We are working on a brand new version of the game! If you want to stay informed, read our blog and register for our mailing list.
| Details | Ministries | Political Positions | Affiliations | Election Results | Legislation | Legislative Agenda | Voting Record | Actions | Messages |
J-Adamson Party[?]
This page contains information about the J-Adamson Party.
This party is inactive.
Details
Nation[?]: Principatus Selucianus (Selucia)
Seats[?] in Senātus Populī[?]: 0
Color[?]:
Description[?]:
Ministries
This party is not part of the national cabinet.
Political Positions
Ideology | Position | Visibility | Coherency |
Centralization | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Civil Rights | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Ecology | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Foreign Relations | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Government Responsibilities | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Market | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Military | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Morality | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Religion | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Affiliations
This party is a member of the following organizations:
Election Results
History Table
Month | Votes | Total Votes | Votes (%) | Votes (%) (+) | Seats | Total Seats | Seats (%) | Seats (+) |
Relative Graph
This graph shows the percentage of seats the party achieved in each election, relative to its maximum.
Absolute Graph
This graph shows the percentage of seats the party achieved in each election in the entire legislature.
National Graph
This graph shows the share of seats the party achieved in each election in the entire legislature, together with the share of other parties.
Legislation
You can view the party's proposed bills here.
Legislative Agenda
This party has to vote on the following bills:
Voting Record
This is the voting[?] record of the J-Adamson Party.
Bill | Created | Voting started | Vote | Bill Status | Result |
ICP #161 (118) | October 2951 | October 2951 | passed | ||
ICP #160 (117) | October 2951 | October 2951 | passed | ||
Racial registration of nationals. | September 2951 | September 2951 | defeated | ||
The way adulthood is determined. | September 2951 | September 2951 | defeated | ||
ICP #159 (116) | August 2951 | August 2951 | passed | ||
ICP #158 (115) | August 2951 | August 2951 | passed | ||
ICP #157 (144) | August 2951 | August 2951 | passed | ||
ICP #155 (113) | January 2951 | January 2951 | defeated | ||
ICP #154 (112) | November 2950 | November 2950 | passed | ||
ICP #153 (111) | November 2950 | November 2950 | passed | ||
Cabinet Proposal of November 2950 | November 2950 | November 2950 | passed | ||
Ratification of the Creation of Sekowan Embassy within Holy Selucian Empire | November 2950 | November 2950 | passed | ||
Call for early elections, October 2950 | October 2950 | October 2950 | passed | ||
ICP #149 (107) | January 2950 | January 2950 | passed | ||
ICP #148 (106) | January 2950 | January 2950 | passed | ||
ICP #147 (105) | January 2950 | January 2950 | passed | ||
ICP #146 (104) | October 2949 | October 2949 | passed | ||
ICP #145 (103) | October 2949 | October 2949 | passed | ||
Cabinet Proposal of March 2949 | March 2949 | March 2949 | passed | ||
Ratification of the Recognizing Selucia as a Jesuit State | March 2949 | March 2949 | passed |
Random fact: Moderation will not accept Cultural Protocol updates which introduce, on a significant scale, cultures which are likely to be insufficiently accessible to players. In particular, for all significant cultures in Particracy, it should be easy for players to access and use online resources to assist with language translation and the generation of character names. Moderation reserves the right to amend Cultural Protocols which are deemed to have introduced significant cultures that are not sufficiently accessible and which are not being actively role-played with. |
Random quote: "We must show that liberty is not merely one particular value but that it is the source and condition of most moral values. What a free society offers to the individual is much more than what he would be able to do if only he were free. We can therefore not fully appreciate the value of freedom until we know how a society of free men as a whole differs from one in which unfreedom prevails." - Friedrich August Hayek |