Black Swans
CBS Evening News would break what would be deemed the story of the decade. The leaker from the White House picked CBS because that network wasn’t anywhere near as partisan as others on the left & right were. She decided that her selection would treat the story in the manner in which she wanted to see it presented to the world. CBS worked fast (and secretly) to confirm the details of what they were given, all while fearful that another network or media outlet would scoop them. The online publication Politico was chasing the same story – from a different leaker – yet CBS beat them to the punch. Early in September 2027, popular host of the evening programme Debbie Parsons revealed allegations concerning President Walsh’s extra-martial affair with a senior White House official. CBS had evidence to that effect, otherwise the story never would have run, and presented that in the broadcast. The woman with whom the 48th President was said to be having sexual relations with at both the White House and Camp David over a period of five months was Charlotte Lloyd. She was the Deputy Homeland Security Advisor, an appointed official whose role was more important that usual due to her titular boss having been absent from his duties since the start of the year with a fight underway against pancreatic cancer. Pictures of Lloyd were released: she was previously an unknown figure. The whole country, soon the whole world too, quickly knew everything about the thirty-three year-old ‘girlfriend’ of Walsh. Her picture and video footage of her pre-scandal was everywhere.
Walsh’s official spokesperson’s first comment on the revelations was to neither confirm nor deny it. Her boss hadn’t given her proper instructions as to how to reply to the incoming allegations and she fluffed the response. That reply was all the confirmation that everyone needed. CBS had already released a lot of evidence and the White House wasn’t denying that there had been a relationship between Walsh and Lloyd, nor that it was still going on too. Everyone had something to say about the private life of Walsh. From politicians to commentators to ordinary citizens, it was all that anyone could talk about. Walsh’s spokesperson would resign the following day, claiming her boss made her job impossible, but that was of little significance when first Fox News and then moments later MSNBC (each claiming an exclusive) ran the story that the First Lady had moved out of the White House. She went with the two children of theirs, heading back to her parent’s house in Pennsylvania. The media circus around that was extraordinary. So too was the furore where the entire media sought out Lloyd. She was nowhere to be found though. There were no more trips over to the White House for her nor could she be found at her office. The acting presidential spokesperson would be forced into denying that Lloyd was staying at the White House when multiple allegations were made that she was there with Walsh. CNN and The Hill both would secure interviews with former staffers who’d been with Walsh when he was a senator for Pennsylvania where each claimed to have had affairs with him while working for under him.
Parsons got that interview with Lloyd, something that other hosts at different networks would have literately killed for. Meeting at the CBS studios up in New York, the president’s girlfriend stated that her affair with Walsh had been something that she had ended a month previous. She confirmed that she had left her job as the Deputy HSA and that was her decision after Walsh Administration pressure upon her. Parsons asked the details of what had happened with Walsh and Lloyd with the latter revealing that to an immense global audience watching the much hyped interview. With her boss in the hospital, Lloyd had spent a great deal of time with the president when briefing him, often during the early hours due to when news of events arrived, concerning security incidents across the nations. Bomb attacks, gunfire etc. had consumed their meetings. There were many late nights too where they discussed the terrible situation on the US-Mexican border, including the multiple instances of the Mexican Drug War spilling over into the streets of El Paso. They had grown close. Lloyd confessed that she had made the first move to engage in relations with Walsh while in full knowledge that he was a married man with children. She asked for Parsons and the country to forgive her. Nonetheless, she excused her actions by claiming that the president and his wife were leading separate lives at that point. She wouldn’t discuss details of her break-up with Walsh, claiming that was private no matter how hard Parsons pushed her to reveal all, and also claimed that she had no idea that others knew of their affair nor that it ended under threat of being revealed as it ultimately was. Her career in government service was over, Lloyd confessed, and so too was her reputation gone forever. Parsons’ final question was to whether Lloyd was still in love with Walsh: Lloyd said that she never had been because it had never been that type of affair.
Republicans and the entire right across the United States had denounced Walsh from the beginning when the news broke about his affair. There were comments made that he had betrayed his country by acting in such a manner while in office. He had neglected his presidential duties, so they said, and imperilled the nation by what he had gotten up to. The high-minded attitude was never going to convince everyone yet that interview which Lloyd gave sealed the deal for the Republicans. They had something to work with when she spoke out rather than remaining hidden away. Action was taken to make sure that the scandal didn’t fade away and that only gain could come from it. Congressional inquiries were announced with senators on the Republican-led ethics committee arranging for hearings. Lloyd was a government employee and had confessed on television that her liaisons with Walsh had taken place in the White House. Testimony from them was also demanded from named administration officials as well as the Secret Service too. From out of the US House, there came remarks that they were looking to impeach Walsh. Few Democrats came out to defend Walsh, even when they were disgusted with the attitude taken by the Republicans to make it all some sort of moral crusade. Walsh had lost their support long before the affair revelations and so the Republicans were allowed to feast on him. Terrified of having her sex life combed over in open session by senators, Lloyd cut a deal with the Senate Judicial Committee to tell them everything that they wanted in private. Her lawyers had made that arrangement by claiming that if not, she would Plead The Fifth but they could do nothing when the transcripts of her confessions to Senate-appointed investigators were leaked to the media. With all of that out in the open, the clamour for impeachment became incandescent. House Speaker Fraser let it go ahead, seeking to damage the Democrats rather than really get anywhere in seeing the removal from office of Walsh as many of his fellow Republicans wanted. He knew that that was going to be impossible. There could still be a lot of damage done to the enemy though.
Before the scandal erupted and impeachment proceedings began, Walsh had been the presumptive nominee for the Democrats in the next presidential election. Former Senator Zenger and incumbent DC Mayor Rochelle Nelson had each declared their candidacy to challenge him yet no one else (beyond near-invisible no-hoper perennial candidates) had moved to. The situation of four years beforehand had been repeated during September/October 2027 where shadow campaigns from Democrats seeking the right moment to make a move were underway. Walsh himself had primaried the 47th President and only done so when the time was deemed right. The revelations of what Walsh had been up to followed by a wave of resignations coming from Walsh Administration staffers ahead of them being called before Congress was regarded by potential challengers as enough of a justification for them to jump into the race. Two major candidates announced that they (just like Nelson & Zenger) would be challenging Walsh for the party’s nomination. Senator Patrick O’Shea out of Massachusetts and New Jersey’s Governor Stephanie Kirk entered the primary contest. Each of them were centralist Democrats with good reputations and certainly having more of a shot at beating Walsh than the weak Nelson nor the disgraced Zenger. Nonetheless, many commentators believed that for either of them to be the Democrats’ candidate in November ‘28 would see them crushed: they wouldn’t be able to bring the country with them as Walsh had done when he had won the presidency. Potential candidates who hadn’t announced, yet who were suspected to be eyeing up a shot at the nomination, had attention focused upon them.
In the US House, an impeachment vote against Walsh went through on a simple majority following party lines. Commentators and legal scholars argued furiously over whether Walsh having a sexual affair with a subordinate was an impeachable offence but the Republican majority voted to send the matter to the US Senate where there would be a trial of Walsh. The upper chamber took up the matter and proceedings against the 48th President moved forward with the charge of ‘high crimes & misdemeanours’. There the Republicans had a strong majority too yet it was wasn’t anywhere bear enough for the two-thirds majority needed to convict and thus remove Walsh. Senate Majority Leader Green and his colleagues knew that. Yet, the Republicans still went through with the impeachment while undertaking the pantomime that they were seeking to have Democratic senators join with them in the end. Moreover, impeaching a Democratic president, any one of them for any reason, had been a Republican goal for a while. Impeachment failed. Not a single Democrat sided with the Republicans once all was said and done. It was the end of October by that point and Walsh emerged from where it was said he was hiding in the White House – he’d made hardly any public appearances since that CBS story broke what was said afterwards to be one of the first black swans of the 2028 presidential race – to speak live to the country. He declared that he didn’t intend to seek the Democratic nomination for the following year’s election. Walsh would serve out his term and then leave office come January ‘29. With that done, there would be other contenders joining Kirk, Nelson, O’Shea & Zenger seeking to replace him.
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Senator Jennifer Young, the New Yorker who was the Senate Minority Leader, had been anticipated as a candidate for the Democratic nomination when it had become apparent that there were further candidates waiting to jump in once the impeachment of Walsh was over with. Everything seemed to be set up for her to make a run with a belief that she could better connect with swing voters across the battleground Purple states better than any other candidate in the race. Young had felt stabbed in the back by O’Shea making his announcement in the middle of those hearings when she thought she had had his support. Regardless, she had thought she could beat him. Then came the ABC story about the how Young had whipped fellow senators in-line to make sure they all voted against impeachment as part of a quid pro quo to get Walsh to announce he would stand down. ABC could prove that too with there being evidence that Young had struck that deal with Walsh. She therefore didn’t announce the widely-expected presidential run of hers when that all came out. Maria RodrÃguez–Quiroz did. MRQ made her announcement online, rather than at rallies or public events like the other candidates from her party, where she made simultaneous broadcasts live from her home across the major social media platforms including the new & trendy Clipper too. A well-known Democrat like Young, though more to the left of the older woman, MRQ was said by commentators to only have joined the contest after the Senate Majority Leader was forced out and thus she could jump in. MRQ wasn’t the only democratic socialist in the race – Nelson was arguably even further to the left while Zenger had his own niche positioning as a provocateur – but she certainly had more of a following. MRQ was supported coast-to-coast, across Blue, Red & Purple states. There was an explosion of support for her from Democrats who were left ecstatic at the thought of her being their next president. Backers of Kirk and O’Shea tried to talk them down by claiming that MRQ would be smashed across conservative portions of America and, even if she somehow won the White House, the Republicans in Congress would retain the real power. MRQ’s devotees refused to listen. A golden future lay ahead of the country as far as they were concerned with the young Latina running for president.
The Democratic debates were late starting once again, but when they got underway starting at the very end of November, they were highly-anticipated and came with a massive audience. Zenger caused a stink. The candidates were asked by the PBS moderator to comment upon violent events nationwide preceding the debate held in Chicago. There had been attacks by right-wing militia against state troopers in Washington state leading to three deaths and also shots fired against a Republican congressman in Ohio: no injuries there but a lot of drama for the media. Kirk, MRQ, Nelson & O’Shea (called upon in alphabetical order) all made the expected statements that everyone thought was adequate for such a situation. Calm was called for, demands were made for the rule of law to be followed and denouncements of violence were issued. From Zenger, there was only hatred on show for Republican politicians and the Red state voters too. Clips of the faces pulled by other candidates when hearing that went out though what got more nation attention was MRQ’s response to Zenger where she berated him for his words. She was the only superstar on that stage and the only one who actually managed to shut him up so thoroughly, so convincingly with her retorts to his outrageous remarks. Her supporters said she looked presidential, that she would have that national appeal. When the first debate moved on, O’Shea foundered when talking social policy. He was more unpopular than he ever would have considered himself and the mess he made of things only added to that. The rich, privileged scion of a well-established political family, O’Shea was reaching beyond himself in trying to get anywhere beyond Massachusetts. Nelson didn’t mess up but failed to find her voice on the national stage. It was Kirk who really stood out as another potential president alongside MRQ. Before her 2025 gubernatorial win, she’d been Mayor of Newark. In the face of state and national opposition, from fellow Democrats and the Republicans, she’d built a Public Safety Department to replace the city’s police & fire departments. Members were cross-trained and focused on protecting citizens rather than locking them up. Talking about plans to do that in New Jersey, across the nation too, her passion for it came across as good as her arguments. Yet, that superstar that was MRQ still dominated the debate and it was the considered opinion of commentators afterwards that she had won it. When she spoke of her vision for America, that set hearts racing among so many Democrats nationwide. How they wanted her as their next president!
Walsh in 2024 had won the Democratic nomination by following the traditional route: Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Carolina, Super Tuesday and so on. Technical problems with several of those races, disputes over the relevance of such an order and arguments over the biased weighed delegate system had affected that contest like the ‘20 race too. Back in ‘26, when it was still believed that Walsh would run again as the incumbent without serious challenge, the DNC had agreed to change the primary contest system. There had been legal challenges out of Iowa due to it losing its first place and also various other disputes, but the system for an entirely different primary system was in-place for the unexpected set of candidates in the ‘28 race to take part in. A last minute DNC attempt to revert to the traditional route blew up in a storm and so the new method was continued with. There were five set days for primary elections with either ten/eleven contests to take place four/five weeks apart. Ten states would hold primary contests with a one-vote-for-one-vote system: delegates, superdelegates and all that other baloney was gone. California, Florida, New York, Pennsylvania & Texas as the five biggest population states were each spread across the five primary contest days, with four of those days also having an eleventh individual of set of contests for Democrats Abroad, DC, Puerto Rico and US territories in the Caribbean & Pacific. Further Democratic debates happened in early ‘28. Nelson dropped out when it was clear she was getting nowhere. MRQ retained in the lead in the opinion polls with Kirk remaining a strong second. The Democrats made a big deal out of their two leading female candidates for the presidential nomination being also a Latina and an African-American. O’Shea and Zenger both stayed in the race though fell increasingly into irrelevance when all eyes were on the two women far out ahead of them. Late January arrived and the first primary day occurred. Contests took place in Blue states such as Nevada, Oregon and Virginia as well as Red states such as Florida, Georgia & Indiana: Purple state Michigan was also in the running. Zenger ended up with the expected no victories while O’Shea would win just Connecticut. Kirk took Delaware, South Dakota & Virginia. Michigan went heavily for MRQ and she also won big victories in the other five states (and Democrats Abroad) including that Texas win. Multiple pundits called the whole race for her after that first day. Kirk stood a fine chance of making a comeback with the numbers available to do that but all eyes were on MRQ to be the winner come June.
The Republican presidential nomination process had started long before the Democrats made a repeat of their late start. Back in the middle of 2027, before only a very few political watchers had heard the name Charlotte Lloyd, they’d been starting the process of selecting a candidate. Walsh was considered the likely opposing candidate thought there had been some thinking at the RNC that maybe he might be primaried due to his unpopularity. There were a dozen major candidates during ‘27, long before debates and primaries (following the Iowa to New Hampshire and so on route) started. Norris was considered an early favourite but then his daughter was kidnapped and violated along with Pennsylvania being hit with all of that abortion violence. Erika Cook and Jerry Stokes were strong early runners. They were two governors, from Florida and Wisconsin respectively, yet neither seemed to have the ‘magic’ regarded as being enough to truly excite Republican voters. Senator Majority Leader Green made comments on the race that supported neither of them and that was seen by many as damaging their campaigns: if ‘America’s real president’ had no support for them, how could they really progress forward? Cook took the hint and backed out though Stokes refused to go nowhere. Roberts’ star shone bright due the impeachment proceedings against Walsh. Green gave him the nod to make a presidential run with figures such as Cook and even defeated ‘24 candidate Holloway moving to show support too despite her history of minority-bashing. Long before ‘27 was out, the Texan senator was seeing so much of his party establishment fall in line behind him. Stokes and other lesser-known challengers intended to fight him for the Republican nomination but they didn’t have the magic that Roberts was said to have. As an African-American, non-official Democratic attack lines against Roberts stated that the party of alleged racists that was the Republicans would never vote for him and he was only being put forward as tokenism when Kirk & MRQ were leading the race for the Democrats. Only a fool would stick with that attack after watching how Roberts would excite crowds of the base yet in the next instance win over independents in battleground states with the strength of his argument about the America he wanted to build with them. He criss-crossed the country, speaking in Red and Purple states, with an abundance of donations flooding his way and endorsements coming in ahead of the primaries starting.
In 2028, Roberts won the Iowa Caucuses and the New Hampshire Primary. Stokes was left far behind him in each with lightweight candidates left falling by the wayside. In South Carolina, Roberts won by a margin of victory of forty-five points: Stokes was slaughtered down there. On Super Tuesday, Roberts won all but one contest that day. Stokes left the race. He was being humiliated and could no longer stay in the race with no money and the shame of such major defeats. Commentators noted the campaign which Roberts ran not just against Stokes but how he was regarded as already fighting the battle against whom his team considered the likely Democratic candidate in the form of MRQ. He spent a lot more time up in the North–East than thought necessary where he met with crowds of supporters but also went out talking to independents too. Visits made to North Carolina and Pennsylvania due to their Purple state status were made early in the campaign, long before the Republican primaries were held there. When on the attack, MRQ was the name on his lips rather than Stokes. He had a big anti-socialist message that went down well indeed in those states. When in North Carolina, Roberts made an appearance alongside the statewide popular former senator David Mitchell. They spoke in the Democratic-bastion that was Raleigh with even stern Republican critics admitting that the two of them put on a good show there on what was traditionally unfriendly ground. Threats were made to Roberts when he was in North Carolina. Statements released online BLA called the leading Republican candidate a ‘race traitor’ and promised him a ‘bloody demise’. He stayed for a further night in North Carolina – delaying a trip to Florida – and made it clear that he remained there meeting voters despite that threat: it was a threat that the BLA were feared to be capable of acting on after showing their deadly capability in once more shooting an alleged racist cop, the latest incident being in Cleveland. Secret Service agents had replaced the private security contractors assigned by the RNC, leaving him well protected, but Roberts wanted to show open defiance to such people. As to race for the party nomination, Stokes walked away from Super Tuesday leaving Roberts as his party’s presumptive nominee come early March. All spending was able to be redirected away towards the November election long before the Democrats’ candidates could think of doing the same thing.
The second and third rounds of Democratic voting were won by MRQ too. Huge numbers of primary voters came out for her with big achievements for her campaign down in Texas. That Red state, like Florida before it, was full of Democrats who voted for her in the primaries knowing that in the general election the wouldn’t get as much of a say. O’Shea dropped out of the race though Kirk, and the angry Zenger (he would rant about a fixed primary, smashing Big Tech bias against him etc.), remained fighting it out for what was clearly going to be MRQ’s. Kirk had a couple of victories, including that of her home state New Jersey and also the previously-Purple but now-Blue Minnesota too. Those meant little overall though when MRQ ran her close in them as well as getting the big numbers in the ones which she won: Pennsylvania went for MRQ and Kirk really needed that win. In addition, DC and Puerto Rico went for MRQ with Nelson campaigning in DC as a surrogate for MRQ after endorsing her. The mayor would also do the same in Maryland as well with her help there in African-American communities tilting the balance for MRQ over Kirk when that state voted in the third primary stage. Nelson was one of many, many surrogates that went out and addressed rallies on behalf of MRQ. The leading candidate herself barely left the West. The significant green component of her policy platform was something that MRQ backed up with action. She didn’t criss-cross the country as ‘a polluter’ no matter what those who said that was crazy thought about it. Those who spoke on her behalf at rallies helped her campaign but she also did major online events to talk with supporters directly too. MRQ was much more comfortable online. As to surrogates, there was an addition after the third primary contest in the form of Vice President Padley. With no presidential ambitions of her own, Padley came out strong for MRQ. She (like Nelson) helped with gaining the African-American vote which Kirk chased strongly. Iowa and Ohio both didn’t hold primaries recognised by the DNC. Both refused to play by the new rules. Unofficially, Kirk won them both and she really could have done with the numbers that came out of Ohio to try and catch up with. Kirk threw a lot at New York. Opinion polls ahead of the fourth round of voting, where Colorado & Illinois were also in contention, put Kirk and MRQ neck and neck for New York. The endorsement of Young was sought and Kirk had hoped to gain that so she could, maybe, stay in the race. Then, the night beforehand, Young endorsed Kirk. The Governor of New Jersey’s campaign got that late boost with feelings that if New York could be won, then the whole race might be just turned around… maybe.
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Stephanie Kirk would win the New York Primary, beating Maria RodrÃguez–Quiroz by just two points. While it was a big achievement for her, the narrow victory meant nothing overall. MRQ won seven other contests that same day – Colorado and Virginia among others – and had run up a huge vote tally. Campaign number-crunchers with the Kirk campaign knew that their candidate would have to win eight of the final ten races by a significant margin, and among them that would need a truly massive win in California: home ground for MRQ. Young’s endorsement might have tipped the balance but not by enough. New York’s lieutenant-governor had also been an active surrogate for MRQ and he was damn popular there. As to the endorsement for Kirk, the Senate Minority Leader had broken her earlier public neutrality (in private she’d always been for Kirk) and came out for the governor due to the terrifying belief that her and many establishment Democrats had by the middle of the primary race that MRQ was going to win the nomination. The thought had been that she was a flash-in-a-pan, that once primary voters of a moderate persuasion got voting in large numbers, they wouldn’t cast their votes for the radical that was MRQ and instead go for the sensible, dependable Kirk. MRQ’s democratic socialism was feared to be frightening to swing voters, independents and especially the moderate Republicans the Democrats would need to win the presidency. An MRQ victory was regarded as being something to certainly hand the White House over to the Republicans. In the fifth & final round of voting, in early June 2028, MRQ won her home state. She secured other big victories too, eventually winning the largest number of votes overall throughout the entire contest by seventeen points. Kirk conceded early, before all the final votes were counted in California. She’d done exceedingly well but just not good enough when MRQ had all of that momentum behind her and kept on defying expectations. Vice President Padley made many California appearances as a campaign surrogate for MRQ. President Walsh demanded that she cease doing so, as he had done when she had done in earlier rounds of voting, but she took no notice of him. The woman affectionately known as ‘America’s grandmother’, someone so many Democrats wouldn’t have minded seeing as an interim president had the Republicans managed to successfully impeach Walsh, broke entirely with him. She believed that the United States needed what MRQ had on offer in terms of her policy platform and so set out to help get her elected no matter what Walsh said that she and others in his administration couldn’t do. As to the Democratic Party establishment, they’d waited too late to anything and, by virtue of that new primary system, gave the contest to MRQ.
Democrats in Utah voted in the fifth round of primary contests. Usually, those there in that Red state were conservative-minded yet they voted overwhelmingly for MRQ. Utah was in the West and fast growing state. Salt Lake City had always been a strong bastion of support for the Democrats. Yet, in 2028, across the whole state there was a massive turnout. Establishment parts of the Democratic Party didn’t just worry about the socialist message of MRQ but also her Western focus. It was that that secured Utah for MRQ in the primary held there. Supporters who gathered together to watch an online post-victory speech by MRQ were attacked when at an outdoor gathering in Salt Lake City. Shots were fired at hundreds of young devotees of the congresswoman and then Molotov Cocktails were thrown too. Seven deaths and almost two dozen serious injuries occurred. Militia with the Free Americans were blamed for that attack while at the same time they made a show of themselves throughout states spread across the West – even California in the face of legal restrictions against their gatherings – in a clear effort to intimidate voters. In Washington state, which voted in the fourth round of the Democratic race, heavily for MRQ too, shots were fired back at militia members, killing a woman among them, with the culprits being Resistance members. That large and threatening organisation was mocked among extreme quarters of the Far Left for being all mouth and no trousers: that ceased after the shooting near Walla Walla. Having won his party’s nomination early on, Roberts was first out of the starting blocks on the national campaign against the Democrats. His campaign had an immense wealth to it, the majority of that in extensive corporate donations. There was open spending across the nation though the most money was directed towards Purple states. Dark money also flowed and was used to make underhand attacks against the Democrats too. The Republicans held their national convention early, almost at the beginning of July. The RNC believed that that would give them an advantage. At the event held in Charlotte, North Carolina, Mitchell was unveiled as Roberts’ vice presidential pick. As a Caucasian male, the pick was surprising in some quarters as it was thought that the Republicans would find a woman to run with Roberts yet in many other ways it wasn’t that surprising. The Republicans had changed dramatically in demographic terms throughout the 2020s but a white man was still felt necessary by many to be on the ticket less a certain section of voters stay at home. Mitchell was an early contender, long before the primaries, and did have some of a following too. After Charlotte, Roberts and Mitchell went on the campaign trail. They started criss-crossing the nation with their early start in that effort. It was truly believed among them and the Republican establishment that the contest was theirs when they were faced by the dynamic yet ultimately-flawed MRQ.
At the Democratic National Convention, MRQ unveiled her vice-presidential pick. It was André Anderson who she went with, the young African-American man who was New York’s lieutenant-governor. Anderson had previously been the public advocate for the Big Apple and had used that platform there in the nation’s largest city to get to Albany. A gubernatorial run was what many people had thought that he might try in his home state during 2030 but instead he ran alongside MRQ for the vice presidency. That made Mitchell the only Caucasian male of four top-tier presidential & vice presidential candidates: something quite amazing, many agreed. As to Anderson, MRQ knew that the DNC didn’t back her pick there but she had branched out on her own. The convention was in Phoenix with that booming Arizona city full of Democrats either in the MRQ camp fully or quietly gravely concerned that she was going to lose them the election. The support she had wasn’t considered the ‘right sort’ by so many establishment figures. After the convention, MRQ went back on the campaign trail. She did do some event appearances, all exclusively in the West, though retained the earlier method of events being on the internet. Those were big, coordinated events. At her home in Walnut Creek, MRQ would go out over Clipper, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, Twitter and YouTube to a national and global audiences. Her family would appear online with her: her activist wife Bree Davis and their two young twins in the form of Daniela & Reuben. Big celebrity stars, long-standing friends of MRQ such as the Hollywood actor Riley Drew and the singer Teyo, would show up too. MRQ had surrogates making campaign appearances and Anderson was immensely busy, but she stayed generally at home. As to campaign finances, like she had done in her congressional races, MRQ refused to take corporate cash for her presidential bid. The DNC took the money she wouldn’t and used it to aid her but in a manner which MRQ could say she didn’t want. Individual donations, small ones yet also large ones from rich backers (Teyo handed over a million dollars), publicly funded her campaign. Continued pressure remained upon MRQ following the convention to travel through the Purple states, even shore up support in Blue states that the DNC had concerns about when either Roberts or Mitchell made visits to them defying usual expectations, but MRQ did what she claimed was the best. Her connection with voters came online and she had surrogates out there. There was also the issue of her not wanting to be a polluter… something that the DNC Chair remarked didn’t seem to cause her an issue when she had those surrogates flying about everywhere!
Commentators had called the revelations about Walsh’s affair a Black Swan event. Several more stunning events that would come from seemingly nowhere, yet could be understood in reflection, occurred during the final months of the presidential election in 2028. Democrats were affected by them on the face of it with the Republicans seemingly uninvolved. The first was the early September (the first anniversary of the exposing of Walsh’s affair) bomb attack in Nebraska. Anderson flew into that state to make a ‘pit-stop speech’ while travelling between the Purple states of Michigan and Minnesota. Nebraska, like Maine, split its Electoral College votes and at least one, maybe even two if things went very well for the Democrats, were up for grabs in that Red state. An organised appearance was made after Anderson’s plane arrived where he spoke to an invited crowd just outside of Eppley Airport. He just began what he had to say when there was an immense explosion. The American Insurgent Army struck again with the Omaha Bomb being bigger than their one in DC the year before. How they got it into the event in the face of Secret Service protection would become a later scandal: they really shouldn’t have been able to get away with that. Forty-five deaths – men, women & children – occurred along with as many serious injuries. Anderson was among them. New York’s lieutenant-governor and the Democrat’s vice presidential pick for an election two months down the line was air-lifted out of the urban park and flown to the city’s main hospital. He was unconscious during that helicopter flight and would be placed in a medically-induced coma due to the scale of his injuries. Images out of Omaha gripped the nation. So many kids had been hurt there with shocking scenes broadcast. News on Anderson first said that he was dead with networks such as CNN, Fox News and MSNBC claiming that as fact when he clearly wasn’t. MRQ would make a video statement that night where she told the country of her shock and grief at the terrorist attack in Omaha. She denounced the AIA – something everyone, left and right, did – and also said that with there being hope that Anderson would live, he would remain on the ticket with her for the general election. A leak the next day of ‘suggested’ names put by the DNC to MRQ as possible replacement candidates went out, annoying many including her: she stuck with Anderson no matter what. Vigils for him and the other wounded victims of the Omaha Bombing, plus memorial ceremonies for the dead, would take place aplenty and throughout the nation.
A week after the attempted assassination of Anderson, MRQ attended the first presidential debate with Roberts. It was held in Denver and so she travelled to Colorado by rail. In one of the many questions put to them both, the issue of the latest Chinese threatening moves towards Taiwan was raised. Roberts gave a statesmanlike approach talking of the United States combating aggression to secure international peace. MRQ refused to take that approach where the talk was of possible war. She was a pacifist and had marched against Walsh’s air campaigns in the Middle East, and so had no intention of saying anything like what her Republican opponent did no matter what establishment Democrats wanted of her. Her response ruled out American military action unless the United States itself was attacked. Asked to clarify, forced to, she affirmed that should China attack Taiwan and US diplomacy at her direction failed to stop conflict, she wouldn’t take America to war. That played right into the Republican’s hands. Their overt and covert messaging – the latter being a ton of black propaganda – had been that MRQ was unfit to lead the nation and maintain America’s place in the world. She gave them all that they could want with her own words. Democrats were far from happy and among them was Maddie Chen. A Taiwanese national with joint American citizenship, Chen was a young woman who loved both of her homelands. Chen had reverted back to the V-Blogging that had first made her name in certain Democratic circles after having failed to win a primary contest for a New York congressional seat. She had a good following and had been active throughout the campaign online. Her criticism of MRQ had grown as the party’s presidential candidate went further and further left, more than Chen thought was survivable in election terms. In her mind, Chen had already given up on MRQ’s chances. There was vitriol from Chen in the aftermath of what MRQ said about Taiwan and those comments went beyond her usual following, even viral. Chen then received a private communication. It was a document dump. Shocked but not so thoroughly as she didn’t know what to do, Chen moved to at least try and confirm what she was given before she put it out in public. It appeared to check out and so, still mad at MRQ, Chen made that public. The documentation was proof that MRQ hadn’t been born in the United States and therefore wasn’t eligible for the presidency. ‘Birther’ talk had followed MRQ throughout her entire political career (smashed by California civil cases) and those deniable Republican attack ads online had made the same claim. However, Chen’s allegations had some substance to them. The V-Blogger wouldn’t backtrack on any of it all, even when savaged by previous supporters, and stuck by what she had put out into the public arena with detailed claims to assert that MRQ couldn’t legally become the 49th President. As to the candidate herself and her team, they brushed off Chen’s claims and were joined in that by the rest of the Democratic Party too. A Republican play was suspected there where a dupe had been used to make that late smear.
The third Black Swan, what would be to many an October Surprise in the 2028 presidential election, was the murder of Teyo in Miami Beach. Teyo was born Malik Sanchez: he was bi-racial with African-American and Hispanic heritage. Aged twenty-nine when he died, he was a global superstar with a dedicated following in a lot of ways tied to not just his music. Teyo had invented the Swagg genre, something that imitators wouldn’t copy well enough. He was a self-declared pan-sexual as well as a democratic socialist like his friend MRQ. Teyo didn’t live the life his financial circumstances would have allowed him to. There was no mansion, no private jet nor no bling. He gave the vast majority of his money away to good causes. That substantial donation to MRQ’s presidential campaign had come the same day that a charity in Miami (his hometown) for homeless, LGBTQ youth had received twice that amount. Advisers and music industry figures cringed at the giveaways of not just cash but his music itself. Just as Riley Drew – real name Garth Boreman – had done where that actor had been a major celebrity backer for MRQ, Teyo had acted as a campaign surrogate for her. However, he was in Florida the day he was shot not stumping for her but instead helping to promote his latest album: Hometown Blues. When visiting a radio station in Miami Beach, he was signing autographs and posing for cell-phone pictures when a young man pushed a small-calibre pistol against his lower back. Two bullets went into Teyo. He died right there in the corridor he was shot in, long before any help could reach him. The assassin made a run for it. There would be an immense manhunt for him by Miami-Dade Police Department officers, one which would later see Florida state troopers involved too. The news of the slaying of Teyo stunned the nation. It personally hit MRQ harder than the death of her father had done though that wasn’t something she made public. Out there in California, she believed that Teyo had been killed because of his politics. That made sense to her and it did to most Americans too. Those on the left and the right would agree that his outspoken politics had seen Teyo shot to death. The truth of the matter was that it was a personal issue but that was unrevealed throughout the rest of ‘28. Even if such a truth had come out, it wouldn’t have mattered. Senator Jorge Vargas, a Republican running for re-election there in Florida, had some unkind things to say about Teyo. He was generally an unkind figure so that wasn’t all that surprising. What would be though was the reaction across Florida by voters towards him personally and also the presidential race. Less than two weeks after the murder of Teyo, Americans went to the polls.