Name
-United Provinces comes from Ideology > Sociocracy
-which, in its original form, advocated the union of the world in the form of cantonal regions (aka cities)
-Lee Cheng-chang emphasized this provincialism both from this and to get loyalty of governors
Executive branch
Supreme President
-Supreme President elected by the people for terms of nine years
-very powerful figure who is only limited in terms of appointments by having to appoint National Conference members for cabinet
-does not have a veto but sits on all sessions of the Board of One Hundred and Eight
-can vote in National Conference sessions
-full title: "His Elective Majesty, the Supreme President of the United Provinces of China, President of the Six Boards"
-in practice he's a sort of republican emperor
-even performs rituals to heaven at Temple of Heaven upon getting inaugurated
-a temple that, after having been destroyed by the rise of the Bai, got replicated in Nanjing
-Temple of Heaven is also containing a delegation of the people, to represent that the Supreme President gets authority from both Heaven and the People
-former presidents are supervisors
Six Boards
-six Boards, each board headed by a Minister
-Board of Revenue is in charge of the treasury
-it acts as a financial assembly and approves of budgets and revises accounts
-and in this is bigger than all the other boards
-Board of the Interior is in charge of police and keeping the public peace
-Board of Various Countries is in charge of foreign affairs
-is a pretty large board as well
-which is important because it keeps track of foreign affairs
-Board of War is in charge of managing the military
-Board of Education is in charge of school system
-Board of Trade manages industry, commerce, labor, and agriculture
-pretty large board which manages a state filled with Ideology > Sociocracy
-contains sub-boards for these different sectors
-on occasion meets as a single assembly known as the Six Boards
-presided over by Supreme President
-all these Boards and Ministers appointed by President but require approval by National Conference
-and every member of them must be Conference members
-reconstitution of boards upon every National Conference election
-means these Boards also act sort of like National Conference committees
-all these Boards also have the power to propose new legislation
Legislative branch
-legislature is divided into National Conference and Board of One Hundred and Eight
National Conference
-National Conference consists of members elected direct by the people in individual constituencies
-essentially a dead assembly with few debates and largely mute
-biggest debate is a sort of Inquest session where President and ministers interrogated by opposition
-when it ratifies laws their results already known, or at least is likely
-and when a law put up to a vote it's done with only a few speeches
-for three year terms
-Conference members elected from 2,085 small constituencies
-voters can vote for any candidate nominated in any constituency by writing them in
-winners have as many votes as people who voted for them
-as long as they meet a threshold of 25,000 votes
-a great many officials must be National Conference members
-so this makes it a repository for national officials
-can remove the president upon recommendation of National Censors with vote of three-fifths
-practically-speaking, this means three fourths of national conference members must concur
-the Supreme President can vote in National Conference sessions with a vote equal to as many people voted for them
-this means they have at least as many as half of the votes of the whole
-so at least three quarters vote of National Conference needed to exceed President's vote
-practically speaking this means that with China having multi-party government politics Supreme President is very influential
-only meets 50 days in a year
-and for a swathe of the year they travel in circuit around their constituencies to hear feedback and all
-Conference members may also be recalled by petition
Board of One Hundred and Eight
-Board of One Hundred and Eight elected by super-constituencies (merged from National Conference constituencies) from already elected National Conference members
-for three year terms
-may propose laws if supported by 36 members
-having been established by Bai dynasty originally in order to accommodate the pro-democracy movement
-when it liaised with Grand Council and was elected by complex of filtered electoral colleges
-various other Legislative Boards, each of whom constituted by sortition
-but with highest officials excluded from being selected by lot
Conserving branch
Board of Supervisors
-Board of Supervisors supervises functioning of all government
-66 members plus ex officio ex-presidents
-selected for terms of twelve years
-candidates are:
-people who have passed jinshi level of examination
-which in practice means that a lot of academics run as Supervisors
-upon election time the current National Conference whittles away its numbers by deselecting one-third of all eligibles, and remainder qualify for election
-elected by the people of province, apportioned by square root of each province's population
-may call byelections in National Conference
-may also exclude National Conferencepeople from eligibility to the Board of One Hundred and Eight
-also supervises examinations and appointments to the civil service
Board of National Censors
-appointed by Board of Supervisors is the Board of National Censors
-which investigates all officials from other branches as well as civil servants
-may lay charges against government officials and extract fines
-and also to audit all functioning of the government
-may also lay charges against the Supreme President
-also can recommend to the National Conference the removal of a president
Grand Secretariat
-Board of Supervisors also appoints the Grand Secretariat
-of five members
-which heads all matters of the civil service
-Chief Grand Secretaryy sits on the cabinet
-and reports findings to Supervisors which meets in closed session to discuss his findings
Board of Constitutional Review
-also appoints the Board of Constitutional Review
-which determines constitutionality of law based on cases
-with final constitutionality determined by Supervisors after it presents them
-and may nullify with reasoning, and a draft of good law, within two years of the law's passage
Civil service
-under the Bai dynasty the civil service examinations got changed from Confucianism to Buddhism
-this gets softened and more Confucianism added after the fact but as a mere supplement
-and also addition of Western canon to it as part of modernization
-because now there's been a hole which can be filled with something
-addition of math and engineering
-degrees also become increasingly specialized
-additionally there's been a dramatic expansion of the number of people who get exams
-as part of Bai wanting to impose itself
-by today civil service less prestigious than formerly due to growth of private sector
-but still hella prestigious and high-paying
-with prestige best retained in less wealthy areas
-also degrees can be important in securing private sector jobs
Degrees
Juren: At the apex of the provincial system.
Gongshi: Second tier degree, gets almost assured high level civil service job
Jinshi: At the apex of the entire system, assures to whoever gets it one of the position within the bureaucracy and required for Supervisors
Judiciary
Minister of Justice
-Minister of Justice
-heads all judicial affairs
Grand Procurator
-Grand Procurator
-manages prosecution through an apparatus of procurators who also accuse and detain
-these are tightly associated with judiciary rather than executive branch
Grand Court of Revision
-Grand Court of Revision
-judicial body appointed on dual confirmation of National Conference and Board of Supervisors
-reviews all actions of previous courts and annuls them if necessary
-charges laid by Board of Supervisors are submitted in trial to it
Provincial administrations
-provinces run by governors
-governors are appointed by the president but require the consent of at least one third of the provincial assemblies
-each province has a Conference from which is elected a Board of 27
-and the Provincial Conference is similarly oversized (a thousand or more on average)
-however, provinces do not have separate civil services, and Board of Supervisors supervises the provinces
-but, civil servants must first be appointed from among Provincial Conferencepeople