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| Details | Ministries | Political Positions | Affiliations | Election Results | Legislation | Legislative Agenda | Voting Record | Actions | Messages |
Libertarian Reds[?]
This page contains information about the Libertarian Reds.
This party is inactive.
Details
Nation[?]: Commonwealth of Lodamun (Lodamun)
Seats[?] in National Congress[?]: 0
Color[?]:
Description[?]:
Website: http://particracy.wikia.com/wiki/Libertarian_Reds_%28Lodamun%29 Ideological pillars of the Libertarian Reds: - Anti-capitalism (popular autonomy) - Anti-statism (voluntary associations) - Egalitarianism - Free-market (mutualism) - Non-violent revolution (peaceful discussion) The aim of the Libertarian Reds (LR) is to approximate the positions of libertarian socialists to the extent possible within electoral politics. We believe that society will be free when workers seize the means of production *for themselves* and neither bosses nor the state try to act on their behalf. The LR seeks to remove all restrictions on workers' activities, especially collective organizing. We want to allow workers to form radical labor unions like the anarcho-syndicalist unions and industrial unions that history has shown to be effective for freeing workers. To this end we neither want to prohibit workers from forming labor unions nor require them to join labor unions. Revolution happens when workers take back the means of production of their own free will. Unlike other "socialist" parties, the LR does not want to hand industry over to the state. The current problem is that the many who work don't manage themselves; they are managed by the few who would rather be bosses than workers, parasites than producers. We find the position of modern Marxists to be absurd. After all, if communism is the abolition of private property, how is the goal furthered by making industry the private property of the state? Putting industry into the hands of the state usually, if not always, amounts to putting workers under the thumb of one collective boss. Or, to use a different metaphor, if you want the people at the foot of five small hills to be able to climb to the top, you don't do it by moving them to the foot of one big hill. The LR's voting record then is often "laissez-faire", though the real aim is to protect workers from the encroachment of another boss -- not to preserve capitalism. When we have no choice but to allow some form of government control, we prefer decentralization, as we believe this comes closer to the ideal of a society in which there are multiple worker-managed syndicates. We also prefer democratic procedures over non-democratic procedures. The LR opposes slavery, prison labor, social conservatism, and movement towards theocracy or a police state. |
Ministries
This party is not part of the national cabinet.
Political Positions
Ideology | Position | Visibility | Coherency |
Centralization | unitarist-leaning | close to none | perfect |
Civil Rights | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Ecology | convinced skeptic | limited | perfect |
Foreign Relations | unknown | close to none | perfect |
Government Responsibilities | convinced small government | limited | perfect |
Market | extreme laissez-faire | 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 (+) |
June 2571 | 91,470 | 128,016,613 | 0.07 | +0.07 | 0 | 150 | 0.00 | +0 |
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 Libertarian Reds.
Bill | Created | Voting started | Vote | Bill Status | Result |
Expenditure Cuts I | April 2103 | April 2103 | defeated | ||
Maximum devolution | April 2103 | April 2103 | passed | ||
Protecting our ecosystem from invaders. | April 2103 | April 2103 | passed | ||
36 months, not 48 | November 2102 | November 2102 | defeated | ||
Gay rights: Davostan (archive purposes only) | September 2102 | September 2102 | defeated | ||
Universal Declaration of Human Rights | September 2102 | September 2102 | defeated | ||
Adoption Act | May 2102 | May 2102 | defeated | ||
Citizenship and Immigration Act | May 2102 | May 2102 | defeated | ||
Responsible journalism only. | March 2102 | March 2102 | passed | ||
Power to the States XIII | February 2102 | February 2102 | passed | ||
Public universities | February 2102 | February 2102 | passed | ||
Power to the states XI | October 2101 | October 2101 | defeated | ||
Truth, Freedom and Integrity | August 2101 | August 2101 | passed | ||
Democracy in Action | August 2101 | August 2101 | passed | ||
Protecting Communities | August 2101 | August 2101 | passed | ||
Fireworks Legalization Act | April 2101 | April 2101 | defeated | ||
Gun Deregulation | February 2101 | February 2101 | defeated | ||
All Discrimination is Negative | November 2100 | November 2100 | passed | ||
To be Secure in Their Possessions | November 2100 | November 2100 | passed | ||
Educational Responsibility | October 2100 | October 2100 | passed |
Random fact: In cases where a party has no seat, the default presumption should be that the party is able to contribute to debates in the legislature due to one of its members winning a seat at a by-election. However, players may collectively improvise arrangements of their own to provide a satisfying explanation for how parties with no seats in the legislature can speak and vote there. |
Random quote: "If a female president can come here and be treated equally, why can't any other woman?" - Jewell C. Stillman, former Lourennais politician (on equal rights in Badara) |