List of fictional United States presidencies of historical figures (K–L)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Lists of fictional presidents of the United States
A–B C–D E–F
G–H I–J K–M
N–R S–T U–Z
Fictional presidencies of
historical figures
A–B C–D E–G
H–J K–L M–O
P–R S–U V–Z

The following is a list of real or historical people who have been portrayed as

alternate history
scenario, or occasionally for humorous purposes. Also included are actual U.S. presidents with a fictional presidency at a different time and/or under different circumstances than the one in actual history.

K

Kim Kardashian

Wynton Kelly

  • In the German Tageschau for the Wende Gruppe Wiedervereinigungsfest, Wynton Kelly was President of the United States in the 1970s, during a crisis between the US and the Soviet Union around the "Herald des Freien Westens", a communication satellite. The secret services of both sides of the Iron Curtain claimed that the other side had stolen crucial parts of the satellite for military purposes. Kelly gave a broadcast speech in which he warned the Soviet leaders to immediately deliver to stolen parts back to the US under threat of a nuclear attack. In return General Bravonov, the Soviet leader, warned the US to return their parts of the satellite. The broadcast speech can be viewed on YouTube under the tag "Wiedervereinigungsfest".

Joseph P. Kennedy Sr.

Joseph P. Kennedy Jr.

John F. Kennedy

John F. Kennedy Jr.

  • In the 2019 alternate history short-story
    New Yorker Hotel
    , thanking his supporters, and taking moment to thank Carolyn for convincing him not to fly them out to Martha's Vineyard he realized years later just how inexperienced he was, and that this victory was probably because of her.

Patrick Bouvier Kennedy

Robert F. Kennedy

Ted Kennedy

  • Mentioned in The Simpsons episode "Bart to the Future" and was president sometime before Lisa Simpson.
  • A list of US Presidents since the 1950s in
    Future History
    timeline) as Woodrow Wilson, Harding, Coolidge, Hoover, Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, Kennedy, Kennedy, Kennedy, Kennedy, Kennedy, Kennedy, ..., Neemiah Scudder Interregnum.
  • Elected president in 1980 in the first edition of Jeffrey Archer's novel "Shall We Tell the President?". He had narrowly managed to defeat Jimmy Carter on the fifth ballot at the Democratic National Convention. He picked Arkansas Senator Dale Bumpers as his running mate and they defeated Illinois Governor James R. Thompson by 147,000 votes in the popular vote and became the 40th President. (In the revised edition, Florentyna Kane, from Archer's "Kane and Abel" and "The Prodigal Daughter" was the president.)
  • In the first season of the television show For All Mankind, set in an alternate timeline where the Soviet Union reached the moon first in 1969, Ted Kennedy became the 38th president of the United States in 1972, having used congressional hearings into NASA's failings as a springboard for his presidential campaign. Kennedy pardons former President Nixon for any and all crimes he may have committed in relation to the break-in at the Watergate Office Building. Though Kennedy succeeds in winning the ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment in 1974 (using contracts with NASA as a bargaining chip to secure ratification from holdout states such as Illinois, which resulted in the Saturn V disaster), his presidency is derailed by his extramarital affair with Mary Jo Kopechne. It is mentioned through newsreel footage that he lost re-election to Ronald Reagan in 1976.
  • In the V for Vendetta comic series by Alan Moore and David Lloyd, Ted Kennedy was mentioned as being the incumbent President when global nuclear war broke out between the United States and the Soviet Union in the late 1980s, rendering continental Europe and Africa uninhabitable and precipitating the establishment of a totalitarian police state in Britain under Norsefire.

Rev. Dr Martin Luther King Jr.

  • In an episode of What If? on the
    Vice President under Robert Kennedy and succeeded him as the 38th president in September 1969. Major of his initiatives are détente and continue program of Great Society (but under a new name). He was assassinated in 1971. He was succeeded by Vice President George McGovern
    .
  • The alternate history novel The Two Georges by Richard Dreyfus and Harry Turtledove is set in a timeline where the American Revolution never occurred and the Thirteen Colonies along with the rest of British America were unified into the North American Union, a self-governing dominion within the British Empire. King-Emperor Charles III had appointed Martin Luther King as the Governor-general of the North American Union, who had to deal with the political ramifications of the theft and ransom of the titular painting and the attempted assassinations of the King-Emperor, both of which were in part orchestrated by the Franco-Spanish Holy Alliance.

Joseph Rudyard Kipling

  • In The Alteration by Kingsley Amis, the Reformation never occurs and thus Catholicism and the Papacy dominate much of the world. Protestant or 'schismatic' theology is restricted to the breakaway Republic of New England which is governed by a 'First Citizen'. Kipling is mentioned as having served as First Citizen between 1914 and 1918.

L

Robert M. La Follette, Sr.

Fiorello H. La Guardia

Rose Wilder Lane

Lyndon LaRouche

Le Duc Tho

Francis Lightfoot Lee

Robert LeFevre

Curtis LeMay

Joe Lieberman

Rush Limbaugh

Abraham Lincoln

. (By definition, any different course or outcome of the American Civil War would have involved a different life and presidency for Abraham Lincoln.)

Charles Lindbergh

Belva Ann Lockwood

Huey Long

References

  1. ^ "Confederate Geographic: Newfoundland Missile Crisis", CSA the movie, archived from the original on April 27, 2012.
  2. ^ "The Probability Broach".