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2040 Reformed States presidential election: Difference between revisions

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[[Presidential elections in the Reformed States|Presidential elections]] were held in the [[Reformed States]] on November 6, 2040. [[Joe Boldano]], entrepreneur and CEO, alongside running mate [[Kyle Richmond]], defeated the [[Republican Party (Reformed States)|Republican]] ticket, [[Jim Jordan]], the junior {{wp|U.S. Senator}} from {{wp|Ohio}}, and {{wp|Kristi Noem}}, the junior senator from {{wp|South Dakota}}; [[Democratic Party (Reformed States)|Democratic]] nominees {{wp|Greg Casar}} and {{wp|Ilhan Omar}}; and {{wp|Andrew Yang}}, entrepreneur and founder of the [[Forward Party (Reformed States)|Forward Party]], running with former {{wp|Arizona}} senator {{wp|Kyrsten Sinema}}.
[[Presidential elections in the Reformed States|Presidential elections]] were held in the [[Reformed States]] on November 6, 2040. [[Joe Boldano]], entrepreneur and CEO, alongside running mate [[Kyle Richmond]], defeated the [[Republican Party (Reformed States)|Republican]] ticket, [[Jim Jordan]], the junior {{wp|U.S. Senator|Senator}} from {{wp|Ohio}}, and {{wp|Kristi Noem}}, the junior senator from {{wp|South Dakota}}; [[Democratic Party (Reformed States)|Democratic]] nominees {{wp|Greg Casar}}, Texas congressman, and {{wp|Ilhan Omar}}, the senior Senator from {{wp|Minnesota}}; and {{wp|Andrew Yang}}, entrepreneur and founder of the [[Forward Party (Reformed States)|Forward Party]], running with former {{wp|Arizona}} senator {{wp|Kyrsten Sinema}}.


<!--As the incumbent president, DeSantis secured the [[2036 Republican presidential primaries|Republican nomination]] without serious opposition, while the Democrats experienced a [[2036 Democratic presidential primaries|competitive primary]]. Ocasio-Cortez narrowly led polls and won the support of some party leaders, but faced opposition from a number of more {{wp|political moderate|moderate}} Democrats. She secured her party's nomination in April, defeating former Pennsylvania governor {{wp|Josh Shapiro}}, Arizona senator {{wp|Ruben Gallego}}, and New Jersey congressman {{wp|Josh Gottheimer}}, among others.
<!--As the incumbent president, DeSantis secured the [[2036 Republican presidential primaries|Republican nomination]] without serious opposition, while the Democrats experienced a [[2036 Democratic presidential primaries|competitive primary]]. Ocasio-Cortez narrowly led polls and won the support of some party leaders, but faced opposition from a number of more {{wp|political moderate|moderate}} Democrats. She secured her party's nomination in April, defeating former Pennsylvania governor {{wp|Josh Shapiro}}, Arizona senator {{wp|Ruben Gallego}}, and New Jersey congressman {{wp|Josh Gottheimer}}, among others.

Revision as of 01:45, 31 December 2024

2040 United States presidential election
Flag of the Reformed States of America.svg
← 2036 November 6, 2040 (2040-11-06) 2044 →

430 members of the Electoral College
216 electoral votes needed to win
Turnout188,308,824
65.11% (Increase 5.27 pp)
  Joe Boldano official portrait.jpg Jim Jordan official photo, 114th Congress (cropped)(b).jpg
Nominee Joe Boldano Jim Jordan
Party Independent Republican
Home state New Jersey Ohio
Running mate Kyle Richmond Kristi Noem
Electoral vote 249 139
States carried 16 21
Popular vote 64,985,375 57,076,405
Percentage 34.51% 30.31%

  Rep. Greg Casar - 118th Congress.jpg Andrew Yang November 2023.jpg
Nominee Greg Casar Andrew Yang
Party Democratic Forward
Home state Texas New York
Running mate Ilhan Omar Kyrsten Sinema
Electoral vote 42 0
States carried 3 + DC
Popular vote 43,668,816 20,054,890
Percentage 23.19% 10.65%

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About this image
Presidential election results map. Light green denotes states won by Boldano/Richmond, red denotes those won by Jordan/Noem, blue denotes those won by Casar/Omar. 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 Reformed States on November 6, 2040. Joe Boldano, entrepreneur and CEO, alongside running mate Kyle Richmond, defeated the Republican ticket, Jim Jordan, the junior Senator from Ohio, and Kristi Noem, the junior senator from South Dakota; Democratic nominees Greg Casar, Texas congressman, and Ilhan Omar, the senior Senator from Minnesota; and Andrew Yang, entrepreneur and founder of the Forward Party, running with former Arizona senator Kyrsten Sinema.