Difference between revisions of "Presidential elections in Lycrabon"
(→Continued Growth) |
(→The First Election) |
||
Line 32: | Line 32: | ||
* 1990: 4 | * 1990: 4 | ||
* 1991: 5 | * 1991: 5 | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
====Grant's Second Term, and Second Election==== | ====Grant's Second Term, and Second Election==== |
Revision as of 20:09, 21 February 2019
Politics has been a big business, and mostly cleanly run. The major parties are:
- Freedom Party
- Green Party
- Workers Party
- Republican Party
- National Party
Presidents serve for 6-year terms, with a limit of three terms before they must retire.
Number | President | Vice President | Party | Years |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | David Grant | Brian Ellis | Freedom | 1985-2004 |
2 | Dale Johnson | Horace Callahan | Freedom | 2004-2016 |
3 | Gregory Hodge | Gabriel Meyers | Independent | 2016-2022 (end of first term) |
|}
Growth of the Nation
Grant's first term saw an explosion of province formation, as groups carved out their sections of land. Within five years, the country would expand to 29 provinces.
- 1987: 5
- 1988: 5
- 1989: 5
- 1990: 4
- 1991: 5
Grant's Second Term, and Second Election
Part of Grant's re-election platform was to get the country to at least 45 provinces. By year four, he succeeded in that.
- 1992: 4
- 1993: 4
- 1994: 4
- 1995: 4
- 1996: 3
- 1997: 2
The second campaign was much more feisty and tightly contested, as a Grant win would guarantee a new president the next time. Grant would eventually get his third term, though only by two provinces, 19-17 over Joe Brady of the Workers Party.
1997 Candidates | Party | Provinces |
---|---|---|
Grant/Ellis (I) | Freedom | 19 |
Jim Blanc/Brian Casson | Independent | 5 |
Nathan Collins/Henry Kennedy | Green | 4 |
Joe Brady/Andrew Salisbury | Workers | 17 |
Richard Fletcher/William Rosenbaum | Republican | 3 |
Edward Walton/Horace Callahan | National | 1 |
2003 Candidates | Party | Provinces |
---|---|---|
Dale Johnson/Horace Callahan | Freedom | 29 |
Justin Simon/Bruce Chang | Independent | 3 |
Charles Byrd/Daniel Allen | Green | 6 |
Joe Brady/Andrew Salisbury | Workers | 11 |
Brayden Maxwell/Ernie Acosta | Republican | 0 |
Nathaniel Tomlin/Robin Glover | National | 1 |
2009 Candidates | Party | Provinces |
---|---|---|
Johnson/Callahan (I) | Freedom | 23 |
Byrd/Allen | Green | 9 |
Joe Brady/Andrew Salisbury | Workers | 1 |
Mark Bostic/Lex Markham | Republican | 17 |
Tomlin/Glover | National | 0 |
Connor Quintana/Harry Olson | Independent | 0 |
2015 Candidates | Party | Provinces |
---|---|---|
Gregory Hodge/Gabriel Meyers | Independent | 20 |
Johnson/Callahan (I) | Freedom | 18 |
Jonah O'Brien/Isaac Everett | Green | 1 |
Kenneth Britt/Wade Albert | Workers | 0 |
Bostic/Markham | Republican | 11 |
Nathaniel Tomlin/Glover | National | 0 |
In the 2021 election, a new party - the New Order Party - entered the scene with candidates for President and one-third of all the legislative seats
2021 Candidates | Party | Provinces |
---|---|---|
Hodge/Meyers (I) | Independent | -- |
Example | Freedom | -- |
Example | Green | -- |
Example | Workers | -- |
Example | Republican | -- |
Example | National | -- |
Example | New Order/Independent | -- |
Example | Independent | -- |
The next election will be in November 2021, for an installation in January 2022.