The USA, October-November 1936, and the 1936 Presidential election.
October was, for most of the world, a fairly quiet month. The Entente, minus National France, agreed to create the Imperial Scientific and Academic Council, an initiative which presumably aims to give the Entente a technological advantage to make up for their comparatively poor manpower and industry. The IDEC parallels other bodies such as the Imperial Development and Economic Council and all are geared by Canada to helping the cause of retaking Britain and France.
The Kingdom of Spain was rocked by a terrorist bombing, though the volatile situation in the country means that identifying the culprit has been impossible, with various groups either claiming responsibility or blaming others.
Wrangel's Russia, meanwhile, faces considerable worker's strikes. Despite his autocratic rule, Wrangel seems wise enough to realize that pushing too hard could be disastrous; Bolshevism remains a force in Russia and could quickly capitalize on unrest. The strikers are convinced to go back to work on the strength of promised economic reforms; political and social ones were seemingly off the table.
Towards the end of the month, and little noticed in the US, where the election was at fever pitch, the Union of Britain's CTU wrangling and backroom dealing finally came to an end. Mosley was ultimately unable to take control and implement his Totalist charter, with the pacifist, anti-war speaking Tom Mann ending up in charge. Nevertheless, Mosley's influence at the Congress of the Trade Unions is clear and evident; Britain is a far more strictly controlled society than it was just bare months ago, and has, like France, moved sharply towards oppression and control. The new government immediately proposed a friendship with Norway, believing the Nordic country ripe for socialism, but this willingness to risk foreign entanglements raises questions about Mann's power.
Of course, the eyes of much of the world were turned to the United States at this time, and no other news took the attention away from this in the two weeks between Mann's ascent and election day. America had long had a two party system, only occasionally and temporarily disrupted, but on this occasion that seemed to have gone out of the window. There were now four major and credible parties who campaigned for votes up and down the country, barring the Pacific Coast, where only the traditional Democrats and Republicans campaigned in earnest, with Long and Reed recognizing that the relative lack of unhappiness there left it a poor choice for their often scarce resources.
The four parties were the Democrats, who fielded John Nance Garner, the Republics, whose candidate was Charles Curtis, the America First-Union party, which was led by Huey Long, and the Combined Syndicalists of America, with John 'Jack' Reed at the top.
The result was dramatic and for many, unexpected. It had been anticipated that the new parties would become forces of note in Congress, perhaps fading away after a few years when the economic situation improved or as the parties and their positions morphed and realigned into new bodies. Few had expected that either Reed or Long would triumph in the election; but triumph one of them did. Jack Reed took 270 Electoral College votes, a bare majority but enough to put him into the White House without needing to resort to the provisions of the 12th Amendment.
As was predicted by many, Long dominated in the South, which voted for him with overwhelming solidarity. Though he came third in the overall race, the states which supported him did so with huge percentages, indicated just how convinced the Southern states were by his ideas. He made some headway in the Midwest but nowhere managed to secure a majority, except in Nebraska, which reportedly surprised Long himself as much as anyone else. Reed, meanwhile, dominated across the Rust Belt and the entire Northeast, winning states he was not predicted to take, including New York, Connecticut, Delaware, and even Kentucky.
Curtis and Garner split the remainder of the states between them, those in the West of the country, most of New England, and the states of Virginia and Maryland.
The breakdown of Electoral College votes is as follows:
Reed: 270
Curtis: 110
Long: 97
Reed: 54
As can be seen, even if Curtis and Reed combined their electoral college votes they could not topple Reed. Had the Democrats and Republicans formed a single party, and presuming that party got the same individual votes combined as the two separately got (that is to say, that any vote for the Republicans OR the Democrats would have gone to the D-R), however, that party would have prevented Reed's majority, giving him only 229 EC votes while the D-R alliance would have had 212 (Also taking Nebraska from Long). Despite still being second, this would have forced the issue into Congress, where the D-R party would have had an advantage due to taking the most states. This was not, of course, to be; the people spoke and Reed was their choice. With almost 50 million people voting, turnout was over 70%, the second-highest to date in the 20th century, though at the lower end of most elections in the 19th century.
What the future holds for America cannot yet be seen, but life will never be the same with a Red victory in the Presidential elections.