United States Presidential Election, 1924 (Southern Victory)

The United States presidential election of 1924 was held in the United States against a backdrop of rising prosperity and drop in tensions with the Confederate States, as well as a failed uprising against US forces occupying Canada. Socialist president Upton Sinclair easily defeated Massachusetts governor Calvin Coolidge of the Democratic Party.

The Election
Four years of Socialist policies had created prosperity in the United States. The stock market was booming, and millions of working-and-middle class people were buying goods that used to be limited to the rich, such as automobiles and radios. Tensions with the neighboring Confederate States had also gone down after Sinclair ended reparations repayments in 1923. On the other hand, discontented Canadians rose in revolt in the summer of 1924, but were ultimately defeated. Sinclair let them off easy, which annoyed quite a few Americans who had spent so much blood and money in the Great War conquering Canada; this created a dilemma for many Americans who liked the Socialists' domestic policies but also liked the Democrats' foreign policies. Still, Sinclair and his vice president, Hosea Blackford, were easily renominated at the Socialist national convention in Chicago. That November, the president defeated Coolidge's bid for the Powel House and was re-elected for another four years.