Other information: List of United States Presidents (Wither)
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45. Donald Trump (2017-2021) VP: Mike Pence[]

Donald Trump
Donald John Trump was the forty-fifth president of the United States. He won his first term along with vice president Mike Pence on November 8, 2016, and was sworn in on January 20, 2017. As Republican nominee, he had beaten Democratic opponent Hillary Clinton with 304 electoral votes compared to Clinton's 227, despite her winning the popular vote by nearly 3 million.
In 2019 and early 2020, Trump was impeached for using Ukraine to interfere with the election, such as spreading lies about opponent Joe Biden, so he could win reelection. In the 2020 presidential election, Trump went against Biden and lost by 7 million popular votes and got 232 electoral votes compared to Biden's 306. Trump, however, refused to concede and insisting Biden only won only due to voter fraud. He caused a riot at the US capitol building on January 6, 2021, and was impeached a second time, the first president to have been.
Trump was out of office when his second impeachment trial started. This time, the question was not whether or not he would be removed from office, but barred from holding public office again. Every Democrat in the Senate and three Republicans voted him to be barred, but were unable to obtain the 2/3 majority needed, and Trump was acquitted. This was the cause for his 2024 run.
46. Joe Biden (2021-2027) VP: Kamala Harris[]

Joe Biden
Joseph Robinnete Biden Jr. was officially elected president on November 7, 2020 after a longer election process due to the millions of mail-in votes due to COVID-19. Biden was inaugurated on January 20, 2021 and implemented many things such as gun restrictions and improved the Affordable Care Act, much to the dismay of conservatives.
Biden ran again in 2024, and was immediately the front-runner. The only other Democratic candidate that didn't drop out before the primaries was New York Senator Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who suspended her campaign shortly after the primaries started. In the Republican primary, Donald Trump ran for a second, non-consecutive term, and most politicians who had already started a campaign quickly suspended it to endorse Trump. The only other person who didn't suspend their campaign was former Maryland Governor Larry Hogan. Hogan lost to Trump due to being a more moderate politician, and later supported the Conservative movement, to make right-wing politics not so "Trumpist". Biden, two years into his second term, resigned due to old age. Vice President Harris became the new President.
During Biden's presidency, he did a lot. He helped in slowing the coronavirus, and by the beginning of 2022, most things had already gone back to the normalcy it was before the COVID-19 pandemic. Amidst all this, Biden also brought back the Affordable Care Act, commonly known as Obamacare (and after it's resurgence, sometimes Bidencare), to give cheaper health care for all Americans.
47. Kamala Harris (2027-2033) VP: Pete Buttigieg[]

Kamala Harris
Kamala Devi Harris became president on April 10, 2027 after the resignation of Joe Biden. She was the first female president, and was also the first female vice president and vice president of color. She ran again in 2028 and won a second term against Ted Cruz. She had nominated Pete Buttigieg as her vice president.
Harris was eligible to run for a third term in 2032, due to her first term being under two years long. However, she declined and Larry Hogan won the next election.
Harris's presidency also saw the introduction of a new state, Puerto Rico.
48. Larry Hogan (2033-2037) VP: Chris Christie[]

Larry Hogan
Lawrence Joseph Hogan ran again in 2032 after failing to win the Republican nomination in the 2028 election. Like Joe Biden, Hogan also made restrictions on owning guns to avoid gun violence.
49. Jon Ossoff (2037-2041) VP: Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez[]
Thomas Jon Ossoff won the presidency against incumbent president Larry Hogan, winning as the Republican votes were split between Republicans and Conservatives.
He lost the 2040 election to Texas senator Ted Cruz, however he won the popular vote by nearly four million. He conceded the election results, but called for an end to the electoral college system. Cruz, however, was assassinated shortly after winning the election. Ossoff condemned the assassin, who was put in jail for a life sentence.