Christian Bo: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox officeholder
{{Infobox officeholder
| image                = Bo Portrait.jpg
| image                = Bo Portrait.jpg
| imagesize            = 250px
| imagesize            = 290px
| name                = Christian Bo
| name                = Christian Bo
| office              = [[Vice President of the United States]]
| office1              = [[Senate|United States Senator]] <br> from [[Jefferson]]
| term_start           = November 10, 2020
| term_start1          = January 19, 2022
| term_end            =  
| term_end1            =
| president            = [[Sandoval]]
| predecessor1        = [[Aegues Phoenix]]
| predecessor         = [[Cabin]]
| successor1           =
| successor            =
| term_start2          = January 14, 2022
| office1             = [[Senate Majority Leader]]
| term_end2            = April 14, 2022
| term_start1         = October 21, 2020
| predecessor2        = [[Sysadmin]]
| term_end1           = November 10, 2020
| successor2          = [[Sysadmin]]
| predecessor1         = [[Epsilon]]
| term_start3         = July 15, 2021
| successor1           = [[Howard Elkridge]]
| term_end3            = August 11, 2021
| office2             = [[Senate Minority Leader]]
| predecessor3        = [[Valerie]]
| term_start2         = September 13, 2020
| successor3          = [[Sysadmin]]
| term_end2           = October 21, 2020
| office4             = 59th [[President of the United States]]
| predecessor2         = [[Valerie]]
| term_start4         = March 12, 2021
| successor2           = [[Ricca]]
| term_end4           = July 15, 2021
| office3             = [[President Pro Tempore of the United States Senate]]  
| vicepresident4      = [[Ian Bellinger]]
| term_start3         = October 12, 2020
| predecessor4        = [[Sandoval|Omarosa Sandoval]]
| term_end3           = October 13, 2020
| successor4          = [[Howard Elkridge]]
| predecessor3         = [[James Order]]
| office5              = 59th [[Vice President of the United States]]
| successor3           = [[Drunk]]
| term_start5          = November 10, 2020
| office4              = [[Senate|United States Senator]] <br> from [[Dixie]]
| term_end5            = March 12, 2021
| term_start4         = September 10, 2020
| president5          = [[Sandoval|Omarosa Sandoval]]
| term_end4            = November 10, 2020
| predecessor5         = [[Cabin|Cabin Fever]]
| predecessor4        = [[Trash]]
| successor5           = [[Ian Bellinger]]
| successor4          = [[Ethan Armstrong]]
| office6             = [[Supreme Court of the United States|Associate Justice of the Supreme Court<br>of the United States]]
| office5              = [[White House Chief of Staff]]
| term_start6         = April 15, 2022
| term_start5          = September 29, 2020
| term_end6           = December 17, 2022
| term_end5            = November 10, 2020
| predecessor6         = [[Sandoval|Omarosa Sandoval]]
| president5          = [[Garland]]
| successor6          =
| predecessor5        = [[Arkenstone]]
| office7              = 1st Chief Judge of the [[United States District Court for Dixie, Jefferson, and Puerto Rico|United States District Court for Dixie and Jefferson]]
| successor5          = [[Computerguy15]]
| term_start7          = August 11, 2021
| office6              = [[Speaker of the Dixie General Assembly]]
| term_end7            = December 23, 2021
| term_start6          = September 26, 2020
| predecessor7        = ''Office Established''
| term_end6            = November 9, 2020
| successor7           = [[Rémi Carton]]
| predecessor6        = [[Phoenix]]
| office8             = [[President Pro Tempore of the United States Senate|President pro tempore of the United States Senate]]
| successor6          = [[Miguel]]
| term_start8          = January 15, 2022
| office7              = Member of the <br> [[Dixie General Assembly]]
| term_end8            = March 14, 2022
| constituency7        = 1st District (14th Assembly – present)
| predecessor8        = [[Cabin|Cabin Fever]]
| term_start7          = August 5, 2020
| successor8          = [[Ian Bellinger]]
| term_end7            =  
| term_start9         = October 12, 2020
| predecessor7        = [[Andrew Blaze]]
| term_end9           = October 13, 2020
| successor7          =  
| predecessor9         = [[James Order]]
| office8              = [[Dixie State Cabinet|Dixie Secretary of State]]
| successor9           = [[Drunk]]
| term_start8          = October 10, 2020
| office10            = [[Senate|Senate Majority Leader]]
| term_end8            = November 9, 2020
| term_start10        = March 15, 2022
| predecessor8        = Drunk
| term_end10          = April 8, 2022
| successor8          = [[Randy Rhombus]]
| predecessor10        = [[Tedd Ddet]]
| office9              = [[Dixie State Cabinet|Dixie Secretary of Internal Affairs]]
| successor10         = [[Valerie]]
| term_start9          = July 3, 2020
| term_start11        = October 21, 2020
| term_end9            = October 10, 2020
| term_end11          = November 10, 2020
| predecessor9        = Jason Miner
| predecessor11        = [[Epsilon Leclair]]
| successor9          = John
| successor11          = [[Howard Elkridge]]
| office10             = Chairman of the <br> [[Second Libertarian Party|Libertarian Party]]
| office12            = [[Senate|Senate Minority Leader]]
| term_start10         = November 13, 2020
| term_start12        = September 13, 2020
| term_end10           = January 16, 2021
| term_end12          = October 21, 2020
| predecessor10       = [[Valerie]]
| predecessor12        = [[Valerie]]
| successor10         = [[Howard Elkridge]]
| successor12          = [[Ricca|Valentin Ricca]]
| office13            = [[Senate|United States Senator]] <br> from [[Dixie]]
| term_start13        = September 10, 2020
| term_end13          = November 10, 2020
| predecessor13        = [[Trash]]
| successor13          = [[Ethan Armstrong]]
| office14            = [[White House Chief of Staff]]
| term_start14        = September 29, 2020
| term_end14          = November 10, 2020
| president14          = [[Garland|Lyndon Garland]]
| predecessor14        = [[Arkenstone]]
| successor14          = [[Computerguy15]]
| office15            = 94th [[United States Attorney General]]
| term_start15        = July 23, 2021
| term_end15          = August 10, 2021
| predecessor15        = [[Sandoval|Omarosa Sandoval]]
| successor15          = [[Computerguy15]]
| office17            = [[Speaker of the Dixie General Assembly]]
| term_start17        = September 26, 2020
| term_end17          = November 9, 2020
| predecessor17        = [[Aegeus Phoenix]]
| successor17          = [[Miguel|Miguel Wazowski]]
| office18             = Member of the <br> [[Dixie General Assembly]]
| constituency18      = 1st District (14th Assembly – 16th Assembly)
| term_start18         = August 5, 2020
| term_end18           = February 9, 2021
| predecessor18       = [[Andrew Blaze]]
| successor18         = [[Moonguy|John Moonguy]]
| birth_name          = Christian Ludacris Bo
| birth_date          = March 10, 1979
| birth_place          = Orlando, Florida
| birth_place          = Orlando, Florida
| party                = [[Second Libertarian Party|Libertarian Party]]
| party                = Independent (August 2021-present) <br> [[Commonwealth]] (December 2021-April 2022) <br> [[Libertarian-Republican Party]] (August 2020-August 2021)
| education            = Univerity of Tampa ([[Political Science|BS]])
| education            = Univerity of Tampa ([[Political Science|BS]]) <br> University of Miami ([[Law|JD]])
| awards              = [[Presidential Medal of Freedom]] (2021) <br> [[Servant of the People]] (2021) <br> [[Dixie Colonelcy]] (2021) <br> [[Congressional Gold Medal]] (2022)
}}
}}
'''Christian Ludacris Bo''' is an American politician who currently serves as [[Vice President of the United States]]. He previously served as a U.S. Senator from the State of Dixie, as well as Senate Majority Leader, Minority Leader, and [[President Pro Tempore|President pro tempore]].
'''Christian Ludacris Bo''' (born March 10, 1978) is an American attorney, politician, jurist and businessman who is serving as the junior [[Senate|United States Senator]] from [[Jefferson]] since January, 2023. A [[Libertarian-Republican Party|Libertarian]], [[Libertarian-Republican Party|Libertarian-Republican]], independent and now [[Radical Republican]], Bo served as the 59th President of the United States from March to July, 2021, as the 59th Vice President of the United States under [[Sandoval|Omarosa Sandoval]] from November, 2020, to March, 2021, as a [[Supreme Court of the United States|Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States]] from April to December, 2022, served as the first Chief Judge of the [[United States District Court for Dixie, Jefferson, and Puerto Rico|United States District Court for Dixie and Jefferson]] from August to December, 2021, represented Jefferson in the Senate from July to August, 2021 and January to April, 2022, and represented Dixie in the Senate from September to November, 2020.  


==Early Life, Education, Career==
==Early Life, Education, Career==
Bo was born in Orlando, Florida to unmarried parents, Linda Wilton and Gary Bo. He also has one brother, Dominic Bo, and has said that he was close with his family throughout his childhood despite his parent’s lack of marriage. They went on to move to Winter Garden, Florida, where Bo went on to graduate from West Orange High School.
Bo was born in Orlando, Florida on March 10, 1978 to Linda Wilton and Gary Bo. He is the elder brother to one sibling, Dominic Bo. His family later moved to Winter Garden, Florida where he attended and graduated from West Orange High School. Going on to attend the University of Tampa, he earned a B.S. in political science.


He went on to attend the University of Tampa in which he earned a B.S. in political science. Following that, he went on to work for various political campaigns throughout the State of Florida, where he gained deep knowledge and skill about politics and managing campaigns for office, which he has said has aided him in his various political campaigns.
After a year working on electoral campaigns across central and southern Florida, he later attended the University of Miami School of Law, earning a J.D. degree. He went on to practice law in a firm based out of Tampa, Florida. Bo then worked as a political consultant before his entry into politics himself, sparked by an appointment to be Secretary of Internal Affairs in [[Dixie]] by Governor [[Sandoval|Omarosa Sandoval]].
==Dixie General Assembly==
Having sought election to the Dixie General Assembly in the first district in August, 2020, Bo faced Trash, Andrew Blaze, and John Smith. He won with 52% of the vote, with Trash taking 30% and the other candidates taking the rest. He passed legislation to mandate LGBTQ+ education in schools; expand access to contraception; legalize prostitution; amend license plate regulation; ensure automatic voter registration; expand rehabilitation programs in prions; and ratify the Choice Amendment. Near the end of the session, when Speaker Phoenix was faced with a motion to vacate the chair, Bo was elected without opposition to the Speakership.
 
Re-elected with over 86% of the vote in October, 2020, Bo was further re-elected to the Speakership with support from both the left and right. He passed legislation to institute ranked choice voting; protect the rights of transgender inmates in prisons; establish the Department of Environmental Protection; promote health education efforts; investigate the Dixie Secession Plot; and enact of a land value tax. Bo forewent the Speakership in November, 2020, upon his election to the Vice Presidency, and he was succeeded by [[Miguel Wazowski]] in the post. Bo was re-elected in December, 2020, with 57% of the vote, against [[Ethan Matthias]] and, in his final term in office, passed legislation to raise Dixie’s minimum wage, and reform voting in the General Assembly. Refusing to seek election to a fourth term in February, 2020, Bo was succeeded by [[John Moonguy]].
==U.S. Senate==
===Dixie===
Bo sought election to the Senate in Dixie in September, 2020, and faced the incumbent, Trash. Winning with 50.79% of the vote, Bo was sworn in to the Senate on September 10, 2020. Bo served as Senate Minority Leader in a caucus of just Senator [[Valerie]] and himself.  


Following the 2018 governmental restructuring within the United States, Bo took a small leave of absence from his work within politics and opted to spend a majority of the time up until 2020 with his family, enjoying a private life and career. However, in July of 2020, Dixie Governor Sandoval appointed Bo to serve as the Secretary of Internal Affairs for the State of Dixie in which he oversaw a multitude of things within that Department.  
Notably during his tenure, he was briefly elected President pro tempore, in an act which would go on to cause [[Gavelgate]]. After partaking in the filibuster with Senator Valerie for 12 days, Bo became Senate Majority Leader in a joint caucus composed of Libertarians and Social Democrats to end the filibuster. Bo resigned from the Senate in November, 2020, and was succeeded by [[Ethan Armstrong]].
===Jefferson===
====July, 2021====
Bo sought election to the Senate in Jefferson in July, 2021, and won without opposition, taking 74.62% of the vote. He swore in on July 15, 2021, and succeeded [[Valerie]].  


==Dixie General Assembly==
Bo resigned to join the [[United States District Court for Dixie, Jefferson, and Puerto Rico]] on August 11, 2021. He was succeeded by [[Sysadmin]].
Bo was initially elected to the Dixie General Assembly in the August 2020 state elections to represent Dixie’s First district, which at the time consisted of the regions of Texas and Oklahoma. In this election, Bo faced Senator [[Trash]], Representative [[John Smith]], and the incumbent Assemblyman [[Andrew Blaze]]. Many originally expected the race to go for Sen. Trash due to his experience and magnitude within the state. However, Bo outspent Trash by $30,000 and went on to win the election with 52% of the vote, with Trash getting just 30% and Smith and Blaze taking the rest, and the election results were a shock to many.
====January, 2022====
Following his resignation from the District Court for Dixie and Jefferson, Bo sought election to the Senate in January, 2022 as an independent, and won against Sysadmin with 50.54% of the vote. He was sworn in on January 14, 2022 and caucused independently in the 139th session. He was further elected [[President Pro Tempore|President pro tempore]] of the Senate without opposition. During this term, he submitted legislation to rename various entities named after President Franklin D. Roosevelt, guarantee breaks that are paid for workers employed by businesses engaging in interstate commerce, and establish the federal budget for the February-March 2022 fiscal period. Both bills passed with bipartisan support and was signed by President [[Jeb!]]. In the 140th session, he formed a right-wing caucus with [[Valerie]], [[Cabin|Cabin Fever]] and [[Ian Bellinger]] and served as Senate Majority Leader, in the first right-wing federal trifecta in nearly two years. Bo resigned from Majority Leader on April 8, 2022, and from the Senate as a whole on April 14, 2022, upon his ascension to the Supreme Court of the United States.
 
====January, 2023====
Following his resignation as an [[Supreme Court of the United States|Associate Justice of the Supreme Court<br>of the United States]], Bo sought election to the Senate in January, 2023 as a [[Radical Republican]]. Running against former Representative [[Freedom_4All]], he won with 100% of the vote following a debate scandal from his opponent.
 
==Vice Presidency==
Bo was long speculated to be a likely candidate for [[Sandoval|Omarosa Sandoval]]’s running mate in the November, 2020, Presidential election, and it was announced on October 15, 2020. Running against the left-wing ticket of [[NotAName]] and [[XRT-17]], on November 9, 2020, Sandoval and Bo were elected with 52% of the popular vote and 18 electoral votes to NotAName/XRT-17’s 11.
 
Leading the White House Coronavirus Committee, Bo successfully oversaw the distribution of 400 million vaccine doses nationwide and, under the Administration, the coronavirus was successfully eradicated in the United States. Furthermore, Bo regularly presided over the Senate, similar to that of both his predecessor and successor. When Sandoval underwent a medical procedure, Bo acted as President for five days in which he issued five different executive actions and, most notably, freed Salvatore Basile, an American hostage in China. Leaving office as one of the most active and influential Vice Presidents in American history, Bo was succeeded by [[Ian Bellinger]].
==Presidency==
===Election===
Bo announced a campaign for the Presidency in the [[United States presidential election, March 2021]] on January 27, 2021. He won the nomination of the [[Libertarian-Republican Party]] without opposition on February 15, 2021, and selected Senator [[Ian Bellinger]] as his running mate.


Within the first half of the term in the Assembly, Bo was extremely productive and passed multiple pieces of legislation, including establishing LGBTQ+ curriculum in schools, legalizing prostitution, expanding access to contraceptives, criminal justice reform, and voting rights. In the second half of the term, the Assembly vacated the incumbent Speaker, [[Phoenix]], due to him refusing to put the ratification of the Choice Amendment up for debate and, subsequently a vote, within the Assembly. Following this event, Bo was elected Speaker of the Assembly without opposition.
He ran against Senate Majority Leader [[Epsilon Leclair]] and Speaker of the House [[Rose McAlister]], the nominees of the Left Coalition, in a contentious election. Bo won, taking 18 electoral votes to Leclair’s 12, carrying the states of Dixie and Puerto Rico, as well as the District of Columbia. Bo lost the national popular vote, taking 48.17% to Leclair’s 50.99%, becoming the only President since 2018 to be elected without it.
===Tenure===
Bo was sworn in by Chief Justice [[Thanos May]] on March 12, 2021. In general, his Presidency was marked by the revival of both the [[Libertarian consensus]] in American politics and the [[Libertarian-Republican Party]] in and of itself, with the party having its best election results ever during his term. He issued the most executive actions than any Presidency since 2018, and led his Administration sponsoring and passing more bills than any of the three Administrations which preceded him.


In the October state elections, Bo ran for re-election and faced political newcomer [[The Owl]]. However, The Owl did not show up to campaign or debate and Bo won re-election in a landslide, taking nearly 86% of the vote. Bo went on to be re-elected as Speaker of the Assembly for the 15th session. Bo, once again, provided another productive session in the Assembly, passing the Fair Vote Amendment, which instituted Ranked Choice Voting within Dixie, LGBTQ+ rights legislation, a resolution as to investigate the [[Dixie Secession Plot]], and the budget for that session, which implemented a land value tax within the state. In the December state elections, Bo ran for a third term, and his opponent was former Assemblyman [[Ethan Matthias]]. While the race was more contentious than some expected, Bo prevailed taking 57% of the vote over Matthias’ 43%.  
Specifically, Bo effectively abolished Medicare, Medicaid, and the federal public option in favor of a block grant to the states; increased the federal Universal Basic Income program; repealed the three strikes statute; repealed the Women’s Healthcare Act in favor of a conditional grant based on contraception and sexual education access; expanded apprenticeship opportunities; granted tax relief to workers’ co-operatives; and provided subsidization for employment vouchers. He and his Administration also dissolved the Department of Agriculture; gave $2,500 to every postpartum woman; offloaded uninhabited American territories; made Juneteenth a federal holiday; and allowed for the suspension of the provisions of the International Reciprocity Act.  


==U.S. Senate==
Bo issued orders to establish the President’s Commission on Drug and Addiction Policy; establish the Office of Health Emergency Preparedness; end the Mexico City Policy; ban the usage of tear gas and rubber bullets by federal officers; audit the Department of Veterans Affairs; proclaim April 20 as Weed Freedom Day; extend Secret Service protection to numerous federal officials; break the Gilead patent on pre-exposure prophylaxis; expand opportunities for immigration from nations where LGBTQ+ individuals are at greater risk for harm or persecution; establish the White House Office of LGBTQ+ Youth Safety and Policy; reform criminal regulation promulgation; and stop; the United States' participation in the United Nations Security Council. His Administration also successfully renegotiated the Memorandum of Understanding with the People’s Republic of China, retaining their membership in the Nuclear Disarmament Treaty, and is regarded as one of the most internationally active Administrations since 2018.
In the weeks preceding the September 2020 federal elections, Bo was initially considering a run for the House of Representatives. However, Bo received encouragement from the Libertarian Party to run for Senate to unseat the incumbent, Trash, the same person who he beat in the Assembly race just a month prior. Following this, Bo accepted and decided to run.  


The race was contentious and, similar to the Assembly race, before the election began most predicted that Trash would end up victorious and with another six month term in the Senate. The debate between the two was one of the longest in that cycle, and the campaign was tied for the second most expensive race within that election cycle, with the two spending a combined $190,000. Trash ended up outspending Bo by $10,000, yet Bo emerged victorious on election day, taking 50.2% of the vote to Trash’s 49.8%. The margin of victory was well within the recount threshold, and Trash went on to file a recount. However, following it, Bo’s lead expanded and the final election results ended up being 50.71% for Bo and 49.29% for Trash. Bo was one of just three Libertarian wins within that election, and, afterwards, Bo was selected as Senate Minority Leader for the caucus of just him and Senator Valerie.  
To handle the oil crisis which came as a result of the attack on Saudi Aramco, Bo was one of the few federal officials to properly address the crisis and, through executive order, suspended a previous prohibition of fracking on federal land and opened American oil reserves, both successfully providing price decreases. He and his Administration, along with Representative [[Tedd Ddet]], passed legislation to provide direct relief payments to low income Americans; expand the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program for the duration of the crisis; support both the federal and state governments weaning off of the usage of fossil fuels; and amend the statutory ban on fracking on federal lands to postpone the end cutoff.  


Following then-President pro tempore [[James Order]]’s resignation from the Senate and, thus, President pro tempore, Bo was briefly elected President pro tempore because he was the only nominated candidate to meet the requirements, despite the left’s supermajority within the chamber. However, his tenure did not last long, due to a motion to appeal the decision of the chair and revert the Senate back to the procedure from before in which nominations were open until all Senators had made a nomination. Following this, Senators Valerie and Bo did not make nominations on the Senate floor and, due to the previous motion which reinstated old rules, an election for President pro tempore could not go forward. Though, before then-Vice President [[Cabin Fever]]’s ascension to the Vice President, he handed the gavel to Senator Valerie, the Deputy President pro tempore. Later on, however, the left majority held an illegal election for President pro tempore in which a staffer from the same stole the gavel from Senator Valerie, in an act described as assault on the only female Senator at the time. This event became known as [[Gavelgate]]. The Senate was, for most of this period, unable to proceed with business and items of legislation, until a point of order from Bo which allowed the Senate to do as such. To get the gridlock over, and go back to normal within the Senate, the Social Democratic members of the left majority caucus led by Senator Epsilon Leclair broke off and, together, the Social Democrats formed a Cooperative Caucus in which Bo was Majority Leader and Drunk was elected President pro tempore closely afterwards.  
Regarded as one of the most partisan Presidencies in modern history, Bo successfully enacted his Administration’s goals in both budgets passed in Congress despite objections from the opposition by playing an aggressive role in the legislative process. In April, when he did reach a compromise with the Left Coalition majority in the House of Representatives and Senate, they faced backlash from their own caucus, but Bo’s proposal, containing a massive reduction in the scope of the federal government with respect to healthcare, passed both chambers. In June, Bo submitted, in coalition with the Workers’ Party and Speaker [[Purdy]], a budget containing no provisions from the Left Coalition majority in the House of Representatives, and faced backlash as a result of it. With the Left Coalition notably attempting to abolish the federal Universal Basic Income, which Bo sought to expand, Bo threatened to refuse signature on any other bills and, hours before a shut-down, the budget containing two minor provisions from the Left Coalition, and all of his Administration’s provisions intact, passed with Bo’s signature. When his nominee to be a Commissioner of the Federal Election Commission, Global Labour Party member [[Rose McAlister]], sat in the Senate by proxy hours following her confirmation, Bo refused to sign her Commission, blocking her from taking office.  


Bo resigned from the Senate on November 10th, 2020, following his ascension to the Vice Presidency.  
When Justice [[Yimir]] resigned in the middle of voting for the July, 2021, federal election, despite Congress being adjourned, Bo recess appointed his predecessor, Attorney General, President pro tempore, and Senator [[Sandoval|Omarosa Sandoval]] to the vacant seat, with him taking office less than five hours following Yimir’s resignation. On his third to last day in office, [[Dallas Evelyn]] attempted a coup in Puerto Rico as a result of the [[United States presidential election, July 2021|July, 2012, Presidential election results]]. In a response, Bo federalized the Puerto Rican National Guard and appointed [[Cabin|Cabin Fever]] as Provisional Governor of Puerto Rico.  


==Vice Presidency==
Bo was succeeded by [[Howard Elkridge]], with his Vice President, [[Ian Bellinger]], elected to a second term.
Bo was selected as Libertarian Party Presidential nominee and Dixie Governor Sandoval’s Vice Presidential nominee during his campaign for the Presidency in the November 2020 election. Originally slated to face a ticket composed of Former Senator Trash and Rep. Kevin Murphy, they faced off against Former House Speaker NotAName and Former Representative XRT-17 following the [[Trash Scandal]], along with an independent ticket of [[Ryan Daly]] and Former Senator [[Zarphos]].


The two went on to win the election in a landslide, winning in the [[North]], [[Jefferson]], [[Dixie]], and [[Washington, D.C]]. Sandoval and Bo won a total of 18 electoral votes to NotAName and XRT-17’s 11 electoral votes, with Daly and Zarphos not winning any. Furthermore, they won a majority of the national popular vote with a 10 point margin. The following day, Bo was sworn in as Vice President of the United States.
==District Court for Dixie and Jefferson==
When the [[United States District Court for Dixie, Jefferson, and Puerto Rico]] (now the United States District Court for Dixie and Jefferson) was formed, Bo was nominated by President [[Howard Elkridge]] to be the Chief Judge thereof. Confirmed on August 10, 2021, Bo resigned from all other positions a day later to take office. Issuing multiple consequential rulings, Bo found the structure of the Federal Open Market Committee unconstitutional, found various provisions of the For the People Act unconstitutional, and issued the framework for jurisprudence on the 42nd Amendment. He resigned on December 23, 2021, citing the inactivity of the [[Malcolm]] Administration shortly before announcing a campaign for the Senate.


As Vice President, Bo has been an active governing partner for President Sandoval, something which he promised during the campaign. In the role, he has taken COVID-19 head on as head of the White House Coronavirus Committee, along with presiding over the Senate on a regular basis similar to that of his predecessor in the Vice Presidency, Cabin. Furthermore, he has helped attempt to implement the administration’s agenda, having helped author various pieces of legislation and advising on things such as executive orders.  
==Supreme Court of the United States==
When Justice [[Sandoval|Omarosa Sandoval]] announced his resignation, President [[Tedd Ddet]] announced Bo as his appointee to replace him. Bo was confirmed on April 14, 2022, and was sworn in a day later. He sat by designation, during his tenure, on the U.S. District Court for the North and the District of Columbia.


==Libertarian Party==
Bo resigned on December 17, 2022.
Following the November 2020 federal elections, [[Second Libertarian Party|Libertarian Party]] Chairwoman [[Valerie]] opted not to seek a third term as Chairman. Bo opted to run, and faced off against [[Aegues Phoenix]] for the role. Bo emerged victorious, taking 80% of the vote, and was elected to be the Libertarian Party’s third Chair. Bo opted not to run for a second term as Chairman, and he was succeeded by [[Howard Elkridge]].


==Political Beliefs==
==Political Beliefs==
Bo is one of the more moderate members of the Libertarians, and is extremely socially liberal. Economically, he is around the center, though he has opposed certain left wing measures such as the Direct Tax Amendment or bills to raise the minimum wage at the federal level. On social issues, he supported the Choice Amendment and was also the plaintiff in a court case to strike down Dixie’s abortion ban. He also supports further power devolution to the states, the land value tax, and a universal basic income. His liberal stance on things such as LGBTQ+ rights and abortion has supposedly helped him with certain moderate left wing voters in various elections, such as his election to the Senate.
Originally campaigning as a moderate, Bo is regarded as having drifted more partisan and more right leaning throughout his term as both Vice President and President, but has maintained socially liberal stances on topics such as abortion, LGBTQ+ rights, and racial equality, while being more right-leaning on the economy, welfare, and the size and scope of the federal government.
 
==Personal Life==
==Personal Life==
Bo is married to his wife, Amanda, an educator and teacher, and together they have two children, Carolann and Henry. Bo has a private residence in Tampa, Florida, along with a home in Arlington, Virginia.
Married to his wife, Amanda, he has two children, Carolann and Henry. Bo’s primary residence is Edwards, Jefferson, but has a secondary residence in Arlington, Dixie.  
 
==Honors==
* [[Presidential Medal of Freedom]]
* [[Servant of the People]]
* [[Dixie Colonelcy]]
* [[Congressional Gold Medal]]
==Electoral History==
==Electoral History==
===Dixie General Assembly===
{{Election box begin |title=August 2020, DX-1 Assembly}}
{{Election box begin |title=August 2020, DX-1 Assembly}}
  {{Election box candidate with party link
  {{Election box candidate with party link
   |party      = Second Libertarian Party
   |party      = Second Libertarian Party
   |candidate  = [[Bo]]
   |candidate  = [[Bo|Christian Bo]]
   |percentage = 52.96
   |percentage = 52.96
   |change    = +52.96
   |change    = +52.96
Line 135: Line 192:
   |winner    = Second Libertarian Party
   |winner    = Second Libertarian Party
   |loser      = American Liberal Coalition
   |loser      = American Liberal Coalition
}}
{{Election box end}}
{{Election box begin |title=September 2020, DX Senate Class III}}
{{Election box candidate with party link
  |party      = Second Libertarian Party
  |candidate  = [[Bo]]
  |percentage = 50.79
  |change    = +50.71
}}
{{Election box candidate with party link
  |party      = United Left
  |candidate  = [[Trash]]
  |percentage = 49.21
  |change    = -21.72
}}
{{Election box gain with party link no change
  |winner    = Second Libertarian Party
  |loser      = United Left
  }}
  }}
  {{Election box end}}
  {{Election box end}}
Line 160: Line 198:
  {{Election box candidate with party link
  {{Election box candidate with party link
   |party      = Second Libertarian Party
   |party      = Second Libertarian Party
   |candidate  = [[Bo]]
   |candidate  = [[Bo|Christian Bo]]
   |percentage = 85.95
   |percentage = 85.95
   |change    = +32.99
   |change    = +32.99
Line 175: Line 213:
   |percentage = 1.25
   |percentage = 1.25
   |change    = +1.25
   |change    = +1.25
}}
{{Election box hold with party link no change
  |winner    = Second Libertarian Party
}}
{{Election box end}}
{{Election box begin |title=December 2020, DX-1 Assembly}}
{{Election box candidate with party link
  |party      = Second Libertarian Party
  |candidate  = [[Bo|Christian Bo]]
  |percentage = 57.47
  |change    = -28.48
}}
{{Election box candidate with party link
  |party      = Social Democratic Party
  |candidate  = [[Ethan Matthias]]
  |percentage = 41.68
  |change    = +41.68
}}
{{Election box candidate with party link
  |party      = Independent
  |candidate  = [[Poliman]]
  |percentage = .84
  |change    = +.84
  }}
  }}
{{Election box hold with party link no change
{{Election box hold with party link no change
Line 181: Line 242:
  {{Election box end}}
  {{Election box end}}


===Dixie State Cabinet===
{{Election box begin |title=October 2020, DX Secretary of State}}
{{Election box begin |title=October 2020, DX Secretary of State}}
  {{Election box candidate with party link
  {{Election box candidate with party link
   |party      = Second Libertarian Party
   |party      = Second Libertarian Party
   |candidate  = [[Bo]]
   |candidate  = [[Bo|Christian Bo]]
   |percentage = 57.24
   |percentage = 57.24
   |change    = +57.24
   |change    = +57.24
Line 206: Line 268:
  {{Election box end}}
  {{Election box end}}


{{Election box begin |title=December 2020, DX-1 Assembly}}
===United States Senate===
{{Election box begin |title=September 2020, DX Senate Class III}}
  {{Election box candidate with party link
  {{Election box candidate with party link
   |party      = Second Libertarian Party
   |party      = Second Libertarian Party
   |candidate  = [[Bo]]
   |candidate  = [[Bo|Christian Bo]]
   |percentage = 57.47
  |percentage = 50.79
   |change    = -28.48
  |change    = +50.71
}}
{{Election box candidate with party link
  |party      = United Left
  |candidate  = [[Trash]]
   |percentage = 49.21
   |change    = -21.72
}}
{{Election box gain with party link no change
  |winner    = Second Libertarian Party
  |loser      = United Left
  }}
  }}
{{Election box end}}
{{Election box begin |title=July 2021, JF Senate Class II}}
  {{Election box candidate with party link
  {{Election box candidate with party link
   |party      = Social Democratic Party
   |party      = Libertarian-Republican Party
   |candidate  = [[Ethan Matthias]]
   |candidate  = [[Bo|Christian Bo]]
   |percentage = 41.68
   |percentage = 74.62
   |change    = +41.68
   |change    = -13.04
  }}
  }}
{{Election box candidate with party link
{{Election box candidate with party link
   |party      = Independent
   |party      = Independent
   |candidate  = [[Poliman]]
   |candidate  = Other
   |percentage = .84
   |percentage = 25.38
   |change    = +.84
   |change    = +13.04
  }}
  }}
{{Election box hold with party link no change
{{Election box hold with party link no change
   |winner    = Second Libertarian Party
   |winner    = Libertarian-Republican Party
  |loser      = Other
}}
{{Election box end}}
 
{{Election box begin |title=January 2022, JF Senate Class II}}
{{Election box candidate with party link
  |party      = Independent
  |candidate  = [[Bo|Christian Bo]]
  |percentage = 50.54
  |change    = +50.54%
}}
{{Election box candidate with party link
  |party      = Global Labour Party
  |candidate  = [[Sysadmin]]
  |percentage = 48.83
  |change    = +13.04
}}
{{Election box candidate with party link
  |party      = Independent
  |candidate  = [[Epsilon Leclair]]
  |percentage = .61
  |change    = +.61%
}}
{{Election box gain with party link no change
  |winner    = Independent
  |loser      = Global Labour Party
}}
{{Election box end}}
{{Election box begin |title=January 2023, JF Senate Class II}}
{{Election box candidate with party link
  |party      = Radical Republican Party
  |candidate  = [[Bo|Christian Bo]]
  |percentage = 100
  |change    = +100
}}
{{Election box candidate with party link
  |party      = Independent
  |candidate  = [[Freedom_4All]]
  |percentage = 0
  |change    = -100
}}
{{Election box gain with party link no change
  |winner    = Radical Republican Party
  |loser      = Independent
  }}
  }}
  {{Election box end}}
  {{Election box end}}
===March 2021 Presidential Election===
{|class="wikitable"
! colspan=1 rowspan=2 | Presidential Candidate
! colspan=1 rowspan=2 | Party
! colspan=1 rowspan=2 | Home State
! colspan=1 rowspan=2 | Popular Vote
! colspan=1 rowspan=2 | Electoral Vote
! colspan=4 rowspan=1 | Running Mate
|-
! colspan=1 rowspan=1 | Vice-Presidential Candidate
! colspan=1 rowspan=1 | Party
! colspan=1 rowspan=1 | Home State
! colspan=1 rowspan=1 | Electoral Vote
|-
| '''[[Christian Bo]]'''
| [[Second Libertarian Party|LRP]]
| [[Dixie]]
| 48.17%
| 18
| '''[[Ian Bellinger]]'''
| [[Second Libertarian Party|LRP]]
| [[Puerto Rico]]
| 18
|-
| '''[[Epsilon Leclair]]'''
| [[Global Labour Party|GLP]]
| [[Jefferson]]
| 50.99%
| 12
| '''[[Rose McAlister]]'''
| [[Global Labour Party|GLP]]
| [[Jefferson]]
| 12
|-
| colspan=3 | '''Other/Write-in'''
| 0.84%
| —
| colspan=3 | '''Other/Write-in'''
| —
|-
! colspan=3 | Total
| 100%
| 30
| colspan=3 |
| 30
|-
! colspan=4 | Needed to win
| 16
| colspan=3 |
| 16
|}
[[Category:Biography]]

Latest revision as of 06:33, 20 January 2023

Christian Bo
Bo Portrait.jpg
United States Senator
from Jefferson
Assumed office
January 19, 2022
Preceded by Aegues Phoenix
In office
January 14, 2022 – April 14, 2022
Preceded by Sysadmin
Succeeded by Sysadmin
In office
July 15, 2021 – August 11, 2021
Preceded by Valerie
Succeeded by Sysadmin
59th President of the United States
In office
March 12, 2021 – July 15, 2021
Vice President Ian Bellinger
Preceded by Omarosa Sandoval
Succeeded by Howard Elkridge
59th Vice President of the United States
In office
November 10, 2020 – March 12, 2021
President Omarosa Sandoval
Preceded by Cabin Fever
Succeeded by Ian Bellinger
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court
of the United States
In office
April 15, 2022 – December 17, 2022
Preceded by Omarosa Sandoval
1st Chief Judge of the United States District Court for Dixie and Jefferson
In office
August 11, 2021 – December 23, 2021
Preceded by Office Established
Succeeded by Rémi Carton
President pro tempore of the United States Senate
In office
January 15, 2022 – March 14, 2022
Preceded by Cabin Fever
Succeeded by Ian Bellinger
In office
October 12, 2020 – October 13, 2020
Preceded by James Order
Succeeded by Drunk
Senate Majority Leader
In office
March 15, 2022 – April 8, 2022
Preceded by Tedd Ddet
Succeeded by Valerie
In office
October 21, 2020 – November 10, 2020
Preceded by Epsilon Leclair
Succeeded by Howard Elkridge
Senate Minority Leader
In office
September 13, 2020 – October 21, 2020
Preceded by Valerie
Succeeded by Valentin Ricca
United States Senator
from Dixie
In office
September 10, 2020 – November 10, 2020
Preceded by Trash
Succeeded by Ethan Armstrong
White House Chief of Staff
In office
September 29, 2020 – November 10, 2020
President Lyndon Garland
Preceded by Arkenstone
Succeeded by Computerguy15
94th United States Attorney General
In office
July 23, 2021 – August 10, 2021
Preceded by Omarosa Sandoval
Succeeded by Computerguy15
Personal Details
Born Christian Ludacris Bo
March 10, 1979
Orlando, Florida
Political party Independent (August 2021-present)
Commonwealth (December 2021-April 2022)
Libertarian-Republican Party (August 2020-August 2021)
Education Univerity of Tampa (BS)
University of Miami (JD)
Awards Presidential Medal of Freedom (2021)
Servant of the People (2021)
Dixie Colonelcy (2021)
Congressional Gold Medal (2022)

Christian Ludacris Bo (born March 10, 1978) is an American attorney, politician, jurist and businessman who is serving as the junior United States Senator from Jefferson since January, 2023. A Libertarian, Libertarian-Republican, independent and now Radical Republican, Bo served as the 59th President of the United States from March to July, 2021, as the 59th Vice President of the United States under Omarosa Sandoval from November, 2020, to March, 2021, as a Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from April to December, 2022, served as the first Chief Judge of the United States District Court for Dixie and Jefferson from August to December, 2021, represented Jefferson in the Senate from July to August, 2021 and January to April, 2022, and represented Dixie in the Senate from September to November, 2020.

Early Life, Education, Career

Bo was born in Orlando, Florida on March 10, 1978 to Linda Wilton and Gary Bo. He is the elder brother to one sibling, Dominic Bo. His family later moved to Winter Garden, Florida where he attended and graduated from West Orange High School. Going on to attend the University of Tampa, he earned a B.S. in political science.

After a year working on electoral campaigns across central and southern Florida, he later attended the University of Miami School of Law, earning a J.D. degree. He went on to practice law in a firm based out of Tampa, Florida. Bo then worked as a political consultant before his entry into politics himself, sparked by an appointment to be Secretary of Internal Affairs in Dixie by Governor Omarosa Sandoval.

Dixie General Assembly

Having sought election to the Dixie General Assembly in the first district in August, 2020, Bo faced Trash, Andrew Blaze, and John Smith. He won with 52% of the vote, with Trash taking 30% and the other candidates taking the rest. He passed legislation to mandate LGBTQ+ education in schools; expand access to contraception; legalize prostitution; amend license plate regulation; ensure automatic voter registration; expand rehabilitation programs in prions; and ratify the Choice Amendment. Near the end of the session, when Speaker Phoenix was faced with a motion to vacate the chair, Bo was elected without opposition to the Speakership.

Re-elected with over 86% of the vote in October, 2020, Bo was further re-elected to the Speakership with support from both the left and right. He passed legislation to institute ranked choice voting; protect the rights of transgender inmates in prisons; establish the Department of Environmental Protection; promote health education efforts; investigate the Dixie Secession Plot; and enact of a land value tax. Bo forewent the Speakership in November, 2020, upon his election to the Vice Presidency, and he was succeeded by Miguel Wazowski in the post. Bo was re-elected in December, 2020, with 57% of the vote, against Ethan Matthias and, in his final term in office, passed legislation to raise Dixie’s minimum wage, and reform voting in the General Assembly. Refusing to seek election to a fourth term in February, 2020, Bo was succeeded by John Moonguy.

U.S. Senate

Dixie

Bo sought election to the Senate in Dixie in September, 2020, and faced the incumbent, Trash. Winning with 50.79% of the vote, Bo was sworn in to the Senate on September 10, 2020. Bo served as Senate Minority Leader in a caucus of just Senator Valerie and himself.

Notably during his tenure, he was briefly elected President pro tempore, in an act which would go on to cause Gavelgate. After partaking in the filibuster with Senator Valerie for 12 days, Bo became Senate Majority Leader in a joint caucus composed of Libertarians and Social Democrats to end the filibuster. Bo resigned from the Senate in November, 2020, and was succeeded by Ethan Armstrong.

Jefferson

July, 2021

Bo sought election to the Senate in Jefferson in July, 2021, and won without opposition, taking 74.62% of the vote. He swore in on July 15, 2021, and succeeded Valerie.

Bo resigned to join the United States District Court for Dixie, Jefferson, and Puerto Rico on August 11, 2021. He was succeeded by Sysadmin.

January, 2022

Following his resignation from the District Court for Dixie and Jefferson, Bo sought election to the Senate in January, 2022 as an independent, and won against Sysadmin with 50.54% of the vote. He was sworn in on January 14, 2022 and caucused independently in the 139th session. He was further elected President pro tempore of the Senate without opposition. During this term, he submitted legislation to rename various entities named after President Franklin D. Roosevelt, guarantee breaks that are paid for workers employed by businesses engaging in interstate commerce, and establish the federal budget for the February-March 2022 fiscal period. Both bills passed with bipartisan support and was signed by President Jeb!. In the 140th session, he formed a right-wing caucus with Valerie, Cabin Fever and Ian Bellinger and served as Senate Majority Leader, in the first right-wing federal trifecta in nearly two years. Bo resigned from Majority Leader on April 8, 2022, and from the Senate as a whole on April 14, 2022, upon his ascension to the Supreme Court of the United States.

January, 2023

Following his resignation as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court
of the United States
, Bo sought election to the Senate in January, 2023 as a Radical Republican. Running against former Representative Freedom_4All, he won with 100% of the vote following a debate scandal from his opponent.

Vice Presidency

Bo was long speculated to be a likely candidate for Omarosa Sandoval’s running mate in the November, 2020, Presidential election, and it was announced on October 15, 2020. Running against the left-wing ticket of NotAName and XRT-17, on November 9, 2020, Sandoval and Bo were elected with 52% of the popular vote and 18 electoral votes to NotAName/XRT-17’s 11.

Leading the White House Coronavirus Committee, Bo successfully oversaw the distribution of 400 million vaccine doses nationwide and, under the Administration, the coronavirus was successfully eradicated in the United States. Furthermore, Bo regularly presided over the Senate, similar to that of both his predecessor and successor. When Sandoval underwent a medical procedure, Bo acted as President for five days in which he issued five different executive actions and, most notably, freed Salvatore Basile, an American hostage in China. Leaving office as one of the most active and influential Vice Presidents in American history, Bo was succeeded by Ian Bellinger.

Presidency

Election

Bo announced a campaign for the Presidency in the United States presidential election, March 2021 on January 27, 2021. He won the nomination of the Libertarian-Republican Party without opposition on February 15, 2021, and selected Senator Ian Bellinger as his running mate.

He ran against Senate Majority Leader Epsilon Leclair and Speaker of the House Rose McAlister, the nominees of the Left Coalition, in a contentious election. Bo won, taking 18 electoral votes to Leclair’s 12, carrying the states of Dixie and Puerto Rico, as well as the District of Columbia. Bo lost the national popular vote, taking 48.17% to Leclair’s 50.99%, becoming the only President since 2018 to be elected without it.

Tenure

Bo was sworn in by Chief Justice Thanos May on March 12, 2021. In general, his Presidency was marked by the revival of both the Libertarian consensus in American politics and the Libertarian-Republican Party in and of itself, with the party having its best election results ever during his term. He issued the most executive actions than any Presidency since 2018, and led his Administration sponsoring and passing more bills than any of the three Administrations which preceded him.

Specifically, Bo effectively abolished Medicare, Medicaid, and the federal public option in favor of a block grant to the states; increased the federal Universal Basic Income program; repealed the three strikes statute; repealed the Women’s Healthcare Act in favor of a conditional grant based on contraception and sexual education access; expanded apprenticeship opportunities; granted tax relief to workers’ co-operatives; and provided subsidization for employment vouchers. He and his Administration also dissolved the Department of Agriculture; gave $2,500 to every postpartum woman; offloaded uninhabited American territories; made Juneteenth a federal holiday; and allowed for the suspension of the provisions of the International Reciprocity Act.

Bo issued orders to establish the President’s Commission on Drug and Addiction Policy; establish the Office of Health Emergency Preparedness; end the Mexico City Policy; ban the usage of tear gas and rubber bullets by federal officers; audit the Department of Veterans Affairs; proclaim April 20 as Weed Freedom Day; extend Secret Service protection to numerous federal officials; break the Gilead patent on pre-exposure prophylaxis; expand opportunities for immigration from nations where LGBTQ+ individuals are at greater risk for harm or persecution; establish the White House Office of LGBTQ+ Youth Safety and Policy; reform criminal regulation promulgation; and stop; the United States' participation in the United Nations Security Council. His Administration also successfully renegotiated the Memorandum of Understanding with the People’s Republic of China, retaining their membership in the Nuclear Disarmament Treaty, and is regarded as one of the most internationally active Administrations since 2018.

To handle the oil crisis which came as a result of the attack on Saudi Aramco, Bo was one of the few federal officials to properly address the crisis and, through executive order, suspended a previous prohibition of fracking on federal land and opened American oil reserves, both successfully providing price decreases. He and his Administration, along with Representative Tedd Ddet, passed legislation to provide direct relief payments to low income Americans; expand the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program for the duration of the crisis; support both the federal and state governments weaning off of the usage of fossil fuels; and amend the statutory ban on fracking on federal lands to postpone the end cutoff.

Regarded as one of the most partisan Presidencies in modern history, Bo successfully enacted his Administration’s goals in both budgets passed in Congress despite objections from the opposition by playing an aggressive role in the legislative process. In April, when he did reach a compromise with the Left Coalition majority in the House of Representatives and Senate, they faced backlash from their own caucus, but Bo’s proposal, containing a massive reduction in the scope of the federal government with respect to healthcare, passed both chambers. In June, Bo submitted, in coalition with the Workers’ Party and Speaker Purdy, a budget containing no provisions from the Left Coalition majority in the House of Representatives, and faced backlash as a result of it. With the Left Coalition notably attempting to abolish the federal Universal Basic Income, which Bo sought to expand, Bo threatened to refuse signature on any other bills and, hours before a shut-down, the budget containing two minor provisions from the Left Coalition, and all of his Administration’s provisions intact, passed with Bo’s signature. When his nominee to be a Commissioner of the Federal Election Commission, Global Labour Party member Rose McAlister, sat in the Senate by proxy hours following her confirmation, Bo refused to sign her Commission, blocking her from taking office.

When Justice Yimir resigned in the middle of voting for the July, 2021, federal election, despite Congress being adjourned, Bo recess appointed his predecessor, Attorney General, President pro tempore, and Senator Omarosa Sandoval to the vacant seat, with him taking office less than five hours following Yimir’s resignation. On his third to last day in office, Dallas Evelyn attempted a coup in Puerto Rico as a result of the July, 2012, Presidential election results. In a response, Bo federalized the Puerto Rican National Guard and appointed Cabin Fever as Provisional Governor of Puerto Rico.

Bo was succeeded by Howard Elkridge, with his Vice President, Ian Bellinger, elected to a second term.

District Court for Dixie and Jefferson

When the United States District Court for Dixie, Jefferson, and Puerto Rico (now the United States District Court for Dixie and Jefferson) was formed, Bo was nominated by President Howard Elkridge to be the Chief Judge thereof. Confirmed on August 10, 2021, Bo resigned from all other positions a day later to take office. Issuing multiple consequential rulings, Bo found the structure of the Federal Open Market Committee unconstitutional, found various provisions of the For the People Act unconstitutional, and issued the framework for jurisprudence on the 42nd Amendment. He resigned on December 23, 2021, citing the inactivity of the Malcolm Administration shortly before announcing a campaign for the Senate.

Supreme Court of the United States

When Justice Omarosa Sandoval announced his resignation, President Tedd Ddet announced Bo as his appointee to replace him. Bo was confirmed on April 14, 2022, and was sworn in a day later. He sat by designation, during his tenure, on the U.S. District Court for the North and the District of Columbia.

Bo resigned on December 17, 2022.

Political Beliefs

Originally campaigning as a moderate, Bo is regarded as having drifted more partisan and more right leaning throughout his term as both Vice President and President, but has maintained socially liberal stances on topics such as abortion, LGBTQ+ rights, and racial equality, while being more right-leaning on the economy, welfare, and the size and scope of the federal government.

Personal Life

Married to his wife, Amanda, he has two children, Carolann and Henry. Bo’s primary residence is Edwards, Jefferson, but has a secondary residence in Arlington, Dixie.

Honors

Electoral History

Dixie General Assembly

August 2020, DX-1 Assembly
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
LP Christian Bo 52.96 +52.96
UL Trash 30.99 +30.99
ALC Andrew Blaze 9.51 -65.49
Independent John Smith 6.54 +6.54
LP gain from ALC
October 2020, DX-1 Assembly
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
LP Christian Bo 85.95 +32.99
UL The Owl 12.76 -18.23
Independent Marune 1.25 +1.25
LP hold
December 2020, DX-1 Assembly
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
LP Christian Bo 57.47 -28.48
SDP Ethan Matthias 41.68 +41.68
Independent Poliman .84 +.84
LP hold

Dixie State Cabinet

October 2020, DX Secretary of State
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
LP Christian Bo 57.24 +57.24
SDP Drunk 41.68 +41.68
Independent Marune 1.07 +1.07
LP gain from SDP

United States Senate

September 2020, DX Senate Class III
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
LP Christian Bo 50.79 +50.71
UL Trash 49.21 -21.72
LP gain from UL
July 2021, JF Senate Class II
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
LRP Christian Bo 74.62 -13.04
Independent Other 25.38 +13.04
LRP hold
January 2022, JF Senate Class II
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Christian Bo 50.54 +50.54%
GLP Sysadmin 48.83 +13.04
Independent Epsilon Leclair .61 +.61%
Independent gain from GLP
January 2023, JF Senate Class II
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
style="background-color:
  1. 5b0000; width: 5px;" |
#5b0000 Christian Bo 100 +100
Independent Freedom_4All 0 -100
style="background-color:
  1. 5b0000" |
#5b0000 gain from Independent

March 2021 Presidential Election

Presidential Candidate Party Home State Popular Vote Electoral Vote Running Mate
Vice-Presidential Candidate Party Home State Electoral Vote
Christian Bo LRP Dixie 48.17% 18 Ian Bellinger LRP Puerto Rico 18
Epsilon Leclair GLP Jefferson 50.99% 12 Rose McAlister GLP Jefferson 12
Other/Write-in 0.84% Other/Write-in
Total 100% 30 30
Needed to win 16 16