User:Luziyca/Sandbox3
Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale | |
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File:ISWI.png | |
First-Secretary | Tembi Miliusis |
Founded | 1 May, 1899 |
Headquarters | Cuanstad, Imagua and the Assimas |
Ideology | Council communism |
Political position | Far left |
Colors | Red |
Senate | 0 / 60
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Lesser House | 0 / 70
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The Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale (Etrurian: Sezione imaguana del lavoratore internazionale, Imaguan Creole: Imakua kuwa a walabeti) is a political party in Imagua and the Assimas that advocates the implementation of far-left politics. Established in 1899, it was the primary left-wing party of the Colony of Imagua from 1900 until 1909 when the Labour Party won a seat in the legislature, and quickly became the main left-wing political party in the country.
(TBC)
History
Establishment and early years
The Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale was established in 1899 by trade union organiser Ethel Cropper, as he believed that the colonial government as existed on the island of Imagua at that time only benefited the "Estmerish bourgeoise," and felt that the only way that all Imaguans could achieve equal rights would be for Estmere to become a socialist state. Thus, on 1 May, 1899, Cropper convened the first party congress, with Cropper being unanimously elected as the First Secretary of the party.
The party's main agenda was to nominate candidates for the Legislative Council: thus, they spent much of the year organising local chapters of the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale, with Ethel Cooper to stand election for the Dockside constituency for the 1900 general elections. Despite only managing to secure ten candidates, Ethel Cropper won the Dockside constituency, allowing the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale to enter the Legislative Council.
During the next four years, the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale gained support from many trade unions, especially the Dockworkers' Union which only helped boost their position in Imaguan politics.
First political peak
In the 1904 general elections, the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale nominated sixty-seven candidates, with First Secretary Ethel Cropper standing for re-election. During the 1904 general election campaign, they viciously attacked both the Conservatives, and the Democrats for being too capitalistic, while attacking the Labour Party for not being sufficiently socialist enough.
Despite a vicious campaign, Cropper secured re-election, and was joined by Harlan Alardice, who was elected as representative from the constituency of Lundholm. That year, at the Second Party Congress, Ethel Cropper was re-elected First Secretary, and the party platform was further refined.
During the next four years, the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale gained substantial popularity, particularly among members of trade unions and feminist organisations, while their staunch support of labour rights and women's suffrage made them relatively unpopular in much of the rest of the Colony of Imagua.
Regardless, in the 1908 general elections, both Cropper and Alardice were re-elected, and were joined by Rudolph Ekbom. While all three legislators represented Cuanstad, they had established a presence in all seventy constituencies of the Legislative Council. However, after the death of Premier Harmon Lambourne, the 1909 general by-election saw the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale lose two of their seats, with only Rudolph Ekbom remaining a member of the Legislative Council.
At the Third Party Congress in 1909, Ekbom demanded that Ethel Cropper resign for his "sheer incompetence" in losing two of the party's three seats in the 1909 general election. Cropper refused, and after heated debates between supporters of Ethel Cropper and Rudolph Ekbom, Ethel Cropper remained the First Secretary.
Thus, during this period, although Cropper was still the party leader, Ekbom's position as the only member of the Legislative Council from the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale meant that Ekbom was by far the most important member of the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale. Despite Ekbom's "official loyalty," in 1911, he was accused by Cropper of attempting to stage an internal party coup to remove Cropper as party leader. While Ekbom was ultimately allowed to stay in the party, the severe infighting within the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale meant that in the 1913 general elections, Ekbom lost his seat to Democratic challenger James Olofson.
First stint in the political wilderness
At the Fourth Party Congress in 1914, Rudolph Ekbom and his supporters were purged from the party, as Ekbom's loss of a seat in the Legislative Council effectively neutralised his strength within the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale. First Secretary Ethel Cropper was again confirmed to be the First Secretary of the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale.
The main priority of the Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale was to regain a seat in the Legislative Council of Imagua, as... (TBC)
Political positions
The Imaguan Section of the Workers' Internationale advocates for far-left politics. To this end, it seeks to expel all foreign military bases, recognise Maracanese sovereignty over Dunhelm Island, nationalise all major industries, and adopt worker's self management.
With regards to Native Imaguans, it seeks to recognise the Imaguan language as an official language, and to restore the "traditional rights" that were removed with the passage of the Native Integration Act of 1949, while upholding indigenous citizenship.
Electoral history
Election | Leader | Candidates | Seats | +/- | Position |
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1900 | Ethel Cropper | 10/70 | 1 / 70
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1 | Third party |
1904 | 67/70 | 2 / 70
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1 | Third party | |
1908 | 70/70 | 3 / 70
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1 | Third party | |
1909 | 70/70 | 1 / 70
|
2 | Third party | |
1913 | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
1 | Extra-parliamentary opposition | |
1917 | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
1920 | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
1924 | Waverly Palmcrantz | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | |
1936 | Willie Douglas | 70/70 | 2 / 70
|
2 | Fourth party |
1940 | 70/70 | 1 / 70
|
1 | Fourth party | |
1944 | 70/70 | 1 / 70
|
Fourth party | ||
1948 | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
1 | Extra-parliamentary opposition | |
1952 | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
1956 | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
1960 | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
1964 | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
1968 | Therman Bloch | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | |
1972 | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
1976 | 70/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
1980 | 69/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
1984 | Eilane Evans | 69/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | |
1988 | 69/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
1992 | 68/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
1996 | Jack Singleton | 68/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | |
2000 | 68/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
2004 | 67/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
2008 | Tembi Miliusis | 68/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | |
2012 | 68/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
2016 | 68/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition | ||
2020 | 69/70 | 0 / 70
|
Extra-parliamentary opposition |