Thursday, April 30, 2009

Kenranian Governing Body

The Kenranian governing body is most like an oligarchy, but it is different in some ways. There are six founders of Kenran, the nation is divided into six, and each founder is in charge of one section. The job of the founder in their section is to make sure the citizens abide by the laws, have public opinion polls to see how the citizens feel about them, and to a good job ruling their state. Once a month, the six founders will meet up. Each of these founders has a role in ruling the whole nation. One of the founders is a builder. The builder will represent the working class in our government to ensure that the word of the people is heard. Two of the founders are in charge of the legislative branch. Basically, their job is to look at society and see what it needs to work smoothly. At the same time the legislative branch needs to make sure that there isn't too much power in the hands of the government. Laws are supposed to keep people safe, not restrict their inalienable rights. To this the legislative is constantly changing based on what is needed. However there is one single constant inside the legislative system of Kenran: the constitution. As a constitutional Oligarchy, we have a constitution that lists out general rights to people, that is specific enough so that people can't take advantage of the law, and so that people can interpret it differently as times change, and ways of life change too. There is one founder in charge of the judicial branch, the job of this founder is to listen to people who have committed crimes or think the law is not being fair to them and make decisions on what the citizen is going to do. One of the founders is in charge of a civil branch in government. The Civil branch includes anything having to do with taxes, permits, civil rights, and most importantly keeping the other branches in check by undoing some of their power when leaders who are corrupt are chosen, or when bad decisions are made. The final branch of government is the executive. The executive branch needs to decide whether or not the laws made by the legislative are fair, and when people disagree with a decision made in the judicial branch, they can apply to have their objection heard from the executive branch. Since each of the six individual powers within the government come from states, there are two parties that are represented by two people and from six of those states the two construct the laws. By interacting with the other branches of government Kenran's different branches of government are kept in check by each other.

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