Megelan

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Community of Liberty of Meᵹelan
Comunità della Libertà di Meſiolano
Motto: "Tiremm innanz" (Insubric)
"We carry on"
Anthem: "La bella Gigogin" (Insubric)
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Location of Meᵹelan (orange) in Tyran
CapitalNone (de jure)
LargestEridanium
Official languagesTuscan
Recognised national languagesInsubric
Orobic
Recognised regional languagesAlemannish
Emilian
Ladin
Ethnic groups
(2019)
86.2% Meᵹelaneſe
13.8% Other
Religion
(2019)
34.9% No religion or undeclared
32.1% Western esotericism
29.4% Modern paganism
3.6 Other
Demonym(s)Meᵹelaneſe
GovernmentConfederation
• Prior
Luisa Bianchi
• Vice Prior
Giuseppina Gabrielli
LegislatureGrand Council of Meᵹelan
Council of Nine Hundred
General Council
Establishment
• Foundation date
14 August 1447
• Current constitution
15 september 1996
Area
• Total
34,112.37 km2 (13,170.86 sq mi)
Population
• 2019 estimate
5,136,854
• Density
150.5/km2 (389.8/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2019 estimate
• Total
$271 billion
• Per capita
$52,862.5
GDP (nominal)2019 estimate
• Total
$304 billion
• Per capita
$59,183.5
Gini (2019)31.3
medium
HDI (2019)0.912
very high
Currencyscudo (Ƨ) (sCU)
Time zoneUTC+1
Date formatdd-mm-yyyy (aID)
Driving sideleft
Calling code+42
ISO 3166 codeMEG
Internet TLD.meg

Politics

The Meᵹelaneſe state is united not by a single pact, but by overlapping pacts and bilateral treaties between members; the parties generally agree to preserve the peace, aid in military endeavours and arbitrate disputes. These pacts and treaties are founded on the principle of subsidiarity, and each higher body only exists to fulfill those needs that cannot be sufficiently met by the lower body. This has resulted in a situation of de facto asymmetric federalism: the different constituent bodies of the Meᵹelaneſe state possess different powers, as detailed by each pact and treaty, and the division of powers between these bodies is not symmetric, although they have the same constitutional status.

Government

The Meᵹelaneſe regard elections as inherently aristocratic, since only those with money and status could win; to the Meᵹelaneſe, selection by lot is an essential feature of democracy. For this reason, in the upper house of the country's legislature - the Council of Nine Hundred - the functions and powers of lawmaking are divided among multiple bodies whose members are selected by lot among interested people.

The Agenda Council of the Council of Nine Hundred is made up of 150 paid volunteers selected by lot; they serve 3-year terms, with one third of members replaced each year, but they are not allowed to serve consecutive terms. The Agenda Council creates and updates a list of issue areas; then, it decides which topics in each area need new laws written, or which existing laws need changing - but doesn’t draft bills or vote on them.

The Interest Panels of the Council of Nine Hundred are made up of 12 unpaid volunteers each; they only serve long enough to draft a bill, but can serve consecutive terms. There is one Interest Panel for each issue or topic highlighted by the Agenda Council, and their duty is to produce one draft bill for each of those issues and topics; the panels can be either formed by lot or be self organized: self-selection at the level of the Interest Panels allows experts who would be unelectable (due to their appearance, class, personality, or other traits) to contribute to governance.

The Review Panels of the Council of Nine Hundred are made up of a total of 150 paid individuals selected by lot out of all the country's adult citizens; those who accept to serve are then split according to issue areas; they serve 3-year terms, with one third of members replaced each year, but they are not allowed to serve consecutive terms. They don’t choose what issue area they will be assigned to, in order to avoid possible domination of the panels by special interests, and their duty is to review draft bills from Interest Panels, amend and combine bills, and produce final proposed bills that will go to a vote - but they don’t initiate bills or cast the final votes.

The Policy Juries of the Council of Nine Hundred are made up of a total of 400 paid individuals selected by lot out of all the country's adult citizens, to be as statistically representative of the whole people as possible; they are then split according to the number of bills. Jury service is nominally mandatory, though with reasonable hardship excuses. Each Policy Jury hears pro and con presentations about one bill, and makes the final decision, in a week or less - but the members don’t set agendas or write bills.