Alternate Party Logos.

Something I've noticed about these logos is that almost none of them are iconic symbols that could be placed anywhere. The swastika and the hammer and sickle are so iconic that even a poor rendition is still easily recognizable. They can have many variations for various purposes. Instead, a lot of what we get is words in a certain font and color. Granted, that is realistic, given how most party logos are.
 
The fact that the logo looks vaguely like a sideways noose is unfortunate.
The original SNP version looks even more like one.
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My thoughts on a Southern SNP is that it would be more "agrarian" than "progressive" in its economic outlook. Other than that, I like it.
That's actually a good idea, thanks. That said, the party is also quite popular among urban black voters as well.
 
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So here's a few logos from my timeline in the althistory wikia, In Frederick's Fields:


First, for Eurasia (OTL Russia), there are five major parties, from left to right:

The Communist Party of the Eurasian Union, currently leading the government but falling to infighting between its two major factions, the more authoritarian Marxian Communists and the less authoritarian Bakuninite Communists and Anarchists. Its current leader is Ilya Ponomarev, Prime Minister.

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The Labour Party, officially New Labour or the Trudoviks, currently in coalition with the CPEU, and at an all-time low from once being the dominant left-wing party, is close to democratic socialism and trade unionism. It has lost its appeal in the urban groups to the Communists, and to the ethnic minorities to the Green-Mensheviks:

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The Green Party - Mensheviks, officially Green Party - Party of Minorities is a left-wing party emphasising regionalism, ethnic minority interests and social democracy as well as enviromentalism. The Party is generally the largest party in the left-wing bloc because it generally takes the absolute majority of seats in ethnic minority states.

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The Progressive Union - The Liberals is the main centre-right party. The descendant of the union between the Progressives with the Liberals in the 1990s (the Liberals, at their time, were the result of the joining of the Kadets with the Octobrists in 1976) are often by far the largest party in Parliament. They are an economically and socially liberal party, currently led by Taavi Rõivas, Leader of the Opposition:

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Finally, the smallest and most right-wing of the parties represented in the Duma, the Conservative Party, which is socially conservative, economically way to the right, and even, in its more extreme incarnations, wishing for a return to more power to the Tsar and less to the Duma. They're a fringe party, with an average of 7 or 8% support in national elections, although they have some strongholds.

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You don't mind if I do a minimalist version of the logo?

That's ... beautiful.

Already posted elsewhere. The logo of the French Parti Machiniste:

Instead, people tend to consider the spectrum to be from organism to machinism in how society is to be governed, whether society can be seen and should be treated as a living, evolving organism, where you want people to organize more or less themselves, or whether society is to be seen as a machine for which the State is to act the dutiful engineer in turning the wheels to make sure that everything runs smoothly. Different kinds of socialism end up on different parts of the spectrum, different kinds of conservatism does the same, liberalism is generally considered to be an organic ideology, while the notion of the welfare state is generally considered to be a machinist conception.

An attractive logo and an interesting system.
 
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Logos for a Britain with Ireland scenario. The Conservative/Unionist and Labour parties logotypes were designed by Krall. The Liberal Party's is mine.
 
I guess it can't be worse than OTL's logo.

Still, I really love how you fit in the American flag into the E in "Dems".

I borrowed it from Scott Walker (who probably stole it from House of Cards). I needed a little umph and I did that. And I liked the idea of using flames and fire, and the use of negative space (Rand Paul does have some good ideas). Not wholly original work there, but it works when combined.
 
I borrowed it from Scott Walker (who probably stole it from House of Cards). I needed a little umph and I did that. And I liked the idea of using flames and fire, and the use of negative space (Rand Paul does have some good ideas). Not wholly original work there, but it works when combined.
...Should I be worried?
 
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