User:Vitamin vic

I just try to keep statistics consistent and correct and sometimes add information (with proper citations). I am REALLY into politics also!

Kenneth Alexander Scott Colley (born April 21st, 2005) is an American politician and businessman who served as the 51st president of the United States from 2053 to 2061. A member of the Colley family and Republican Party, he previously served as the 75th governor of Ohio from 2047 to 2052.

While in his twenties, Colley volunteered for many GOP campaigns such as the election of President Nikki Haley in the 2024 election and even becoming campaign manager for then Lt. Governor Jon Husted in the 2026 Ohio gubernatorial election. After graduating from the University of Cincinnati in 2029, he started a political consulting firm. For a brief period from 2032 to 2037, Colley worked as chief political analyst for FOX News. Colley went on to win an upset victory in the 2046 Ohio gubernatorial election in the 2046 midterm elections, which saw Democrats sweeping into power across the board. As governor, Colley successfully sponsored legislation for rebuilding the state’s education department, continuing clean energy policies, reformed criminal justice, rebuilding infrastructure, and opening Ohio up at a state for businesses to start and flourish. In the 2052 presidential election, Colley defeated then New York Senator Elizabeth Ross in an extremely lopsided contest, winning states for the GOP that hadn’t gone for them in decades.

Upon taking office, Colley signed a major energy bill and education reform package giving parents more of a say in their child’s education. Colley also balanced the budget in years 2055 and 2056. In 2058 Colley reformed government auditing, and signed the Transparent Act which gave Americans more information on how the government was spending taxpayer money. The irony of the passage of the act was when critics pointed out the fact the administration was using money to reinforce the US Mexico border wall. In 2060, after rising tensions with Russia and the EU, Colley sat down with Russian President Natasha Artemievna in efforts to find common ground. All changed when later that year it was found that the Russian government was paying terrorist groups across the region to infiltrate the EU in hopes that they would back down. This would later be known as the Kremlin Cutthroat Scandal. After what his advisors called “many sleepless nights” and a harsh response from Colley, Russia stepped down briefly and stopped pushing towards war with the EU. Colley is credited for the building of strong foreign relationships and in the mind of some the reason the United States did not enter war with Russia in the summer of 2060.

Colley was re-elected president in 2056, defeating Democrat Ryan Goldstein in the largest electoral victory since the 1820 election. During his second term, Colley reached multiple free trade agreements. He appointed Marie Canton and Terrance Sowell to the Supreme Court. Later in his second term, he signed into law comprehensive immigration reform, and signed a bipartisan law that targeted loopholes in the Second Amendment; while protecting the right to bear arms profusely. Colley was the first incumbent president in a midterm to gain seats in the house since President George W. Bush in the 2002 Midterm Elections. The administration overall saw few scandals, but the biggest was most likely the Shush Up Scandal that broke in late 2059. Journalist Harvey Todd wrote an alarming Op-ed piece after two years of research stating the president in the 2052 and 2056 elections set up a group of his advisers to go out and find any cases of potential critics of the president trying to release information from his past that could “hurt” him in his elections. It was found that even as president, Colley continued the investigation in which many private citizens were found to be key targets of the administration and had a “close eye” kept on then incase of any bad press they could speak out upon. The president responded to the Op-ed saying he may have done some things during the campaign to “hide youthful mistakes, that were irrelevant and not important.” While receiving some backlash, overall the event was overlooked as an extreme form of campaigning and did not remain in the public circle for long.

After finishing his second term, Colley returned to Ohio, where his presidential library opened in 2063. He was among the most popular presidents in U.S. history, having received the highest recorded approval ratings in the history of presidential approval polling. His presidential high point being 94% and low point being 58%; his term average was 73% approved. Colley’s presidency has been rated as above-average, and public and scholarly favorability of his presidency have remained consistent since leaving office.