. "The United States presidential election of 2020 was the 59th quadrennial presidential election. It was held on Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Democratic nominee Senator Elizabeth Ann Warren of Massachusetts and her running mate Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio defeated incumbent President Michael Richard Pence and his running mate Vice President Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire. Elizabeth Warren, upon her inauguration, became the first woman and oldest person ever to be elected President of the United States."@en . "United States presidential election, 2020 (Scenario: 84 Years Ahead)"@en . . . . "The United States presidential election of 2020 was the 59th quadrennial presidential election. It was held on Tuesday, November 3, 2020. Democratic nominee Senator Elizabeth Ann Warren of Massachusetts and her running mate Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio defeated incumbent President Michael Richard Pence and his running mate Vice President Kelly Ayotte of New Hampshire. Elizabeth Warren, upon her inauguration, became the first woman and oldest person ever to be elected President of the United States. The election is seen by many historians as a repudiation of both the administrations of Donald J. Trump (2017-2019) as well as his Vice President Michael R. Pence (2019-2021) and an alarming potential for conflict with Russia (a developing foreign policy debate that dominated the election). Elizabeth Warren achieved the Democratic Party's presidential nomination on May 13, 2020, after defeating Joe Biden in a mildly competitive race. Michael R. Pence, the incumbent President, drew large controversy over his intention to run for reelection, making contradictory statements about his plans. Many suggested that Pence, due to his lack of winning a Presidential election (after assuming office upon the resignation of Donald Trump in 2019), would not seek reelection in 2020. Despite this, he would later announce his reelection campaign on June 2, 2019, only months after assuming the presidency, and win his party's nomination with ease despite minor controversial candidates campaigning to defeat the President. Elizabeth Warren, along with her running mate Senator Sherrod Brown of Ohio, went on to win the election in a near-landslide, achieving the highest number of electoral votes for one candidate in 24 years, and the largest winning margin (8.55%) since Ronald Reagan's landslide victory in 1984. Warren's total vote amount of 71.8 million votes is the highest amount ever won by a presidential candidate. The Democratic Party won 9 states it had lost in 2016, as well as Nebraska and Maine's second districts. Many political analysts theorize that the Russian invasion of East Ukraine only 3 weeks before the election caused it to swing heavily in the favor of Warren, inducing Alaska, a state where Warren campaigned in light of the news from East Ukraine, to be handily won by a Democrat for the first time since 1964. Multiple other traditionally Republican states flipped to Democrats in the 2020 election, including Georgia (the first time since 1992), and Arizona (the first time since 1996). Despite the Democratic Party making gains across the United States in the 2020 election, President Pence reinforced Republican strength in states which had been trending Democrat over the previous decade such as Texas, Utah, and Missouri. The election of 2020 was notable for both major candidates running on a populist campaign; Elizabeth Warren's main campaign message being to provide better economic potential for Americans, \"getting Wall Street out of Washington\", and the tearing down of elitism in politics; and President Pence's message being one of refusal to the 'media elite' and the continuation of his outsider administration's challenging of the political status quo established by the Trump Administration. Elizabeth Warren would, throughout the campaign, point to Donald Trump and Mike Pence's failure in upholding their 2016 campaign's anti-Wall Street stance, citing his inclusion of lobbyists and those close to Wall Street in his cabinet, as well as the issues related to the Russia Tapes where Donald Trump's 2016 campaign was proven to have committed treasonous acts and to have agreed to alter White House policy upon Russian request. President Pence focused his attacks on Warren's supposed disconnect with rural America and representation of the 'political establishment' through her senatorship. Donald Trump remained popular among Republican voters despite his resignation and would be used throughout the campaign in attempt to recreate his 2016 victory. His nickname for Warren, 'Pocahontas', along with 'The Indian' and 'Red Warren' (referring to her claims of Native American heritage in 2012) would prove controversial and questionable for Pence's campaign. She would soon adopt 'Red Warren' as a campaign slogan, embracing the nickname throughout her Presidency in relation to her reputation as an aggressive and rigid President, as well as her connection to the left. Warren would go on to win 91% of the Native American vote, the highest achieved by any candidate in American history."@en . .