Main | About | Tutorial | FAQ | Links | Wiki | Forum | World News | World Map | World Ranking | Nations | Electoral Calendar | Party Organizations | Treaties |
Login | Register |
Game Time: October 5567
Next month in: 01:01:19
Server time: 14:58:40, November 12, 2024 CET
Currently online (1): Mrfactsril | Record: 63 on 23:13:00, July 26, 2019 CET

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 |


Txurruka/Aperribai/Mayoz's OPX[?]

This page contains information about the Txurruka/Aperribai/Mayoz's OPX.

This party is inactive.

Details

User[?]: Liam

Nation[?]: Syndicalist Union of Autonomous States (Baltusia)

Seats[?] in Congress of Trade Unions[?]: 0

Color[?]:

 

Description[?]:

The OPX stands for:

*Providing the greatest benefit, financial or otherwise, for its shareholders and maximising brand exposure for their sponsors
*Paying lip service to corporate responsibility
*Enforcing whatever human rights are left over, including but not limited to, the rights to drink thirst-quenching Levhäger Dry, eat a tasty Le Royale with Cheese from MacDunaldos, to enjoy a titillating pornographic publication and, if there's resources, to have access to free public health and education.
-------------------------------------------------------
The OPX has a long history. Founded as the Liberal Libertarian Party in 2039, the OPX was created by the leadership of the Baltusian Human Rights Movement, an organisation based at the University of Baltusia in Lindar Valley that operated covertly under the authoritarian Napoli regime. The LLP became a political force to be reckoned with. The party's ideology revolved around the "20 Rights Manifesto" set up by early party ideologues which outlined many of the rights the new democratic government of Baltusia should enforce. This approach appealed to voters with the LLP winning its first Presidential election after only eight years of existence with then-party hero Troy Champion. In the aftermath of Jesus McMohammed's leadership and the events of the Crimson Entente, it would be twenty years after Champion's defeat before the LLP would see anything resembling the heights of the 2050s.

In 2092, Saba Billong ushered in a long period of LLP domination. Despite several brief attacks from authoritarians (including the Violet Reev rebellion in 2145) and free marketeers, the LLP and its allies consistently won the elections for Praetor and secured top spot as largest party with a program of enforcing civil rights, progressive morality and free market economics with a heavy dose of quality government services. This period would continue well into the 2300s. During this time, the LLP/OP was instrumental in shaping the face of all aspects of Baltusian government, law and culture. In the mid-24th century, interest in the party waned as newer parties came to the fore, revitalising public interest in politics. Though respect for the party, both in the legislature and amongst the voting public, remained high, the OP was consigned to minor party status.

In 2227, LLP leader, John Perfect, revamped the face of the party, giving it a fresher, slicker image. In doing so, he renamed the party the Orange Party. He maintained the core ideology despite concerns that the revamp was a sell-out to attract new voters and corporate lobbies' purses. The naysayers were wrong and it is in this spirit that the OPX underwent its single biggest revolution. Konev Maurice, the first official leader of the party since Ivar Davis resigned in 2439, took the initiative to recapture voter interest in the OP. In an innovative and radical move, he floated the party on the Baltusian Stock Exchange and sold off naming rights to corporate sponsors. Party politics became dependent on the decision of its shareholders at the OPX AGM and its board of directors. OPX representatives consisted almost entirely of good-looking actors who were paid to tow the corporate and party line (though it should be noted that this has largely been party convention since its founding).

The OPX struggled for the first twenty years with its new identity. In the aftermath of the demise of the Revolutionary Democratic Socialists, the party filled the void in the left-wing and picked up their votes, moving their way back to the top of the Senatorial pile. With the return of the RDS, the OPX moved to more extreme fascist positions in order to steal votes, which they accomplished with varying success from the 2460s until the turn of the century. As this policy began to fail under the leadership of Elke Ravenstijn, the OPX's share price dropped dramatically. The now significantly less valuable company was bought out by an accounting firm moving into financial services, Txurruka/Aperribai/Mayoz, and delisted. TAM appointed Kolda Beloki as CEO and announced a return to the "old school of OPX thought".

Over the party's five centuries of existence to 2524, it has contested 147 elections, winning 11,932 seats and receiving 1,620,396,258 votes from a possible 7,209,690,618 (~22%). Of Baltusia's 485 years of democracy, it has lived under 258 years of OPX Praetorship. The party has claimed 76 Praetorial wins from 148 elections with 18 of Baltusia's 63 Praetors, meaning only 6 of the party's leaders were not elected to Praetor.
-------------------------
NAMES:
*Pre-2039: Baltusian Human Rights Movement
*2039 - 2227: Liberal Libertarian Party
*2227 - 2447: Orange Party
*2447 - 2460: Levhäger Dry & SEX presents OPX
*2460 - 2467: OPX powered by Republica Daily
*2468 - 2476: OPX powered by wannabet.com
*2476 - 2491: OPX sponsored by MacDunaldos
*2491 - 2504: iPharm's OPX
*2504 - Now: Txurruka/Aperribai/Mayoz's OPX
-------------------------
LEADERS:
*2040 - 2059: Troy Champion
One of the founding fathers of the BHRM and the LLP, Troy Champion was the nation's first multi-term President and is considered a folk hero among die-hard OPX voters. He is known for his brash, laconic style of debate which has influenced every leader since.

*2060 - 2073: Jesus McMohammed
Considered highly incompetent by almost everyone, the corrupt McMohammed managed to prolong his stay as party leader by bending the rules. This act sums up his personality for most who remember his ill-fated leadership.

*2073 - 2085: Chilli Nafti
Chilli Nafti was an enigma. No one knew where she came from, no one knew where she went. Undoubtedly she came to the fore of the party at the wrong time as doubts surrounded the LLP's ability to lead after its silence during the Crimson Entente.

*2086 - 2109: Saba Billong
Originally one of the youngest leaders of the LLP, farm girl and athlete Saba Billong went on to become the longest serving of her time, along with setting the record for the longest serving Praetor.

*2110 - 2125: Demetria Johansson
Demteria Johansson was the subject of the first political assassination since Baltusia adopted democracy in 2039. The reasons for her death were unknown but dealt a harsh blow to a nation who loved the then-Praetor.

*2125 - 2135: Filip Moore
Filip Moore was rumoured to have slept his way to the top. After the assassination of Johansson (his reputed lover), then Deputy Praetor Moore was promoted to the full office. He disappeared in 2135 after being the first LLP Praetor in decades to lose an election. Reasons for his disappearance range from gambling debts to conspiracy theories involving the faking of Johansson's assassination.

*2135 - 2144: Brigitte Pearce
Pearce was the second LLP leader and Praetor to be assassinated. On 31 August 2144, members of the Violet Reev entered the home of Praetor and shot her, sparking the following civil war. She was otherwise known for upholding the traditions and values of party and nation.

*2144 - 2158: Tanith Hadjadj

*2158 - 2200: Taya Charlton
Taya Charlton became the longest serving Praetor in Baltusian history, surpassing Billong's mark. His reign came over the least interesting and most stable period in democratic Baltusian history.

*2201 - 2224: Jordan Capri
It was inevitable that the LLP would elect a porn star to its leadership role. Jordan Capri worked her way up from Rootianville's then organised crime ridden city government into top office as leader of the nation.

*2224 - 2243: John Perfect
John Perfect's influence on the LLP could be felt more than two centuries later when it became the OPX. Perfect upgraded the image of the party, changed its name and, in doing so, got himself elected.

*2243 - 2283: Harlow Anaclet

*2284 - 2298: Atreide M'Bokma

*2298 - 2322: Juanita Pierini

*2323 - 2337: Kioko Jordan

*2338 - 2349: Ford Munoz

*2350 - 2366: Kande Varrault
Kande Varrault's leadership would be where it all went wrong for the Orange Party. Through no fault of her own, Varrault saw the OP's share of the seats in the Senate plummet. An offer from the lithe sexagenarian leader to do a nude calendar to bump up votes did not secure her re-election and she resigned, leaving the OP leaderless for twenty-two years.

*2367 - 2389: No leader

*2390 - 2400: Ronald Rock
Ronald Rock made little headway as a political leader or statesman during his tenure as head of the party. His stint as Foreign Minister and his dacking of a Liberal Party leader may be his only claims to fame.

*2401 - 2421: Troy Champion XVII
Troy Champion's direct descendent and namesake may be best remembered for being the last OP Praetor, a position he gained through the negotiation skills that made his antecedent so successful. He was also noted to be remarkably similar in looks and personality to his ancestor.

*2422 - 2439: Ivar Davis
A bland man with no discernible talents, Ivar Davis managed to make it to the top by not offending anyone. It is this lack of a personality that meant he failed to capture the public's imagination and failed to be voted into office. It was later revealed Davis had a chronic gambling problem, using party property as collateral in extremely high stakes betting on Superpolo matches. The subsequent IPO helped pave the way for his debts to be repaid.

*2439 - 2447: No leader

*2447 - 2471: Konev Maurice
The new leader of the OPX was responsible for its transformation from an old, tired political machine into a healthy, profit-generating corporate cash cow at the expense of votes. In his first election after assuming leadership, the party's voter share plummeted. He steered the party in a new, more socialist direction in the aftermath of the Revolutionary Democratic Socialists' demise. Twenty years later, he triumphed in 2467, sweeping 117 seats in the Senate (of 300) and winning Praetorship through the first round. He won a second term in office before being ousted in 2471. He decided to retire shortly after.

*2472 - 2491: Soren Almiron
Almiron saw neither the highs nor lows that marked the career of predecessor Konev Maurice. He failed to win Praetorship against a united free market/liberal coalition but did steer the party to moderate success, becoming the largest single entity in the Senate twice. He died in a car crash in March 2491. He was due to retire at the end of the year.

*2491 - 2504: Elke Ravenstijn
Elke Ravenstijn became the first woman to lead the OPX ever and the first woman to lead the OP/OPX since Kande Varrault 125 years earlier. Ravenstijn would lead the OPX to lose its comfortable status as a power player as the continued emergence and establishment of the Elite Sinn Fein and the Revolutionary Democractic Socialists saw the OPX seat share slide. She was deposed as leader after several disastrous elections for the party.

*2504 - 2523: Kolda Beloki
After the disastrous leadership of Ravenstijn, the party's share price plummeted and was eventually delisted after the purchase by the accounting firm and burgeoning merchant bank, Txurruka/Aperribai/Mayoz. Kolda Beloki was appointed CEO and steered the party back to its roots as a economic-centrist, civil-progressive party. The new strategy paid off, getting the OPX narrowly to the top of the Senate once again and taking Beloki to the Praetor's Office three times. She stepped aside as CEO in 2523 with the party looking unbeatable in the next election.

*2523 - Now: Amets Ansola

Ministries

This party is not part of the national cabinet.

Political Positions

IdeologyPositionVisibilityCoherency
Centralizationmoderate unitaristhighperfect
Civil Rightsrestrictive-leaningexcellentperfect
Ecologymoderate environmentalistmoderateperfect
Foreign Relationsmoderate internationalisthighperfect
Government Responsibilitiessmall government-leaningexcellentperfect
Marketmoderate regulatorexcellentperfect
Militarymoderate pacifistmoderateperfect
Moralityconvinced progressivehighperfect
Religionconvinced secularexcellentperfect

Affiliations

This party is a member of the following organizations:

Election Results

History Table

MonthVotesTotal VotesVotes (%)Votes (%) (+)SeatsTotal SeatsSeats (%)Seats (+)
September 20691,910,48013,118,27214.56+14.566241015.12+62
November 20731,473,74717,630,8698.36-6.20344108.29-28
November 2077837,57222,126,5383.79-4.57144203.33-20
November 2081762,47022,321,1723.42-0.37134203.10-1
November 2085734,74922,448,2943.27-0.14124202.86-1
November 20891,055,70523,120,5924.57+1.29174204.05+5
May 20924,159,79218,309,21122.72+18.159642022.86+79
May 20964,641,91421,303,28021.79-0.939342022.14-3
May 21004,588,59019,695,98023.30+1.519942023.57+6
May 21044,259,31819,473,76021.87-1.4310245422.47+3
May 21086,423,57723,295,41027.57+5.7012545427.53+23
May 21125,630,17420,035,19528.10+0.5313246628.33+7
May 21168,836,45024,966,81435.39+7.2916546635.41+33
February 21194,796,58120,456,55523.45-11.9511146623.82-54
February 21236,604,78523,811,92327.74+4.2912946627.68+18
February 21276,854,15424,530,53627.94+0.2013246628.33+3
June 21278,046,06023,477,84834.27+6.3316346634.98+31
June 21318,969,71624,794,82936.18+1.9017046636.48+7
June 21357,266,77526,142,14727.80-8.389433328.23-76
June 21398,838,74030,526,85028.95+1.169833329.43+4
June 21437,115,24429,937,42823.77-5.198234223.98-16
September 2145000.00-23.774134211.99-41
March 21463,480,18821,537,37016.16+16.165834216.96+17
December 21473,505,82028,787,53012.18-3.984134211.99-17
December 21516,884,41331,137,23322.11+9.937734222.51+36
December 21556,164,99731,212,29119.75-2.366934220.18-8
March 21587,503,24332,377,25523.17+3.428134223.68+12
July 21587,345,72932,490,81322.61-0.577934223.10-2
July 21628,382,14431,376,74626.71+4.119936127.42+20
July 21668,343,46831,300,65526.66-0.069936127.42+0
October 21688,909,47732,715,70027.23+0.5810136127.98+2
December 217211,261,20836,413,67330.93+3.6911436131.58+13
July 21769,266,05934,818,08226.61-4.319836127.15-16
July 21808,782,93034,456,56025.49-1.129336125.76-5
July 21848,619,69836,293,98823.75-1.748736124.10-6
July 218810,123,50036,871,45427.46+3.7110136127.98+14
July 219210,716,75737,609,37928.49+1.0410636129.36+5
July 21967,333,45837,132,92419.75-8.757236119.94-34
July 22007,627,42237,361,28820.42+0.677536120.78+3
September 22026,431,49037,829,76917.00-3.417040817.16-5
September 22066,766,07538,451,20917.60+0.607240817.65+2
July 220811,657,89238,295,78630.44+12.8512740831.13+55
July 221211,906,31639,615,52430.05-0.3912942130.64+2
July 221610,938,77841,295,10226.49-3.5711442526.82-15
July 222010,753,40941,869,70725.68-0.8111142925.87-3
July 222113,280,85043,321,47930.66+4.9713343230.79+22
July 22259,315,97043,829,23321.26-9.409343521.38-40
February 222713,933,11639,245,51535.50+14.2515843935.99+65
February 223112,597,71240,465,28531.13-4.3713944231.45-19
February 223514,781,69544,598,20133.14+2.0114944233.71+10
February 223914,893,12742,314,44635.20+2.0516345435.90+14
February 224312,844,42040,878,98031.42-3.7814746031.96-16
August 224314,146,23239,797,69135.55+4.1216646036.09+19
August 224714,757,76935,279,02141.83+6.2919346041.96+27
February 224915,826,42927,520,48557.51+15.6826546057.61+72
February 225322,108,21939,445,08056.05-1.4625846056.09-7
March 225510,733,33033,061,45932.46-23.5814946032.39-109
March 22598,365,51327,514,74530.40-2.0613846030.00-11
March 226312,272,30935,215,62334.85+4.4515946034.57+21
March 226710,987,05635,670,10630.80-4.0513946030.22-20
February 226911,437,13237,750,58630.30-0.5113646029.57-3
February 227310,208,00938,913,89226.23-4.0611946025.87-17
April 227411,892,56137,533,09531.69+5.4514546031.52+26
April 227820,590,65347,879,63743.01+11.3220046043.48+55
June 227926,947,53947,339,57956.92+13.9226146056.74+61
June 228324,816,28846,944,97552.86-4.0624446053.04-17
May 22855,555,80745,295,18312.27-40.606746014.57-177
June 22867,280,02440,056,15218.17+5.9110452819.70+37
June 229010,635,09433,198,03732.04+13.8616853731.28+64
June 229416,115,33038,575,19441.78+9.7422254041.11+54
June 229815,951,79841,329,47638.60-3.1820554037.96-17
August 229915,831,29339,363,80540.22+1.6221454039.63+9
August 230319,837,63251,601,25638.44-1.7720854038.52-6
August 230721,578,40850,997,02242.31+3.874310043.00-165
August 231122,150,82245,757,44148.41+6.104910049.00+6
August 231521,723,09647,014,42546.21-2.204710047.00-2
August 231929,363,92947,699,20561.56+15.366310063.00+16
August 232327,333,46248,565,27356.28-5.285910059.00-4
August 232728,460,10447,269,55860.21+3.936210062.00+3
August 233115,988,46845,407,85135.21-25.003610036.00-26
August 233515,164,60547,560,08631.89-3.333210032.00-4
March 233819,269,87357,633,98233.43+1.553410034.00+2
March 234212,097,12450,351,79524.03-9.412510025.00-9
March 234617,009,63554,739,71631.07+7.053310033.00+8
March 235012,569,88658,161,20321.61-9.462210022.00-11
March 235410,303,94461,413,85416.78-4.833219016.84+10
October 235612,027,78759,210,40620.31+3.544119021.58+9
June 235711,769,02060,639,99919.41-0.913919020.53-2
June 23619,144,63260,327,93415.16-4.252919015.26-10
June 236511,316,44461,069,56218.53+3.373719019.47+8
April 236712,147,22760,100,06820.21+1.684019021.05+3
July 237012,305,25355,352,69222.23+2.024420022.00+4
July 237414,874,26362,507,52223.80+1.574720023.50+3
February 237514,203,75456,381,21225.19+1.405120025.50+4
February 237914,154,18955,992,26425.28+0.095120025.50+0
February 238216,247,08152,268,17031.08+5.816220031.00+11
February 238612,496,16655,205,59622.64-8.454720023.50-15
February 23907,394,14562,529,56311.83-10.812320011.50-24
February 23945,989,13765,675,9339.12-2.71172008.50-6
September 23976,903,85965,263,88510.58+1.462220011.00+5
September 24015,805,60561,312,3509.47-1.112020010.00-2
September 24055,429,82862,692,9988.66-0.81162008.00-4
September 24098,663,10364,742,64713.38+4.722720013.50+11
September 24139,934,75571,315,03913.93+0.552820014.00+1
January 241713,648,34163,343,60021.55+7.624320021.50+15
May 241719,204,66761,478,05231.24+9.695920029.50+16
November 241831,798,22364,008,04049.68+18.449920049.50+40
November 242217,804,93875,994,40123.43-26.254720023.50-52
November 242611,045,73759,263,08618.64-4.793620018.00-11
November 24308,740,57973,190,84911.94-6.702420012.00-12
November 24348,831,29879,572,59011.10-0.842120010.50-3
November 24385,156,12080,711,7376.39-4.71112005.50-10
May 24444,719,77276,626,2896.16-0.23183006.00+7
January 24455,754,67879,185,9037.27+1.11223007.33+4
January 24493,991,94980,451,8384.96-2.31143004.67-8
June 24505,333,49880,936,4926.59+1.63183006.00+4
February 24515,572,62178,913,2467.06+0.47203006.67+2
September 24526,992,34779,356,6448.81+1.75263008.67+6
September 24564,874,03081,341,2685.99-2.82163005.33-10
September 24608,103,54382,085,7349.87+3.88293009.67+13
August 24618,894,32078,996,33811.26+1.393330011.00+4
September 246321,700,69383,976,08225.84+14.587930026.33+46
September 246734,542,05890,389,33338.21+12.3711730039.00+38
September 247116,264,62781,609,38019.93-18.286030020.00-57
December 247413,692,14987,265,23415.69-4.244530015.00-15
December 247816,949,11888,019,81319.26+3.575930019.67+14
December 248212,765,67189,380,20914.28-4.974430014.67-15
December 248615,071,49688,525,92117.02+2.745130017.00+7
December 249017,954,19686,144,03620.84+3.826330021.00+12
February 249217,508,74193,523,15218.72-2.125730019.00-6
February 249610,736,84691,054,86911.79-6.933530011.67-22
April 24989,901,73289,641,04011.05-0.753230010.67-3
April 250210,313,71292,452,98911.16+0.113330011.00+1
November 250310,744,28298,209,67310.94-0.223330011.00+0
July 250412,409,42798,747,66912.57+1.633730012.33+4
July 250812,197,64195,701,31812.75+0.183730012.33+0
July 251213,921,26790,817,53215.33+2.584530015.00+8
July 251619,504,516101,166,55119.28+3.955730019.00+12
July 252023,607,884104,733,86522.54+3.266830022.67+11
July 252423,081,51998,298,06123.48+0.947230024.00+4
July 252821,390,604103,289,04020.71-2.776330021.00-9
July 253219,580,670102,812,69619.04-1.665930019.67-4
July 253623,739,966104,325,36122.76+3.717030023.33+11
July 254022,516,843107,545,64520.94-1.826430021.33-6
July 254420,657,195105,493,14919.58-1.365930019.67-5
January 254722,137,41799,213,74822.31+2.736830022.67+9
January 255124,096,138110,307,21121.84-0.476830022.67+0
January 255523,479,174113,863,28820.62-1.226330021.00-5
January 255922,644,278108,655,54420.84+0.226630022.00+3
January 256323,010,826106,102,10121.69+0.856830022.67+2
January 256728,132,617117,250,07423.99+2.317530025.00+7
January 257121,399,633119,825,55817.86-6.135630018.67-19
June 257519,250,682119,496,65816.11-1.755230017.33-4
June 257928,746,619121,148,82123.73+7.627730025.67+25
June 258319,864,859123,374,00316.10-7.635230017.33-25
June 258716,030,532112,684,65214.23-1.884730015.67-5
June 259131,545,71480,833,44639.03+24.8011730039.00+70
June 259584,364,097111,237,45375.84+36.8222430074.67+107
June 259980,574,81797,366,38682.75+6.9124030080.00+16
June 260368,255,055132,990,27751.32-31.4315230050.67-88
June 260737,440,57794,404,45339.66-11.6611930039.67-33
June 261118,177,368119,125,67915.26-24.404530015.00-74

Relative Graph

This graph shows the percentage of seats the party achieved in each election, relative to its maximum.

Election History

Absolute Graph

This graph shows the percentage of seats the party achieved in each election in the entire legislature.

Election History

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.

Election History

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 Txurruka/Aperribai/Mayoz's OPX.

Page 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487 488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 558 559 560 561 562 563 564 565 566 567 568 569 570 571 572 573 574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599 600 601 602 603 604 605 606 607 608 609 610 611 612 613 614 615 616 617 618 619 620 621 622 623 624 625 626 627 628 629 630 631 632 633 634 635 636 637 638 639 640 641 642 643 644 645 646 647 648 649 650 651 652 653 654 655 656 657 658 659 660 661 662 663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670 671 672 673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 690 691 692 693 694 695 696 697 698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705 706 707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718 719 720 721 722

BillCreatedVoting startedVoteBill StatusResult
TreatyJune 5559June 5559passed
Still Water Act, August 5556August 5556 debate
Expurgation Act, IAugust 5556 debate
Salvation ActAugust 5556 debate
Positions Bill - Please IgnoreNovember 5555March 5557defeated
RP: NEW PLAYERS READ THIS: Single Party StateNovember 5555November 5555passed
Military Reform Act of 5556November 5555 debate
RP: NEW PLAYERS READ THIS: Single Party StateNovember 5555 debate
Family Farm and Agricultural Encouragement ActJuly 5555November 5555defeated
Marriage Reform ActJuly 5554July 5554defeated
Specialized Plan for Environmental SecurityJuly 5554July 5554passed
Restoration Act of 5552July 5552July 5552defeated
United Workers Union ☭ | 01January 5551January 5551passed
Call for early elections, September 5550September 5550September 5550passed
United Workers Union Bill 🛠ï¸January 5550January 5550defeated
Phone Service Provider Regulation BillSeptember 5547September 5547passed
RP: Baltusian RevolutionJuly 5545December 5550passed
LibCon Manifesto (2)December 5544February 5546defeated
LibCon Manifesto (1)June 5544July 5544defeated
House Bill 007 Patriots FamilyJuly 5537July 5537defeated

Random fact: Culturally Open nations can adopt advisory/non-enforceable Nation Descriptions. See http://forum.particracy.net/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=6242

Random quote: "Let's not forget that we belong to history, that history that men and women who fought before did, that history that men and women who are fighting now will do." - Tera Pisthis, former Selucian politician

This page was generated with PHP
Copyright 2004-2010 Wouter Lievens
Queries performed: 51