Appalachia

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| '''Majority Leader''' || [[Blake Emerson]] ([[Republican Party|R]]-VA)
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Current revision as of 02:58, 7 August 2007

Appalachia
Capital Columbus
Largest city Columbus
Notable Metropolitan Areas Alexandria-Northern Virginia, VA (split with Mid-Atlantic and Washington D.C.)
Cleveland, OH
Cincinatti, OH-KY
Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Hampton Roads, VA
Indianapolis, IN
Columbus, OH
Louisville, KY-IN
Richmond, VA
Charlotte, NC (split with Dixie)
Dayton, OH
Akron, OH
Raleigh, NC
Toledo, OH (split with Heartlands)
Regions States
Shenandoah Valley Virginia
North Carolina
West Virginia
Ohio Valley Ohio
Indiana
Kentucky
Area  Ranked ?th
 - Total 242,475 sq mi
628,005 km²
 - % water 5.59
Population  Ranked ?th
 - Total 40,315,459 (2000 Census)
 - Density 166.27/sq mi 
64.20/km² (?th)
Governor Whitney Mason (D-NC)
Lt. Governor Gabrielle Garcia (D-OH)
Majority Leader Blake Emerson (R-VA)
Minority Leader Lt. Governor
U.S. Senators
 - Shenandoah Valley Avery Passerday (R-NC)
Calum Daniels (D-VA)
 - Ohio Valley Terry Hughes (R-OH)
Tim Kent (R-OH)
Abbreviation APP
Web site Appalachia Government

The Superreion of Appalachia comprises of the Ohio Valley and Shenandoah Valley regions, consisting of six States. Along with Big Sky Country and Mississippi Valley, it is one of the only superregions which lacks a single-state region within it.

It was named, presumably, after the Appalachian Mountains, which approximately form the boundary between the two constituent regions.

Contents

[edit] Adjacent Superregions

[edit] Politics

Appalachia is an overall Republican-leaning superregion, with Republicans holding an overall 3.5 point advantage in party registration over the Democrats. Nearly all of the Republican margin of comfort comes in the Ohio Valley, where Republicans hold a 6.1 point advantage; in the Shenandoah Valley, the GOP holds a miniscule 0.2 point advantage, making the Shenandoah Valley one of the most evenly divided regions in the nation. As a result, the Ohio Valley tends to be strongly Republican, the Shenandoah Valley has been a heavily contended battleground, and Appalachia as a whole leans Republican.

[edit] Election 2008


Appalachia Governor
Party Candidate Votes  %
Democratic Chris Harrison 5,407,996 48.89%
Republican Peter Vandenberg 5,653,581 51.1%
Total 11,061,577

Ohio Valley Senate, Class 3
Party Candidate Votes  %
Democratic Michael Rubenstein 4,024,563 22.22%
Republican Tim Kent 1,149,749 77.78%
Total 5,174,312

[edit] Election 2010


Shenandoah Valley, Class One
Party Candidate Votes  %
Democratic Chris Harrison 3,207,718 49.6%
Republican Richard Schneiter 3,200,493 49.5%
Total 6,408,211

Ohio Valley, Class One
Party Candidate Votes  %
Democratic Jax Jaxal 3,466,852 40.6%
Republican Terry Hughes 5,002,081 58.5%
Total 8,468,933

[edit] Election 2012


Appalachia Governor
Party Candidate Votes  %
Democrat Whitney Mason 7,914,071 54.8%
Republican Peter Vandenberg 6,453,825 44.7%
Total 14,367,896

Shanendoah Valley, Class One
Party Candidate Votes  %
Democrat Daniel Smith 3,077,909 43.9%
Republican Avery Passerday 3,906,440 55.7%
Total 6,984,349

Shanendoah Valley, Class Two
Party Candidate
Democrat Calum Daniels
Republican William Tavington
Default Win

[edit] Office Holders

Year Governor Lt. Governor Legislature
Name Party State Name Party State GOP DNC Maj. Leader Min. Leader
2009 Peter Vandenberg Republican Ohio Caroline Andrews1 Republican Indiana 51 50 Lt. Gov Whitney Mason
2010 Marcus Milam2 Republican North Carolina
Vacant
2011 48 53 Whitney Mason Vacant
2012
2013 Whitney Mason Democrat North Carolina Gabrielle Garcia Democrat Ohio 51 50 Blake Emerson Lt. Governor
2014
2015
2016


Senators
Year Ohio Valley Shenandoah Valley
Class 1 Class 3 Class 1 Class 2
2008 Terry Hughes
(R-OH)
Vacant James Olsen
(R-VA)
Jared Daniels
(D-NC)
2009 Tim Kent
(R-OH)
Richard Schneiter3
(R-NC)
2010 Keith Carter4
(D-VA)
2011 Chris Harrison6
(D-VA)
Richard Schneiter5
(R-NC)
2012 Avery Passerday
(R-NC)
2013 Calum Daniels
(D-VA)

Footnotes

  • 1 Caroline Andrews was eaten by a leopard while visiting Yemen in 2009.
  • 2 Marcus Milam vanished under mysterious circumstances sometime in 2010.
  • 3 Richard Schneiter was appointed by Governor Vandenberg after James Olsen resigned in 2009.
  • 4 Jared Daniels became a game administrator; Keith Carter was appointed by the Democratic Party to fill the remainder of Daniels' seat.
  • 5 Richard Schneiter was appointed by Governor Vandenberg after Keith Carter vanished under mysterious circumstances in late 2011. Schneiter resigned in late 2012 before the election.
  • 6 Chris Harrison was killed after stepping on a landmine in the DMZ in July 2012. Avery Passerday was appointed by Governor Vandenberg to the vacancy.
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