The United Commonwealth of America

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The United Commonwealth of America
Flag of the United Commonwealth of America (1983-Present Day)
Flag of the Commonwealth of New England (1980-83)
Flag
Coat of Arms of the Commonwealth
Coat of arms
Motto: "E pluribus unum"
"Out of Many, one"
Anthem: "The Star-Spangled Banner"
CapitalBoston Capital District
Largest cityNew York City
Official languagesNone at the federal level
Recognised national languagesEnglish
Recognised regional languagesNew England French, Revived Wômpanâak
GovernmentFederal presidential republic
LegislatureThird Continental Congress
Senate
House of Representatives
Independence from the United States
• Declaration
March 7, 1980
• Albany Declaration
April 20, 1980
• British Recognition
July 4, 1980
• Federal Recognition of secession
July 12th, 1981
HDI0.950
very high
CurrencyU.C. Dollar ($) (UCD)
Time zoneEST
Driving sideright
Calling code+1

The United Commonwealth of America (UCA), commonly known as the United Commonwealth (UC) or American Commonwealth, and occasionally colloquially referred to as New England, is a country in eastern North America, primarily in the former American Northeast. It is the fourth most populous nation in North America, behind Mexico, the Midwest and Western States, ahead of Canada and Texas, and the third in the former United States. The Commonwealth consists of eight fully controlled states, one state government in exile, three 'sister republics' and a joint military control sector.

The United Commonwealth of America (UCA), commonly known as the United Commonwealth (UC), Commonwealth, American Commonwealth, or in pre-1981 Contexts, New England, is a Country primarily located in North America. The 'Core' Commonwealth is bordered by Canada to the North and the Midwestern Union to the west. It is officially a federation of 14 states, two Canadian-American Joint territories, three "Sister Republics", a federal capital district, and several Indian Reservations. Although claiming 14 states, the country only controls 8, the other 6 being under the de-jure (and internationally recognized) control of the Western Rump State.

Following the collapse of the United States in the wake of the Three Mile Island incident, the remnants of the American government fled to the west coast, and little more than a year after the collapse, the New England states joined together and proclaimed the United Commonwealth, claiming the United States and her ideals of democracy had been betrayed, and that New England would carry the so called "Torch of Democracy". Soon after, the state governments of New York, as well as what was left of New Jersey and Pennsylvania would vote to join the Commonwealth.

The United Commonwealth is a founding member of the Tokyo Accords and TTARS, as well as the BRUCA Agreement (a successor to the 1943 BRUSA Agreement), as well as being a member of the United Nations, the World Bank, a Contested UN Security Council member, and an observer in the Organization of American States. The National government of the Commonwealth takes much of its functions from the United States, being a presidential constitutional republic and liberal democracy with three separate branches: legislative, executive, and judicial. It has a bicameral national legislature composed of the House of Representatives, a lower house based on population; and the Senate, an upper house based on equal representation for each state. Less autonomy is given to states, with its "Sister Republics" maintaining near full independence, with Hawaii being officially neutral in most affairs. The nation has a political culture that emphasizes liberty, equality under the law, individualism, and limited government, however maintains some more authoritative policies. The UC ranks among the world's highest in secularism, happiness, life expectancy, human rights, and higher education.

Etymology

The United Commonwealth derives its name from from the name of the United States and the traditional English term Commonwealth, a term also used by Australia, the Bahamas, Dominica, and the Commonwealth of England, a (de-jure) Parliamentarian faction during the English civil war. The name commonwealth was also used by several American states, and most notably for the Commonwealth, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania.