Political parties in The Furbish Islands: Difference between revisions

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====Local parties====
====Local parties====
Only parties with seats in any federal subject legislatures are listed here.
Only parties with seats in any federal subject legislatures are listed here.

Revision as of 00:28, 6 December 2024

This article lists political parties in The Furbish Islands.

The Furbish Islands is a multi-party democracy and has hundreds of registered political parties, the vast majority existing only in the provincial and territorial level. On the federal and regional level, many parties align themselves with one of the "Big Three" party alliances, the Christian Democratic Union, Liberal Union, and Progressive Union, or one of the three smaller alliances, Alianza de Ley y Justicia, Democrats and Progressives of The Furbish Islands, or Union of Furbish Green Parties. Other parties with seats in the National Assembly include Alternative for The Furbish Islands, the Conservative Party, De Burgers, Det Konservative Parti, the Liberal Party, New Ideas, the New Progressive Party, the Peoples' Party, the Pirate Party, and the satirical Partij Fête Fiesta Party.

Organization

Furbish political parties, especially the four alliances, are more loosely organized than parties in most countries. The four alliances exist only on the national and regional levels. Other parties have separate organizations in different provinces, territories, and regions they are active in. While they are legally separate entities, they often have an organization leading all of them, which may or may not be the regional or national organization of that party.

The Furbish constitution requires that parties are "democratic organizations representing the interests of their members" and lays out how they are to be organized.

Delegates

The party delegates are the main governing body of each political party, which decide the party platform, elect the leaders, and in party alliances can approve new member parties as well as expel current members. They can also expel individuals from a party. Usually they are elected every 3 years from local branches. They meet once a year to discuss most matters, and always meet before the start of the official election campaign to elect a party leader.

Chair and executive committee

The party executive committee handles administrative tasks such as managing finances and hiring campaign staff. They are elected by the party delegates.

Party leaders

Party leaders are considered the "face" of the party and represent its views in debates and to the general public. Parties have a leader in the national government and in every federal subject it is active in, and leaders are also the party's candidate for Prime Minister or the provincial equivalent, or serve in the cabinet or shadow cabinet.

In addition to the leaders there is a number of co-leaders. Depending on the party, they might either be handpicked by the leader or elected in separate elections (or be the runners up in the leader election). In parties that have a parliamentary leader, they are always a co-leader as well.

Parliamentary leaders and whips

Unlike in many countries, the parliamentary leader in Furbish parties is a separate position from the party leader. Parliamentary leaders lead representatives of the party in the National Assembly or in other federal subject assemblies and are in charge of a party's legislative agenda. They are elected by deputies of the party, usually in either a multi-round or ranked choice system, and they appoint party whips who enforce discipline. Traditionally the parliamentary leader of the leading party in the governing coalition is referred to as the Leader of the National Assembly (or their respective assembly) and is in the cabinet, while the leader of the leading party of shadow government is referred to as the shadow leader and is in the shadow cabinet.

List

Current parties

Christian Democratic Union

Name Leader(s) Ideology National Assembly Federal subject executives Political Position
CDULogo.svg Christian Democratic Union (CDU) Arthur Trudeau Christian democracy
Liberal conservatism
95 / 615
25 / 130
Center to center-right

Liberal Union

Name Leader(s) Ideology National Assembly Federal subject executives Political Position
LULogo.svg Liberal Union (LU) Floris Hutters Classical liberalism
Conservative liberalism
132 / 615
49 / 130
Center to center-right

Progressive Union

Name Leader(s) Ideology National Assembly Federal subject executives Political Position
PULogo.svg Progressive Union (PU) Thomas Norup Social democracy
Social liberalism
Progressivism
99 / 615
50 / 130
Center-left to left-wing

Alianza de Ley y Justicia

Name Leader(s) Ideology National Assembly Federal subject executives Political Position
Alianza de Ley y Justicia (ALJ) Lixandro Cuyar Christian democracy
Liberal conservatism
15 / 615
4 / 130
Center to center-right

Democrats and Progressives of The Furbish Islands

Name Leader(s) Ideology National Assembly Federal subject executives Political Position
Democrats and Progressives of The Furbish Islands (DPTFI) Georgia Pascarelli Social democracy
Progressivism
54 / 615
0 / 130
Left-wing

Union of Furbish Green Parties

Name Leader(s) Ideology National Assembly Federal subject executives Political Position
Union of Furbish Green Parties (UFGP) Mathijs Vrylink Green politics
30 / 615
2 / 130
Center-left to left-wing
center (factions)
center-right (factions)

Other national parties

The following are parties that have had seats in the National Assembly.

Name Leader(s) Ideology National Assembly Federal subject executives Political Position
AFTFILogo.svg Alternative for The Furbish Islands (AFÐFI) Nathaniel Doggenbúrg Right-wing populism
National conservatism
Furbish nationalism
31 / 615
0 / 130
Far-right
Conservative Party (CP) William Kirkham Conservatism
Liberal conservatism
18 / 615
0 / 130
Center-right to right-wing
De Burgers (Burgers) Marijke Heusinkveld Agrarianism
15 / 615
0 / 130
Det Konservative Parti (DKP) Niklas Sorby Conservatism
Liberal conservatism
10 / 615
0 / 130
Center-right to right-wing
Liberal Party (LP) Anastasia Keating Social liberalism
12 / 615
0 / 130
Center to center-left
New Ideas (NI) Chad Grosderhan Right-wing populism
Civic nationalism
Conservatism
56 / 615
0 / 130
Right-wing
New Progressive Party (NPP) Sophia Eicke Left-wing populism
Democratic socialism
Progressivism
Non-interventionism
9 / 615
0 / 130
Far-left
Partij Fête Fiesta Party (PFFP) Dewitt Stevens Political satire
8 / 615
0 / 130
Peoples' Party (PP) Elizabeth Brant Left-wing populism
Democratic socialism
Progressivism
Non-interventionism
8 / 615
0 / 130
Far-left
Pirate Party (Pirates) Matilda van Aalzum Pirate politics
10 / 615
0 / 130

Local parties

Only parties with seats in any federal subject legislatures are listed here.

Former parties

Only parties with seats in any federal subject legislatures are listed here.

Coalitions

As legislatures on all levels of Furbish governments are elected proportionally, it is rare when a single party or party alliance wins an absolute majority, so parties have to form a coalition government. Since the Third Great War each party is associated with a color, and certain coalitions have been given nicknames by the media. The following are ones which have been in power in a federal subject government in the post-Third Great War era, organized by major parties. They are listed by names preferred by the Furbish National Broadcasting Company, with names used by other sources listed below.

Certain parties are usually grouped together due to being ideologically similar and operating in different provinces, but almost always enter coalition talks together in higher levels. For example the CDU and ALJ are both socially conservative and economically centrist, while both the CP and DPK are socially and fiscally conservative.

Christian Democratic Union and/or ALJ:

  • Pineapple coalition (CDU and/or ALJ and UFGP)    
  • Zarare coalition (CDU, ALJ, and DKP)    
  • TBD coalition (CDU, ALJ, DKP, and LP)     
  • TBD coalition (CDU and/or ALJ and NI)    

Liberal Union:

Progressive Union:

  • Atocha coalition (PU and CP)   
  • Christmas coalition (PU and De Burgers)   
  • Christmas storm coalition (PU, De Burgers, and LP)    
    • Sometimes called the icy Christmas coalition by foreign media
  • Gryva coalition (PU and LP)   
  • Louisiana coalition (PU and DKP)   
    • Sometimes called the New Piedmont coalition
  • Strawberry coalition (PU and UFGP)   
    • Called the Sexish coalition by most other media
  • TBD coalition (PU, UFGP, and LP)    

CDU and/or ALJ and LU:

CDU and/or ALJ and PU:

LU and PU:

  • Mavona coalition (LU and PU)   

Hypothetical coalitions

The following are hypothetical coalitions that have been discussed either by politicians or the media, and could have held a majority at some point. They may have also held majorities on the municipal level.

Christian Democratic Union and/or ALJ:

  • Carrot coalition (CDU and De Burgers)   

Liberal Union:

  • Gagium coalition (LU and Pirates)   

Progressive Union:

  • Valentines coalition (PU and Pirates)   

CDU and/or ALJ and LU:

CDU and/or ALJ and PU:

LU and PU:

CDU and/or ALJ, LU, and PU:

Minor parties only:

  • Avocado coalition (De Burgers and NI)   

AFTFI The following coalitions include AFTFI, which is under a cordon sanitaire by other parties.

Pre-Third Great War

The following are names given to past coalition. They were not contemporary, and it should be noted past party colors do not align with ones used by current parties even with a similar ideology.

History

Colonial era (1500s-1805)

First Republic (1805-1815)

Second Republic (1815-1875)

Early Third Republic (1875-1930s)

Second Great War era (1930s-1973)

Post-Third Great War era (1973-present)

Contemporary era (2015?-present)