrew Yang
Electoral vote 240 (+1 invalidated)[a] 190 (+3 invalidated)[a] 0
States carried 25 (+ ME-02 invalidated) 15 + DC + NE-02 (+1 invalidated) 0
Popular vote 58,816,685 55,770,999 8,300,742
Percentage 47.12 44.68% 6.65%

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About this image
Presidential election results map. Red denotes states won by DeSantis/Scott, blue denotes those won by Cortez Masto/Fetterman, and Maroon denotes non-voting seceded states. Though the seceded state of Maine held elections, no electoral votes were counted due to its allegiance to New England. Numbers indicate electoral votes cast by each state and the District of Columbia.

President before election

Ron DeSantis
Republican

Elected President

Ron DeSantis
Republican

Presidential elections were held in the United States on November 2, 2032. Ron DeSantis, incumbent president and Republican Party nominee, alongside running mate Tim Scott, defeated the Democratic ticket of Catherine Cortez Masto, the senior U.S. Senator from Nevada, and John Fetterman, the senior U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania. Brian Fitzpatrick, member of the House of Representatives from Pennsylvania's 1st district, ran alongside entrepreneur Andrew Yang for the Forward Party, receiving over 6% of the national popular vote.

JD Vance initially ran for re-election (which would have been disallowed if not for the passage of the United States Term Limits Act in March of 2031), facing little opposition and securing enough delegates to become the Republican Party's presumptive nominee on March 12; his assassination three days later forced the party to find another nominee, marking the first time since 2024 that a party's nominee did not run in the general election after winning enough delegates. DeSantis, having been inaugurated president the previous day, announced his campaign and received widespread support among Republicans. Ben Sasse, former senator from Nebraska, also announced his campaign, but withdrew shortly after. DeSantis chose Tim Scott, the junior senator from South Carolina, to be his running mate.

DeSantis employed a strategy of appealing to emotion, describing his former running mate's assassination as a "national tragedy," and implored Americans to vote for him to "end political violence." As a former governor and a long-time member of the Republican establishment, DeSantis was significantly better-known by voters than his opponent. Cortez Masto drew parallels from DeSantis to Donald Trump, including calling DeSantis a "wannabe fascist" and giving him the nickname "Ronald Trump". Cortez Masto's running mate John Fetterman was picked in an attempt to gain support in swing states, and her campaign consequently won both Nevada and Pennsylvania, as well as several other battleground states; this was overshadowed by the fact that the seceding Free States did not cast electoral votes, thus making a Cortez Masto victory improbable. Though the seceded state of Maine held elections, its electoral votes were invalidated due to its allegiance to New England.

According to polls, the most important issues for voters were national stability, democracy, the economy, climate change, education, and LGBTQ rights. Abortion and illegal immigration were also major issues focused on by each candidate. Polled voters consistently cited national stability and unity during the Second American Civil War as being the single most important issue.

DeSantis achieved victory in the Electoral College, winning 240 electoral votes to Cortez Masto's 190. Though Cortez Masto won every swing state except Georgia, the seceding Free States made a victory impossible without also flipping Georgia, Alaska, and Texas, the latter of which voted for DeSantis by about 6 percentage points. DeSantis won the national popular vote with a plurality of 47.12%, which would be the last time a Republican did so until Joseph Clarke in 2044. Cortez Masto improved upon Gavin Newsom's 2028 campaign among working class voters, minorities (particularly Hispanic and Latino Americans), and those with college degrees. This was the first of two elections won by DeSantis, the second being in 2036 against Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.






























Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Maine, a state in the separatist nation of New England, was the only seceding state that held elections. DeSantis won Maine's 2nd district and Cortez Masto won its 1st district and the statewide election, but the results were invalidated and Maine sent no electors.