Talk:Mursland

Backup:
Mursland is a (federal) parliamentary constitutional monarchy since 1831. The Mursian Head of state is the King, currently Martin II of Bonamech and Traxí; the head of government is de jure the King as well, but is de facto the State President. The legislative part of the national government is officially run by the Province-President, although he is a .

Before 1831, the state did not have a single monarch and was a, with each substate having his own monarch or government.

The constitution last large reform was in 1961, when the elections of the State-President and Province-Room were separated. The last correction was in 2018, when a select few phrases were rephrased to use.

Parties
The Confederation of Mursland has a history of many different parties. There can be various levels of organisation between parties, ranging from a centralized institute making a single policy, to various provincial focused parties working together with an agreement over a national policy. Due to the elections having both a national and provincial focus, there are also several parties and one-man listings which do not actively participate in the national government and rather focus their work on their province.

Due to the dynamic nature of balancing national and provincial governing, it is not uncommon to have parties unify or split up to focus better on certain issues. The current oldest party is the Katá-Vasiliko, which has existed in its current form since 1931 after the merger of various parties unbanned in 1923.

As of March 3rd 2019, there are 6 nationally-unified parties, 4 provincial parties and 3 one-man fractions in the government. The current coalition on national issues consists of the Frontov Obshtonaroden, Edinen Khora and Live!KDM, which hold a majority of 114 on 207 seats. The Province President Gavrail Prifti is from the Konfederatsiya Liberalni Duurzhavi, and the State President is Iona Cattiou-Satinnacis from the same party.

Note: This table only includes parties with unified policies in the Province-Room, some parties are split on provincial level.