1992 United States Presidential Election (A New Dawn)

The 1992 United States Presidential Election was the 52nd quadrennial presidential election in the United States, and its second two-round election, held on Tuesday, November 8, 1992. Democratic challenger Bill Clinton defeated incumbent Republican George H. W. Bush, ending a winning streak for the Republican Party. The election also solidified a deep divide between the entrenched parties and the rising minor parties, as conservatives, feeling betrayed by Bush breaking his "No new taxes" pledge, flocked to Schlafly and the Constitution Party at large, while budding progressives and social democrats joined the Progressive Party en mass.

Despite this, Bush managed to secure renomination, fending off a challenge from Pat Buchanan, who briefly rejoined the GOP to challenge Bush. After losing, Buchanan rejoined the Constitution Party and supported its eventual nominee, Phyllis Schlafly. In the Democratic Party, the young Clinton championed himself as a centrist and moderate, contrasting with Dukakis four years earlier. Clinton managed to defeat former California Governor Jerry Brown, driving Brown to the Progressives, and Paul Tsongas, a former Senator from Massachusetts.

In the Constitution Party, Phyllis Schlafly was nominated essentially unopposed, while Brown defected to the Progressives and beat out the party's 1988 Vice Presidential nominee, Jesse Jackson, the second time Jackson had failed to be nominated by his own party. Schlafly selected conservative activist Howard Phillips as her running mate, while Brown picked Gary Hart, a former Colorado Senator.