Government of Tyreseia: Difference between revisions
Line 63: | Line 63: | ||
==Executive branch== | ==Executive branch== | ||
[[File:Egypt-14A-148_-_Al-Montazah_Palace_(2216757121).jpg|thumb|left|200px|Palace of Workers' Councils, the seat of the Supreme Workers' Assembly and Council of State in New Tyria]] | |||
The executive branch of the Tyreseian government is helmed by the Council of State (Tyreseian: ''Cunsiju djul Stadu''). Rather than a single head of government, the Council of State functions as a collective body. Its members are elected from within the Supreme Workers' Assembly. Each member of the Council serves as a People's Commissar, whom heads Tyreseia's executive agencies, known as People's Commissariats. Commissars are entitled to serve until the end of their terms in the Assembly, and are thus subject to the same principles of recall and term limits as other Assembly members. Additionally, any one or all of the Council may be impeached and removed by a supermajority vote of the Assembly. | The executive branch of the Tyreseian government is helmed by the Council of State (Tyreseian: ''Cunsiju djul Stadu''). Rather than a single head of government, the Council of State functions as a collective body. Its members are elected from within the Supreme Workers' Assembly. Each member of the Council serves as a People's Commissar, whom heads Tyreseia's executive agencies, known as People's Commissariats. Commissars are entitled to serve until the end of their terms in the Assembly, and are thus subject to the same principles of recall and term limits as other Assembly members. Additionally, any one or all of the Council may be impeached and removed by a supermajority vote of the Assembly. | ||
===People's Commissariats=== | ===People's Commissariats=== |
Latest revision as of 02:42, 24 May 2023
This article is incomplete because it is pending further input from participants, or it is a work-in-progress by one author. Please comment on this article's talk page to share your input, comments and questions. Note: To contribute to this article, you may need to seek help from the author(s) of this page. |
Federal syndicalist directorial council republic | |
Formation | 22 October 1883 |
---|---|
Country | Workers' Federation of Tyreseia |
Legislative branch | |
Legislature | Supreme Workers' Assembly |
Meeting place | Hall of Workers' Councils, New Tyria |
Executive branch | |
Leader | Collective body |
Main body | Council of State |
President of the Council of State | Lazarru Chichera |
Appointer | Supreme Workers' Assembly |
Departments | 14 |
Judicial branch | |
Court | Supreme Workers' Justice Committee |
Seat | Palace of Justice, New Tyria |
The government of Tyreseia, also known as the federal government or the national government of Tyreseia (Tyreseian: Guvernachu Djindalu dja Tirexia) is the national government of the Workers' Federation of Tyreseia and its subnational entities.
Legislative branch
The Tyreseian government structure resembles a highly-modified nested council system, in which lower councils on the local level elect representatives to councils in higher levels. The ultimate legislative power of Tyreseia is vested in the Supreme Workers' Assembly, a unicameral body made up of 708 members. The Assembly is responsible for passing all federal laws in the nation. Laws may also be put before the Assembly for voting by petitions of initiative, which require 30,000 signatories from across at least two constituencies to pass. Assembly members also may form committees to address specific policy issues. Usually formed on an ad hoc basis, some of these committees may nonetheless persist through multiple sessions. The Supreme Assembly also elects from its ranks the Council of State, the collective head of state and executive cabinet. The Supreme Workers' Assembly's ranks are filled according to X principle; Tyreseian regions are entitled to representation based on population and the number of municipalities and communes within them. Terms last for four years; Assemblymen are allowed one consecutive re-election before being forcibly barred from office. As of the 1970 National Reforms, Tyreseia is also one of the few nations to practice staggered elections for a national assembly, with half of the seats being elected on odd-numbered years and half on even-numbered years. Division between "odd" and "even" seats is as evenly distributed across the nation's constituencies as possible. Citizens in a representative's constituency are allowed to start petitions of recall at any time during that representative's term, which will trigger a snap election. Snap elections may also be called by the Council of State, thus dissolving their own post and the Assembly upon the election's conclusion; snap elections via petitions of recall are more common under the Tyreseian system.
As the Tyreseian system is federal, there exists a debate over what issues fall into the regional system and what comes under national prerogative through the auspices of the Supreme Workers' Assembly. For example, it is generally agreed that projects, such as rail lines and highways, crossing multiple regions fall under the national government, but
Executive branch
The executive branch of the Tyreseian government is helmed by the Council of State (Tyreseian: Cunsiju djul Stadu). Rather than a single head of government, the Council of State functions as a collective body. Its members are elected from within the Supreme Workers' Assembly. Each member of the Council serves as a People's Commissar, whom heads Tyreseia's executive agencies, known as People's Commissariats. Commissars are entitled to serve until the end of their terms in the Assembly, and are thus subject to the same principles of recall and term limits as other Assembly members. Additionally, any one or all of the Council may be impeached and removed by a supermajority vote of the Assembly.
People's Commissariats
A People's Commissariat (Tyreseian: comixadu djindalu) is a Tyreseian government body analagous to a government ministry in other nations. The leaders of these departments, also known as People's Commissars or Commissars for short, serve on the Council of State, the collective head of state and government of the Workers' Federation. As the Commissars themselves are politicians with short term limits, the bureaucracy within the Commissariats is often influential over the political leadership.
Communication and Postal Affairs
- Internet and Telecommunications Bureau
Culture and Tourism
- Commission for Latinic Cultural Affairs, the body in charge of cultural coordinations regarding Civitas, the international organization gathering all nations with a shared Latin cultural heritage.
Education
- Bureau of Science, Technology and Innovation
Finance and Industry
- National Mint and Engraving Service
- Nuclear Administration Commission
- Rubric Currency Coordination Commission
- Taxation Bureau
Foreign Affairs
The current People's Commissar of Foreign Affairs is Damya Tamment.
- Permanent Mission to the Forum of Nations
- Permanent Mission to the Rubric Coast Consortium
- Bureau for Scipio-Periclean Affairs
- Agency for Foreign Mutual Aid
- Bureau for Kiso Pact Affairs
Health
The current People's Commissar of Health, and the President of the Council of State, is Lazarru Chichera.
- Food and Substance Regulatory Commission
- Work Safety Bureau
Housing and Development
- Bureau of Vital Statistics
- Office of Archives and Public Records
Justice
- National Oversight and Audit Bureau, Tyreseia's primary anti-corruption wing. Due to the nature of its tasks, the Bureau is given significant investigative freedom, as well as redundancies to serve as self-auditing. Assignments within the Justice Commissariat to the Oversight and Audit Bureau are generally seen as a high honor, and the culmination of a state prosecutor's career.
Labor and Unions
National Defense
The current People's Commissar of National Defense is Meir Aroeste.
- Workers' Naval Fleet
- Workers' Naval Infantry Service
- Workers' Naval Air Service
- Office of Naval Intelligence
- Workers' Militia Coordinating Committee
Oceans and Maritime Trade
- Maritime Safety and Insurance Board
Public Safety
- Nuclear Safety Commission, established to guard nuclear facilities and protect related aspects of the nuclear power sector. The Commission also conducts safety audits of Tyreseia's two nuclear power plants, alongside other aspects of Tyreseia's nuclear industry.
- Civil Emergency Response Service, the national government's disaster response group. The Service maintains first responders, search-and-rescue teams, CBRN response specialists, and firefighters to augment local disaster relief forces. The CERS also operates a small handful of firefighting tanker planes.
- Bureau of the Republican Guard
Transportation
- National Railways Bureau (FerruTir)
- Transport Safety Regulatory Commission
Water and Natural Resources
Judicial branch
See also: Judicial system of Tyreseia
The judicial system of Tyreseia is defined by the use of civil law and judicial panels.
Administrative divisions
Within Tyreseia's nested system, the lowest level of organization is the ward or neighborhood. These groups govern anywhere from 3,000 to 9,000 people, and are usually designated by a conglomeration of local union workplaces (or from a single local union in the case of rural areas). Each ward elects a council of around 30-50 people, and regulates local issues specific to that area. Multiple wards or councils coalesce to form municipalities (Tyreseian: cunsiju). The primary function of a municipality is to facilitate inter-council cooperation and govern wider issues, such as city services. In rural areas, communes serve instead of wards, with multiple adjoining rural communes adjoining into prefectural governments. These prefectures and municipalities vary widely in size based on the number of wards under them; municipalities usually govern whole cities or parts of large metropolises, while prefectures cover a regionally-important town and surrounding countryside. In either case, these second-level subnational governments will form a region. Regions are the highest form of subnational government, and retain the most autonomy out of all the levels of Tyreseia's subnational entities. The regions are governed by regional councils of 100 to 150 people, elected from within the municipal or prefectural councils. From there, regional councils mediate issues between lower bodies and administer regional infrastructure projects. Regional governments also maintain commissariats of their own to support regional laws and institutions. Regions are entitled to appoint a number of their own members to the Supreme Workers' Assembly. The regional council determines a list of candidates from within its ranks and places the list before the general populace of the region at-large for approval by vote.
Local powers
As Tyreseia is a federal nation, the subnational governments retain significant authority.