Politician/Jake Parker

Jake Parker is an American politician who is currently serving as the governor of Arizona. Parker was previously the President of the United States from 2069 to 2076 and was before that he was the senior Senator of Arizona, beginning his term in 2053 and ending it in 2068. A member of the Democratic Party, he served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 2021 to 2053 (from 2021 to 2048 as the representative from New Jersey's 6th congressional district and from 2049 to 2053 as the representative from Arizona's 3rd congressional district), and is currently the senior Senator of Arizona, being elected in 2053. He served as the House Majority Leader from 2029 to 2031 and 2035 to 2037, the House Minority Leader from 2037 to 2039 and 2049 to 2051, and the Speaker of the House from 2039 to 2048 and 2051 to 2053. He was also the Chair of the Progressive Democrats from 2027 to 2029 and 2033 to 2035 during his tenure in the House.

Born in Middlesex County, New Jersey, he started his career at the age of 18 and ran for Congress and quickly became a new member of the U.S. House of Representatives from New Jersey's 6th district in 2019. He would be the Chair of the Progressive Democrats multiple times and become House Minority Leader and House Majority Leader during his tenure.

Parker would remain in that seat for 14 terms before moving to Maricopa County, Arizona and running for election in Arizona's 3rd congressional district. He would only hold that position for 2 terms before setting his eyes on retiring Senator Salvador Rovirosa's seat in 2052.

After winning his Senate race, Parker would immediately be voted to be come the new and current Senate Majority Leader. He was the only Senate race in 2052 to flip from Republican to Democrat and would be the crucial win that was needed for the Democratic Party to keep control of the Senate at 50-50 with a new Democratic president being newly elected.

Up until the election of 2060, which saw the incumbent Democratic president Olive Tayler being term-limited due to the Twenty-second Amendment to the United States Constitution, the Democratic party was the majority party in both houses of Congress with a Democratic president in power. Since being elected to his Senate seat in 2052, Parker had been the Senate Majority Leader, being responsible for helping pass bills that would help reduce the national deficit which had been starting to grow the last few years. In the other Senate race for Arizona, the incumbent Byron Lomax decided against running for re-election which provided an opportunity for Parker's new protégé, Bernie de la Cruz, to run for the seat. This would end up not coming to fruition, as Tim Salas, the same man Parker defeated 2 years prior, would end up winning and flipping that seat to Republican.

After the results of the 2060 election, which prior to that had a Democratic-controlled Senate of 52-48, a Democratic-controlled House of Representatives of 226-206, and Democratic President Olive Tayler, Parker would become the Senate Minority Leader, due to the Democrats losing 3 seats, those being Arizona, Pennsylvania, and Florida, with the new layout being 49-51 Senate in Republican control. The House of Representatives would also lose a Democratic majority and be 202-233 in Republican control. In the presidential race, Wilford Hawley, the 3-term U.S. Senator of Alaska, would go on to defeat the current Governor of Nevada, Merv Fernandez 315-223. This would result in both the upper body and lower body of Congress as well as the presidency flipping to Republican Control, leading to a Republican trifecta.

Once Hawley became president for a second term, Parker began setting his eye on the presidency, although he didn't tell anyone yet. In the Senate elections prior to 2068, Parker would try his best to help the Democrats regain a majority in both chambers of Congress.

In 2062 the Senate would remain in Republican control at 49-51 but the House would flip to Democratic control at 230-205. In Parker's re-election campaign in 2064 for his Senate seat would be successful for him but not so much for the Democratic party. They would remain the minority in the Senate at 48-52 due to Georgia flipping to Republican control as well as lose control of the House at 208-227. His protégé, Bernie de la Cruz, was defeated by Tim Salas in the 2060 election for the U.S. Senate seat of Arizona, but would go on to defeat him in 2066 where Salas was running for re-election. Whereas 2064 was a good night for Parker but not his party, 2066 was a good night for both de la Cruz and the Democratic party, where in the Senate the Democrats were able to flip Arizona, Texas, Florida, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania to regain control of the Senate at 53-47. In the House they also saw them regain control and sit at 230-205.

Parker would then run in 2068 after promising his protégé, Bernie de la Cruz, that he would run for president if de la Cruz won his Senate race, which he successfully did. Parker would dominate in the primary elections and go on to face Republican nominee Jeffery Higgs, and defeat him 335-203, becoming the next President of the United States. In the Senate races that year there would be no change of seats and the Senate would remain in Democratic control at 53-47, and the House the Democrats would only lose 3 seats and therefore also be in Democratic control at 227-208. This means the first 2 years of Parker's presidency would be a Democratic trifecta, the exact opposite result of the 2060 presidential election.

In the 2070 midterm elections the Democrats would flip one seat in the Senate, Georgia, and have a 54-46 majority. In the House of Representatives, Democrats would lose 2 seats but remain in the majority with 225-210.

Four years later, Parker would successfully run for re-election with the same exact result, beating U.S. Senator from Missouri, Francis Moss, 335-203. The closest state was Georgia, which Moss was able to retain by just a total of 868 votes. No seats would change in either chamber of Congress, the Senate would remain 54-46 in Democratic control and the House of Representatives would remain 225-210 in Democratic control.

In the election of 2076, Parker would not be seeking a third term, due to term limits provided by the twenty-second amendment. The Senate would remain in Democratic control, although they would lose 2 seats, those being Pennsylvania and Florida, and have 52 seats to Republican's 48 seats. They would lose the control in the House of Representatives, losing 15 seats and have 214 Representatives to Republican's 221 Representatives.

In 2078, Parker announced he would be running for the governorship of Arizona, with incumbent and term-limited Democrat, Heidi Mahmud being unable to run for re-election. Parker would end up defeating Jimmy Newell, U.S. Representative of Arizona's 4th congressional district by 10 points and would become the next Governor or Arizona. One of Parker's protégés, Bernie de la Cruz, would go on to be re-elected as the Senator of Arizona during the same election cycle.

Early life and education
Born and raised in Middlesex, New Jersey, Jake Parker would complete his education in his hometown and graduate from Rutgers University-Newark with an undergraduate degree in Political Science before going onto getting a Masters Degree in Political Science. He became interested in politics at a young age and wanted to run for a seat House of Representatives. At the age of 18 he would run for the NJ-6 seat in the 2020 elections, and would go onto win the general election. While still being in school earning his degrees, he used that to his advantage in his marketing messages to voters saying that his views were what the public agreed with and that he saw a future for the new generation.

Personal life and family
Parker married Mallory Tammy Brown on July 24th, 2055. They have a daughter, Sofia who was born in 2056. Parker met Mallory shortly after moving to Arizona while he was at a charity event for his election campaign to Arizona's 3rd congressional district where she was working as one of the organizers. They dated for 7 years before getting married and having a child.

Mallory was a teacher of 30 years prior to meeting Parker and was getting ready to retire and enjoy life at home until Parker gave her the idea to run for public office like he had been doing for almost the same amount of time. Her first venture into politics was running for the open governor's seat of Arizona in 2062 which was being held by term-limited Democrat Lincoln Sandoval. Even with the help from her husband, she would end up losing to Republican Julius Dickerson, who was the current 4-term U.S. Representative of Arizona's 8th district. She would wait 2 years before running for public office at the age of 61 for the position of State Senator for Arizona's 4th legislative district. She would be victorious in the race and defeat Republican dietician G.Y. Duran by a margin of 4%.

U.S. House of Representatives from New Jersey's 6th district
After being elected to the House of Representatives in 2020, Parker would continue to hold the seat of NJ-6 up until 2048, for a total of 28 years. During this time, he would take the role of House Minority Leader, House Majority Leader, and Speaker of the House of Representatives. He would be responsible for helping pass a plethora of bills, such as federal drug courts, the legalization of cannabis, the replacement of income tax with a flat tax, comprehensive sex education, and universal health care. After heavy consideration, Parker decided against running for re-election in the 2048 election. Instead, he moved to the state or Arizona, where he had spent time there as a child over the summers with his extended family.

Moving to Arizona
Parker had been to Arizona many times over the years and typically spent the summer there with his aunt and uncle. Here Parker would first get interested in politics, due to his uncle being a local representative in Maricopa County. After Parker grew up and graduated from college, he would run for the House of Representative seat in New Jersey's 6th district before moving to Arizona in 2048 after his term expired.

U.S. House of Representatives from Arizona's 3rd district
Parker would run for Arizona's 3rd congressional district in the House of Representatives in 2048 and become the new representative of that district for 4 years. During that time, he would again become the House Minority Leader and Speaker of the United States House of Representatives. His short tenure would be due to the incumbent Senator, Salvador Rovirosa (R), deciding not to run for re-election. Parker would go on to defeat Vincente Haro (R) and Ivan Romero (I) in the general election of 2052 and become the new Democratic Senator of Arizona.

2078 United States Senate election in Arizona
Incumbent Senator of Arizona, Bernie de la Cruz was up for re-election and would be facing former U.S. Representative of Arizona's 6th district, Alan Josephs. de le Cruz would be campaigning alongside his mentor, Jake Parker, who was running for the open governor seat currently being held by term-limited Heidi Mahmud

In the primary elections, de la Cruz ran unopposed and Josephs would win in his primary election against 3 other opponents, one of those being Rafael Cardenas, who de la Cruz defeated in his previous Senate election in 2072. Therefore, de la Cruz and Josephs would be facing each other in the general elections.

In the general election, de la Cruz would go on to defeat Josephs by a margin of 4.6%, underperforming his mentor, Parker, by 5.4 points, who would go onto win his election for Governor of the Arizona that was going on concurrently. However, more voters would participate in the Senate election, 4,022,397 compared to 3,936,906 voters who would participate in the governor's race, a difference of 85,491.

Prior to this election, Senate control was 52-48 with the Democrats in control, with polling showing no races being flipped to the other party. Come election night, that would come to fruition and the Democrats would remain in control of the Senate with the majority of 52-48. In the House of Representatives, Democrats would win 21 seats and would regain control of the House with a majority of 235-200.

2072 United States Senate election in Arizona
Incumbent Senator of Arizona, Bernie de la Cruz was up for re-election and would be facing U.S. Representative of Arizona's 4th district, Rafael Cardenas. This would be de la Cruz's first re-election campaign for Senator since his mentor, Jake Parker, won the seat of the presidency.

In the primary elections, de la Cruz ran unopposed and Cardenas would win in his primary election against 3 other opponents, therefore de la Cruz and Cardenas would be facing each other in the general elections.

In the general election, de la Cruz would go on to defeat Cardenas by a margin of 4.7%, performing better than his first election 6 years prior. His mentor, Parker, would go onto win re-election for President of the United States that was going on concurrently.

Prior to this election, Senate control was 54-46 with the Democrats in control, with polling showing no races being flipped to the other party. Come election night, that would come to fruition and the Democrats would remain in control of the Senate with the majority of 54-46. In the House of Representatives, there would be no overall net change in seats and Democrats would remain in control with a majority of 225-210.

2066 United States Senate election in Arizona
Incumbent Senator of Arizona, Tim Salas was up for re-election and Parker encouraged de la Cruz to run for the seat for a second time. While he was reluctant to accept at first, after a few weeks of talking to each other, Parker and de la Cruz came to an agreement that de la Cruz would run for the seat again under one condition. If de la Cruz won his race, Parker would run for President of the United States, and Parker accepted. As Parker was currently 64 and would be 69 by the next time he was up for re-election, Parker indicated that it would be sooner rather than later.

In the primary elections, both de la Cruz and Salas ran unopposed and would therefore be facing each other in the general elections.

In the general election, de la Cruz would go on to defeat Salas by a margin of 1.9%, performing better than his mentor against Salas just 8 years prior. This would be the first protégé of Parker's that would initially lose an election for a senate seat and then win it the next time it was up for re-election. As promised by Parker and de la Cruz, Parker announced his candidacy for President of the United States in 2068 when incumbent President Wilford Hawley will be unable to run for re-election as he is term-limited.

Prior to this election, Senate control was 48-52 with the Republicans in control, meaning they could only afford to lose 2 seats and still be in the majority due to Hawley, a Republican, being president and therefore the Republican Vice President Ethan Tate would be the tie-breaking vote. Polls prior to the election showed the potential of 5 Republican controlled seats flipping, those being Arizona, Texas, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Florida. Democrats would go onto flip all 4 of those seats, giving them the majority of 53-47.

2060 - The Return of Tim Salas in the Arizona Senate Election
After losing in the 2058 General Election for United States Senator of Arizona against Parker, Tim Salas was determined to try again the next time a Senate seat in Arizona opened up, and he only had to wait 2 years. Incumbent Democratic Senator Byron Lomax had decided not to run for re-election, seeing as Parker's new protégé, veterinarian of 20 years, Bernie de la Cruz, was going to run for the seat. Due to the popularity of Parker and how much power and notoriety he had gained over his career, de la Cruz ran unopposed in the 2060 Senate Democratic Primary. Salas would run against Logan Durrant and Alec Barns and would garner 43% of the vote and become the Republican nominee for the Senate seat in Arizona.

Weeks preceding the 2060 elections showed polls describing what was known as a potential Red Wave election, which is when one party wins a substantial amount of seats in an election. Wave elections typically occur during midterm elections (elections not coinciding with a presidential election), but seeing as 2060 was not a midterm election year, it was not a typical Red Wave election. Instead, this occurred at the end of the incumbent Democratic President Olive Tayler's second term and was term-limited from running for a third term, by reason of the 22nd Amendment.

In polls of other states, there were 5 Democratic states that had the potential of flipping from Democratic to Republican, that being New Mexico, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Florida, and Arizona. Polls leading up to the election showed the possibility of Arizona and Pennsylvania being the most likely to flip, with the other states being more competitive for both parties.

Prior to the election the makeup of the Senate would be 52-48 with Democrats in control. Polls for the presidential race showed with high certainty that the next president would be the 3-term senator from Alaska, Wilford Hawley. Meaning that in order to maintain the majority in the Senate, the Democrats could only afford to lose one net seat. Come election night, New Mexico and Michigan both stayed in Democratic control, but Pennsylvania, Florida, and Arizona all flipped to Republican, giving the Republicans control of the Senate for the first time in 21 years, sitting at 51-49. Salas would go on to defeat de la Cruz in the general election by 3% and would become the next United States Senator of Arizona, alongside the man he lost to just two years prior, Jake Parker, who would now become the Senate Minority Leader for the first time after being Senate Majority Leader for as long as he had been in the Senate.

2082
After a successful first term as governor, Parker ran for re-election, facing no opposition on the Democratic side and would be the Democratic nominee for governor of Arizona.

On the Republican side, it would be Mike Mejia, Arizona's state senator for the 23rd state senate district from 2071-2073 and U.S. Representative for Arizona's 5th congressional district from 2077-2079. He also faced no opposition and would be the Republican nominee for governor of Arizona.

In the general election, polls showed Parker consistently in the lead, and that would be the case come election day. Parker would go on to defeat Mejia by a slightly larger gap than his previous election for governor. Parker would defeat Mejia 54.3% to 44%, a 10.3 point gap. No other governor races flipped parties, meaning that the previous races in the 2078 governor elections that flipped from Republican to Democrat remained with the Democratic party.

For comparison, Ohio, which flipped to the Democratic party in 2078 by only 1.3%, was won by incumbent Democrat governor Jeremy Emmerich by 5.8%. Georgia, which flipped to the Democratic party in 2078 by only 1.7%, was won by incumbent Democrat governor Caitlin Spooner by 6.4%, and Michigan, which flipped to the Democratic party in 2078 by 5.2%, was won by incumbent Democrat governor Odin Barber by 5.9%.

The State Senate would be in Republican control at 13-17 and the State House would be in Republican control at 27-33.

2078
After completing his second term as President of the United States, Parker set his eyes on one seat of public office he had not had the chance to hold, which was Governor.

The current governor of Arizona, Heidi Mahmud, a Democrat, was term-limited and would not be able to run for re-election. Thus, it became an open race on both sides, with Parker running against Luis Costello, the Democratic senator of Arizona from 2069-2071; Ben Q. Webb, an Assistant District Attorney from 2066-2078; and Harvey Villarreal, a prosecutor from 2041-2078 on the Democratic side.

On the Republican side, it would be Nick Sun, Arizona's state senator for the 20th state senate district from 2069-2077, and Jimmy Newell, U.S. Representative on Arizona's 4th congressional district from 2075-2079.

Parker would go on to win the Democratic nomination for governor and Jimmy Newell would win the Republican nomination for governor. Polls showed a constant lead for Parker going into election day. That would end up being the case, where Parker would defeat Newell 53.6% to 43.6%, a 10-point gap. While Arizona didn't flip parties in the governorship, 3 states flipped from Republican to Democrat, those being Ohio (by 1.3%), Georgia (by 1.7%), and Michigan (by 5.2%). The State Senate would be in Republican control at 13-17 and the State House would stand at 30-30.

Primary Elections
Parker ran unopposed and therefore was the Democratic nominee for President of the United States, running for his second term.

General Election
Please see the 2072 presidential election page for the presidential election. Parker would face off against current U.S. Senator of Missouri, Francis Moss. Parker would then go on to defeat Moss with 335 electoral votes to Moss' 203 electoral votes. Parker would win his second term and remain President of the United States.

Primary Elections
Please see the 2068 Democratic Party presidential primaries page for the Democratic primary elections. Parker would face off against 9 other opponents and would win 4,087 delegates (77%) and win the most votes in each primary election.

General Election
Please see the 2068 presidential election page for the presidential election. Parker would face off against current governor of Arkansas, Jeffery Higgs. Parker would then go on to defeat Higgs with 335 electoral votes to Higgs' 203 electoral votes. Parker would become the next President of the United States, replacing term-limited Republican president, Wilford Hawley.

2064
This election would be the first Senate election that Parker would be facing a Primary challenger for the Democratic nominee for the Senator of Arizona. He would end up facing Gladys V. Johnson, the former Governor of Arizona from 2047-2055 as well as candidate on 2052 for the Democratic Presidential Primary. Since his unsuccessful bid for President, Johnson had not gone back to holding any office and this would be his first time back in the national spotlight, potentially for the last time.

At the end of the primary election for the nominees for Senator of Arizona, Parker would go on to defeat Johnson by a very impressive 27%, and would be facing Republican business analyst & investment banker, Luca Grande and Independent lobbyist, Carl Herber. Neither Grande nor Herber faced opposition in their primary races.

In the general election, Parker would go onto defeat Grande by 6.4% and remain the Senator of Arizona. Compared to Parker's last election in 2058, Parker was able to flip Navajo County and Yuma County blue and slightly weaken Republican's hold on Gila County.

While Parker was able to retain his seat in the Senate, the Democrats were still in the minority, as Republicans were able to flip the open seat of Georgia which was being occupied by a retiring Democrat, 1-term K.G. Bur who was 69 years old. This would cause the Democrats to remain in the minority at 48-52.

2058
In what would be Parker's first time defending a Senate seat as an incumbent, it would be a test to see whether or not his work in the Senate was a success or not thus far. He would have no opponents in the Democratic Primary and would therefore be heading to the general election to face Ned Macias, an independent, and one of three Republican opponents: Tim Salas, Ned Cowell, or Victor Arcos. Salas would end up garnering 45% of the votes in the Republican Primary and would face Parker in the general election.

While the race was very close, Parker would go on to defeat Salas by 1.52%. This election year would also see Georgia flipping from Republican control back into Democratic control and would make the Senate 52-48 with a Democratic majority.

This would not be the last time Salas would run for a Senate seat in Arizona.

2052
With the United States Senate at 51-49 in Democratic control prior to this election, and with polls from swing states such as Georgia and North Carolina (both with Democratic senators) being disadvantageous for the Democratic Party, there was a high likelihood that the Democrats would lose control of the Senate. Parker saw this as the perfect opportunity to move from the House of Representatives to the Senate, while also helping keep the Senate competitive.

While the Democratic Party had been the party in control of the Senate most of the time, the last few cycles prior to this election was showing dwindling support. From the year 2044 until 2052, the Democratic Party either lost seats in the Senate or managed to only retain the ones they had, without flipping any Republican seats to Democratic control. Parker felt this was the perfect time to run for the open Senate seat, facing off against Barrett Sierra, O.X. Vega, and Jan Jenkins in the Democratic Primary, garnering 42.3% of the vote and becoming the Democratic nominee. On the Republican side, Vincente Haro would defeat Emmett Aldridge and Norman I. Lyakhova to become the Republican nominee. Ivan Romero was the only Independent to run and therefore was the Independent nominee.

In the general election for the open Senate seat, Parker would go on to defeat Haro by a margin of 3.5%, and was the only seat to flip from Republican to Democrat in the 2052 Senate elections. Georgia and North Carolina, which had both had Democratic incumbent senators prior to this election, flipped to Republican control, as a result of this election. Parker's win would be the crucial win the Democrats needed in order to have a split 50-50 Senate, with a newly elected Democratic president, Olive Tayler, confirming the Democrats would stay in the majority.