The Sakhile Party
The Sakhile Party | |
---|---|
Chairperson | Makhaya Kwazulu ya Sakhile |
Secretary of the Treasury | Djene Laku ya Sakhile |
Governing Body | Sakhile National Committee |
Founders | Placeholder |
Founded | June 7, 1741Unified Sera | Mombasa, Shaka,
Headquarters | Mombasa, Shaka, Unified Sera |
Student wing | Libertarian Students of Sera |
Youth wing | Young Libertarians of Sera |
Women's wing | National Committee of Libertarian Women |
Membership (2021) | 7,123,447 |
Ideology | Libertarianism |
Colors | Green
|
Slogan | "Freedom for All People" |
Senate | 12 / 48
|
Chamber of Representatives | 106 / 435
|
State governorships | 4 / 24
|
Election symbol | |
Website | |
SeranLibertarians.us |
The Sakhile Party (SP) is a political party in the United States of Sera that promotes civil liberties, non-interventionism, laissez-faire capitalism, and limiting the size, power, and scope of not just the federal government, but state and local governments. The party, like other Seran political parties, was formed out of the original tribes on June 7th, 1741 when the Confederation of Seran Tribes officially became the United States of Sera. The beliefs of the party was greatly formed by the lifestyle and tribal makeup of the Sakhile tribe prior to becoming a political party. That is to say, the tribe's small, almost nonexistent tribal government system instilled a belief in small federal government, high personal liberties, and low intervention in the economy.
The party generally promotes a classical liberal platform, in contrast to the The Latinius Party's modern liberalism and progressivism, and the The Mbaku Party's conservatism. In 2016, the acting chairperson of the Sakhile Party Makhaya Kwazulu ya Sakhile, claimed that the Sakhile Party is more culturally liberal than Kogans, and more fiscally conservative than the Mbaku. Its fiscal policy positions include lowering taxes, abolishing the many tax collection agencies in Unified Sera, decreasing the dependence on foreign products, allowing people to opt out of national ID card program, and eliminating many of the social security supports and programs, in part by utilizing private charities. Its cultural policy positions include ending the prohibition of illegal drugs, advocating criminal justice reform, supporting the ending of the Crucible and caste system, ending capital punishment and supporting the equal treatment of individuals regardless of class or social status.