This article belongs to the lore of Eurth.

Council of the Democratically-aligned nations of Argis

(Redirected from CDANA)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Council of the Democratically-aligned nations of Argis
  • Concilium Nationum Argium Democraticarum Conformium
  • (CNADC)
Flag of the Council of the Democratically-aligned nations of Argis
Flag
Motto: "Vox populi - Vox democratiae"
"Voice of the people - Voice of democracy"
TypeRegional organization
Membership9 states
Leaders
LegislatureParliamentary Assembly
Establishment
23 August 2023
• CDANA Treaty enters into effect
1 January 2024

The Council of the Democratically-aligned nations of Argis, officially named by the CDANA Treaty in Latin as Concilium Nationum Argium Democraticarum Conformium, also known by the abbreviation CDANA, is a regional organization of 9 democratic nations located in central and western Argis. It is a mix of a political forum, an intergovernmental organization and a supranational union.

Its stated goals are promotion of political freedoms and democracy in Argis through peaceful means and intergovernmental cooperation on an organized, but voluntary, level.

Rights and competences

The Council is a voluntary organization, which, by design, does not have the necessary political overreach outside within their member states to overrule their institutions. Despite this, various rights have been granted to the Council to help it aide with the tasks it has been created to deal with, most notably the rights to:

More rights and competences can be added through a mechanism of agreements in the Cabinet of Ministers and the Parliamentary Assembly as long as it does not contradict Article 6 of the treaty, which states that "The Council was established to promote the ideals of democratic governance, civil rights and liberties, political rights and liberties, climate protection and peaceful cooperation through an international forum of equals", i.e. the reform is democratic, respects civil and political rights and peaceful coexistence between the member states.

Institutions

There are three nominal institutions of the Council:

Cabinet of Ministers

The Cabinet of Ministers is an institution that in its form combines the competences of an international summit and the executive functions of the organizations. It consists of delegations from the member states, which are to have no less than three members from the respective governments, and which each holds one vote, which is cast en bloc through a majority consensus in the respective delegation.

For voting in the Cabinet, a special system named called "undisputable majority" is utilized instead of unanimity common in other international institutions. In the system of "undisputable majority", the vote passes if, after the number of negative votes (NAY) is subtracted from the number of positive votes (AYE), the resulting number is at least as large as an absolute majority (abstaining and non-presence are disregarded and are counted neither as positive nor as negative votes).

Moreover, the Cabinet chooses its President, who is to not belong to any of the national delegations. In case of a tie where the undisputable majority voting lands directly at 50% of the votes, the President acts to break a tie through their own decision to prevent a hung cabinet. This, however, can mathematically occur only if there is an even number of member states.

As defined by the treaty, the Cabinet is to meet at least every 6 months, with a possibility, in case of a crisis, for at most two meetings to be cancelled (i.e. a gap of at most 18 months between two consecutive meetings). In case this rule is broken, the powers of the Cabinet are transferred to the Secretariat of the Parliamentary Assembly, which consists of one member per member state, which are elected by the delegation of the respective member state, and of the President of the Parliamentary Assembly, for a total of 10 members. Once again, the President of the Parliamentary Assembly acts as a tiebreaker who does not regularly participate in voting unless required to break a tie.

Parliamentary Assembly

The Parliamentary Assembly is the international parliament for the member states, serving as an impure legislature of the organization. It consists of a total of 108 members, 12 per member state.

Of the 12 members from each member state, the 10 so-called "ordinary members" are to be elected directly or semi-directly by each of the member state's population in conjunction with their national legislatures using the principles of proportional representation, whereas the other 2 so-called "supplementary members" are appointed by law from ex officio positions, by convention former presidents, vice presidents, prime ministers or other high representatives whose term has ended.

The first ever elections have taken place on 4 and 5 November 2023 in Walneria, with more elections scheduled to take place in conjunction with parliamentary elections in other member states, until all 90 ordinary member seats are filled in.

The President of the Parliamentary Assembly is appointed by the Cabinet of Ministers. By convention, this functions is merged with the function of the President of the Cabinet of Ministers, even though the Treaty does not require it.

The Parliamentary Assembly is located in the Old Senate Building in Tyrámen, Walneria.

Court of Justice

TBA