The Yankee Dominion: A Map and World Building Project

I'm like done with the PM wikibox except for one thing...

Who will be the Governor General/First Secretary?
The last Federal election will be next...
We have a homegrown monarchy descended from George III's bloodline. King George II is the current head of state. Thanks for the great work and contributions!
 
Here's the full Senate:

Alaska
  • Lisa Murkowski (Progressive)
  • Bill Walker (Progressive)
  • Mike Gravel (Reform)
  • Don Young (National Heritage)
  • Sarah Palin (National Heritage)
  • Mark Begich (Liberal)
Arkansas
  • Michel Hucabé (Federalist) (OTL Mike Huckabee)
  • Jules Gauthier (RPL) (OTL J.C. Watts)
  • Andrew Rice (Liberal)
  • Marie Fallin (RPL) (OTL Mary Fallin)
  • Tim Griffin (Federalist)
  • Louise Renaud (Federalist) (OTL Leslie Rutledge)
Assiniboinia
  • Andrew Scheer (Federalist)
  • Erin Weir (Labor)
Athabasca
  • Dick Cheney (National Heritage)
  • John Hoeven (Federalist)
Bahamas
  • Sidney Poitier (Labor)
  • Cynthia Pratt (Labor)
Cape Breton
  • Mark Eyking (Liberal)
  • Rodney MacDonald (Federalist)
Connecticut
  • Joseph Lieberman (Independent)
  • Ralph Nader (Green)
  • George W. Bush (Federalist)
Delaware
  • Joe Biden (Labor)
  • John Carney (Labor)
East Florida
  • Ricardo Sancho (Reform)
  • Greg Asbed (Labor)
  • Jeff Greene (Liberal)
  • John Morgan (Independent)
  • Michael Arth (Green)
Franklin
  • Kim Campbell (Federalist)
  • Bill Gates (Independent)
  • Yonah Martin (Federalist)
  • Maria Cantwell (Labor)
  • Jim McDermott (Labor)
  • Svend Robinson (Labor)
Frederica
  • Stephen Harper (Federalist)
  • Elaine McCoy (Progressive)
Georgia
  • Ted Turner (Liberal)
  • Jack Kingston (Federalist)
  • Andrew Young (Labor)
  • Bernice King (Labor)
Hudson
  • Michael Gravelle (Liberal)
  • Bill Mauro (Liberal)
  • Peter Harder (Independent)
  • Lynn Beyak (Federalist)
Idaho
  • Jim Mattis (Federalist)
  • Jon Huntsman (Federalist)
  • Stockwell Day (National Heritage)
  • Paulette Jordan (Labor)
  • Butch Otter (National Heritage)
  • Rocky Anderson (Green)
Illinois
  • Jesse Jackson (Labor)
  • Guillaume Blythe (Liberal)
  • Donald Rumsfeld (Federalist)
  • Wesley Clark (Liberal)
  • Carol Moseley Braun (Labor)
Indiana
  • Newt Gingrich (National Heritage)
  • Dominic Bague (Union Populaire)
  • Carine Lierre (RPL) (OTL Kay Ivey)
  • Robert Romilly (Federalist) (OTL Bob Riley)
  • Judith Bonaire (Federalist) (OTL Judy Bonner)
  • Tristan Shérif (RPL) (OTL Tate Reeves)
  • Reynaud Masson (Union Populaire) (OTL Ronnie Musgrove)
  • Rodolphe Voclain (Liberal) (OTL Randall Woodcliff)
Iowa
  • Tom Harkin (Labor)
  • Christine Vilsack (Liberal)
Kansas
  • Robert Gates (Federalist)
  • Mike Pompeo (America First!)
Kentucky
  • Mitch McConnell (Federalist)
  • Matt Bevin (Federalist)
  • Jim Bunning (Federalist)
Louisiana
  • Kathleen Blanco (Union Populaire)
  • Scott Angelle (RPL)
  • Gerard Longue (Independent Federalist) (OTL Gerald Long)
  • Jacques Roy (Union Populaire)
  • Dorian Cazayoux (Liberal) (OTL Don Cazayoux)
  • Paul Hardy (Federalist)
Maine
  • Olympia Snowe (Progressive)
  • Henry John Bear (Green)
Manitoba
  • Heidi Heitkamp (Liberal)
  • Duane Sands (Reform)
Maryland
  • Barbara Mikulski (Labor)
  • Donna Edwards (Labor)
  • Ben Jealous (Labor)
Massachusetts
  • Bill Weld (Reform)
  • Elizabeth Warren (Labor)
  • John F. Kennedy, Jr. (Liberal)
Michigan
  • Owen Bieber (Independent Labor)
  • Carl Levin (Labor)
  • Brian Schatz (Green)
  • Mitt Romney (Federalist)
  • Michael Moore (Independent)
Minnesota
  • Walter Mondale (Labor)
  • Jesse Ventura (Reform)
  • Tim Penny (Progressive)
Missouri
  • Kit Bond (Federalist)
  • Eric Greitens (Independent Federalist)
  • Jay Nixon (Liberal)
Nebraska
  • Charles Koch (Reform)
  • Warren Buffett (Independent)
New Hampshire
  • Gene Chandler (Federalist)
  • Katrina Sweet (Liberal)
  • Ken Burns (Independent)
New Jersey
  • Tom Kean (Federalist)
  • Jon Corzine (Liberal)
  • Richard Codey (Liberal)
  • Paul Krugman (Labor)
New York
  • Barbara Boxer (Labor)
  • Nancy Pelosi (Liberal)
  • Colin Powell (Federalist)
  • Bill Nye (Independent)
Newfoundland
  • Brian Tobin (Liberal)
  • Lorraine Michaels (Labor)
North Carolina
  • Jerry Richardson (Federalist)
  • Elizabeth Dole (Federalist)
  • Harvey Gantt (Liberal)
  • Erskine Bowles (Liberal)
Nova Scotia
  • Scott Brison (Progressive)
  • David Richard Adams (Liberal)
  • Geoff Regan (Labor)
Ohio
  • Ted Strickland (Labor)
  • Lee Fisher (Labor)
  • Dick Celeste (Labor)
  • Mike DeWine (Federalist)
  • Bob Hagan (Liberal)
Ontario
  • Anne Cools (Independent)
  • Gwen Boniface (Independent)
  • Tony Dean (Liberal)
  • Frances Larkin (Labor)
  • Sabi Marwah (Liberal)
  • Thanh Hai Ngo (Federalist)
  • Victor Oh (Federalist)
  • Jim Munson (Labor)
  • Linda Frum (Federalist)
  • Hassan Yussuf (Labor)
Oregon
  • Carwyn Kendrick (Federalist) (OTL Phil Knight)
  • Goronwy Sayer (Federalist) (OTL Gordon Smith)
  • Anwen Cecil (Independent) (OTL Ann Curry)
  • Evan Maddox (Liberal) (OTL John Kitzenhaber)
  • Ellen Rosenblum (Liberal)
  • Liz Schuler (Labor)
Pennsylvania
  • Ed Rendell (Liberal)
  • Ron Paul (Reform)
  • Tom Wolf (Labor)
  • Tom Ridge (Federalist)
Pike
  • Pete Coors (Federalist)
  • Tom Udall (Labor)
Quebec
  • Rosa Galvez (Labor)
  • Paul Massicotte (Union Populaire)
  • Dennis Dawson (Liberal)
  • Jean Charest (Federalist)
  • Claude Carignan (RPL)
  • Judith Seidman (Federalist)
  • Andre Arthur (RPL)
  • Serge Joyal (Union Populaire)
  • Vivian Barbot (Union Populaire)
  • Marine Ouellet (Union Populaire)
Rhode Island
  • Lincoln Chafee (Progressive)
  • Clay Pell (Labor)
Saskatchewan
  • Lillian Dyck (Labor)
  • Pamela Wallin (Independent)
South Carolina
  • Elizabeth Colbert-Busch (Liberal)
  • Tim Scott (Federalist)
  • Paul Thurmond (Federalist)
  • Thomas Davis (Reform)
  • Nikki Haley (Federalist)
St. Johns
  • Norman Doyle (Federalist)
  • Fabian Manning (Federalist)
Tennessee
  • Bob Corker (Federalist)
  • Bill Haslam (Federalist)
  • Albert Giroux (Liberal) (OTL Al Gore)
  • Craig Fitzhugh (Liberal)
  • Peyton Manning (Independent Federalist)
Vermont
  • Howard Dean (Labor)
  • Jim Jeffords (Progressive)
Virginia
  • Jay Rockefeller (Labor)
  • Joe Manchin (Labor)
  • Jim Webb (Liberal)
  • Eric Cantor (Federalist)
Wabash
  • Dan Quayle (Federalist)
  • Richard Lugar (Federalist)
  • Mike Braun (Federalist)
  • Lee Hamilton (Labor)
West Florida
  • Jean Casque (Federalist) (OTL John Neely Kennedy)
  • Caroline Fayard (Union Populaire)
  • Trent Lott (America First!)
  • Raymond Harbert (RPL)
  • Piyush Jindal (Federalist)
  • Joe Scarborough (Progressive)
Wisconsin
  • Herb Kohl (Liberal)
  • Mary Burke (Liberal)
  • Chris Larson (Labor)
  • Reid Ribble (Reform)
  • Ron Johnson (Federalist)
 
Last edited:
Has anyone yet considered that the reason Bill Clinton (or Bill Blythe)'s dad's death was the reason he got so far in politics so young. Maybe we could move his political career forward a few years.
 
Here's the full Senate:

Alaska
  • Lisa Murkowski (Progressive)
  • Bill Walker (Progressive)
  • Mike Gravel (Reform)
  • Don Young (National Heritage)
  • Sarah Palin (National Heritage)
  • Mark Begich (Liberal)
Arkansas
  • Michel Hucabé (Federalist) (OTL Mike Huckabee)
  • Jules Gauthier (RPL) (OTL J.C. Watts)
  • Andrew Rice (Liberal)
  • Marie Fallin (RPL) (OTL Mary Fallin)
  • Tim Griffin (Federalist)
  • Louise Renaud (Federalist) (OTL Leslie Rutledge)
Assiniboinia
  • Andrew Scheer (Federalist)
  • Erin Weir (Labor)
Athabasca
  • Dick Cheney (National Heritage)
  • John Hoeven (Federalist)
Bahamas
  • Sidney Poitier (Labor)
  • Cynthia Pratt (Labor)
Cape Breton
  • Mark Eyking (Liberal)
  • Rodney MacDonald (Federalist)
Connecticut
  • Joseph Lieberman (Independent)
  • Ralph Nader (Green)
  • George W. Bush (Federalist)
Delaware
  • Joe Biden (Labor)
  • John Carney (Labor)
East Florida
  • Ricardo Sancho (Reform)
  • Greg Asbed (Labor)
  • Jeff Greene (Liberal)
  • John Morgan (Independent)
  • Michael Arth (Green)
Franklin
  • Kim Campbell (Federalist)
  • Bill Gates (Independent)
  • Yonah Martin (Federalist)
  • Maria Cantwell (Labor)
  • Jim McDermott (Labor)
  • Svend Robinson (Labor)
Frederica
  • Stephen Harper (Federalist)
  • Elaine McCoy (Progressive)
Georgia
  • Ted Turner (Liberal)
  • Jack Kingston (Federalist)
  • Andrew Young (Labor)
  • Bernice King (Labor)
Hudson
  • Michael Gravelle (Liberal)
  • Bill Mauro (Liberal)
  • Peter Harder (Independent)
  • Lynn Beyak (Federalist)
Idaho
  • Jim Mattis (Federalist)
  • Jon Huntsman (Federalist)
  • Stockwell Day (National Heritage)
  • Paulette Jordan (Labor)
  • Butch Otter (National Heritage)
  • Rocky Anderson (Green)
Illinois
  • Jesse Jackson (Labor)
  • Guillaume Blythe (Liberal)
  • Donald Rumsfeld (Federalist)
  • Wesley Clark (Liberal)
  • Carol Moseley Braun (Labor)
Indiana
  • Newt Gingrich (National Heritage)
  • Herman Cain (National Heritage)
  • Dominic Bague (Union Populaire)
  • Carine Lierre (RPL) (OTL Kay Ivey)
  • Marc Vieux (RPL) (OTL Mark Keenum)
  • Robert Romilly (Federalist) (OTL Bob Riley)
  • Judith Bonaire (Federalist) (OTL Judy Bonner)
  • Tristan Shérif (RPL) (OTL Tate Reeves)
  • Reynaud Masson (Union Populaire) (OTL Ronnie Musgrove)
  • Rodolphe Voclain (Liberal) (OTL Randall Woodcliff)
Iowa
  • Tom Harkin (Labor)
  • Christine Vilsack (Liberal)
Kansas
  • Robert Gates (Federalist)
  • Mike Pompeo (America First!)
Kentucky
  • Mitch McConnell (Federalist)
  • Matt Bevin (Federalist)
  • Jim Bunning (Federalist)
Louisiana
  • Kathleen Blanco (Union Populaire)
  • Scott Angelle (RPL)
  • Gerard Longue (Independent Federalist) (OTL Gerald Long)
  • Jacques Roy (Union Populaire)
  • Dorian Cazayoux (Liberal) (OTL Don Cazayoux)
  • Paul Hardy (Federalist)
Maine
  • Olympia Snowe (Progressive)
  • Henry John Bear (Green)
Manitoba
  • Bill Blaikie (Labor)
  • Duane Sands (Reform)
Maryland
  • Barbara Mikulski (Labor)
  • Donna Edwards (Labor)
  • Ben Jealous (Labor)
Massachusetts
  • Bill Weld (Reform)
  • Elizabeth Warren (Labor)
  • John F. Kennedy, Jr. (Liberal)
Michigan
  • Owen Bieber (Independent Labor)
  • Carl Levin (Labor)
  • Brian Schatz (Green)
  • Mitt Romney (Federalist)
  • Michael Moore (Independent)
Minnesota
  • Walter Mondale (Labor)
  • Jesse Ventura (Reform)
  • Tim Penny (Progressive)
Missouri
  • Kit Bond (Federalist)
  • Eric Greitens (Independent Federalist)
  • Jay Nixon (Liberal)
Nebraska
  • Charles Koch (Reform)
  • Warren Buffett (Independent)
New Hampshire
  • Gene Chandler (Federalist)
  • Katrina Sweet (Liberal)
  • Ken Burns (Independent)
New Jersey
  • Tom Kean (Federalist)
  • Jon Corzine (Liberal)
  • Richard Codey (Liberal)
  • Paul Krugman (Labor)
New York
  • Barbara Boxer (Labor)
  • Nancy Pelosi (Liberal)
  • Colin Powell (Federalist)
  • Bill Nye (Independent)
Newfoundland
  • Brian Tobin (Liberal)
  • Lorraine Michaels (Labor)
North Carolina
  • Jerry Richardson (Federalist)
  • Elizabeth Dole (Federalist)
  • Harvey Gantt (Liberal)
  • Erskine Bowles (Liberal)
Nova Scotia
  • Scott Brison (Progressive)
  • David Richard Adams (Liberal)
  • Geoff Regan (Labor)
Ohio
  • Ted Strickland (Labor)
  • Lee Fisher (Labor)
  • Dick Celeste (Labor)
  • Mike DeWine (Federalist)
  • Bob Hagan (Liberal)
Ontario
  • Anne Cools (Independent)
  • Gwen Boniface (Independent)
  • Tony Dean (Liberal)
  • Frances Larkin (Labor)
  • Sabi Marwah (Liberal)
  • Thanh Hai Ngo (Federalist)
  • Victor Oh (Federalist)
  • Jim Munson (Labor)
  • Linda Frum (Federalist)
  • Hassan Yussuf (Labor)
Oregon
  • Carwyn Kendrick (Federalist) (OTL Phil Knight)
  • Goronwy Sayer (Federalist) (OTL Gordon Smith)
  • Anwen Cecil (Independent) (OTL Ann Curry)
  • Evan Maddox (Liberal) (OTL John Kitzenhaber)
  • Ellen Rosenblum (Liberal)
  • Liz Schuler (Labor)
Pennsylvania
  • Ed Rendell (Liberal)
  • Ron Paul (Reform)
  • Tom Wolf (Labor)
  • Tom Ridge (Federalist)
Pike
  • Pete Coors (Federalist)
  • Tom Udall (Labor)
Quebec
  • Rosa Galvez (Labor)
  • Paul Massicotte (Union Populaire)
  • Dennis Dawson (Liberal)
  • Jean Charest (Federalist)
  • Claude Carignan (RPL)
  • Judith Seidman (Federalist)
  • Andre Arthur (RPL)
  • Serge Joyal (Union Populaire)
  • Vivian Barbot (Union Populaire)
  • Marine Ouellet (Union Populaire)
Rhode Island
  • Lincoln Chafee (Progressive)
  • Clay Pell (Labor)
Saskatchewan
  • Lillian Dyck (Labor)
  • Pamela Wallin (Independent)
South Carolina
  • Elizabeth Colbert-Busch (Liberal)
  • Tim Scott (Federalist)
  • Paul Thurmond (Federalist)
  • Thomas Davis (Reform)
  • Nikki Haley (Federalist)
St. Johns
  • Norman Doyle (Federalist)
  • Fabian Manning (Federalist)
Tennessee
  • Bob Corker (Federalist)
  • Bill Haslam (Federalist)
  • Albert Giroux (Liberal) (OTL Al Gore)
  • Craig Fitzhugh (Liberal)
  • Peyton Manning (Independent Federalist)
Vermont
  • Howard Dean (Labor)
  • Jim Jeffords (Progressive)
Virginia
  • Jay Rockefeller (Labor)
  • Joe Manchin (Labor)
  • Jim Webb (Liberal)
  • Eric Cantor (Federalist)
Wabash
  • Dan Quayle (Federalist)
  • Richard Lugar (Federalist)
  • Mike Braun (Federalist)
  • Lee Hamilton (Labor)
West Florida
  • Jean Casque (Federalist) (OTL John Neely Kennedy)
  • Caroline Fayard (Union Populaire)
  • Trent Lott (America First!)
  • Raymond Harbert (RPL)
  • Piyush Jindal (Federalist)
  • Joe Scarborough (Progressive)
Wisconsin
  • Herb Kohl (Liberal)
  • Mary Burke (Liberal)
  • Chris Larson (Labor)
  • Reid Ribble (Reform)
  • Ron Johnson (Federalist)
I'm gonna take a shot at it soon, this list is pretty good though.
 
Prime Minister Goodwin Infobox

ST15RM

Banned
ID2IFet.png

After all these months, it's here.

We're getting closer...
 
I just realised that the apportionment for the Lower Mississippi is wrong. 10+7+6+6 isn't 24. I fixed it.

St. Lawrence (24 Senators)
  • Hudson - 4 Senators
  • Ontario - 10 Senators
  • Quebec - 10 Senators
Southeast (24 Senators)
  • Bahamas - 2 Senators
  • East Florida - 5 Senators
  • Georgia - 4 Senators
  • Tennessee - 4 Senators.
  • North Carolina - 4 Senators
  • South Carolina - 5 Senators
Lower Mississippi (24 Senators)
  • Arkansas - 5 Senators
  • Indiana - 8 Senators
  • Louisiana - 5 Senators
  • West Florida - 6 Senators
Northwest (24 Senators)
  • Alaska - 6 Senators
  • Franklin - 6 Senators
  • Idaho - 6 Senators
  • Oregon - 6 Senators
Great Lakes (24 Senators)
  • Illinois: 5 Senators.
  • Wabash: 4 Senators.
  • Ohio: 5 Senators.
  • Michigan: 5 Senators.
  • Wisconsin: 5 Senators.
New England (24 Senators)
  • Connecticut: 3 Senators.
  • Vermont: 2 Senators.
  • Rhode Island: 2 Senators.
  • Massachusetts: 3 Senators.
  • New Hampshire: 3 Senators.
  • Maine: 2 Senators.
  • Nova Scotia: 3 Senators.
  • Cape Breton: 2 Senators.
  • Newfoundland: 2 Senators.
  • Saint Johns: 2 Senators.
Mid-Atlantic (24 Senators)
  • New York: 4 Senators.
  • New Jersey: 4 Senators.
  • Pennsylvania: 4 Senators.
  • Maryland: 3 Senators.
  • Virginia: 4 Senators.
  • Kentucky: 3 Senators.
  • Delaware: 2 Senators.
Midwest (24 Senators)
  • Minnesota: 3
  • Missouri: 3
  • Iowa: 2
  • Kansas: 2
  • Nebraska: 2
  • Pike: 2
  • Athabasca: 2
  • Frederica: 2
  • Saskatchewan: 2
  • Manitoba: 2
  • Assiniboinia: 2
 
Oregon: The Last Fifty Years Of State Government

The Premier of Oregon (who also holds the position of Governor) is the head of state and government of the state of Oregon, and leads the unicameral Oregon Assembly (or Cynulliad). Oregon's premiers tend to have either very long tenures (e.g. Marc Hatfield and Ifan Kitzhaber, who combined make up 34 years of Oregonian history) or very short tenures, often cut short by scandal (as has happened to six premiers in the past four decades).

1960-1981: Marc Hatfield (Ffederalydd majority)
1981-1983: Gwythyr Atiyeh (Ffederalydd majority)
1983-1984: Gwythyr Atiyeh (Ffederalydd minority)
1984-1984: Aneirin Goldschmidt (Independent leading majority coalition of Ffederalydd, Werdd, and Y Wladfa)
1984-1988: Rhobert Packwood (Corhedydd leading majority coalition of Corhedydd and Rhyddid)
1988-1994: Denny Smith (Rhyddid leading majority coalition of Corhedydd and Rhyddid)
1994-2001: Ifan Kitzhaber (Ffederalydd leading majority coalition of Ffederalydd, Y Wladfa, and Werdd)
2001-2001: Ifan Kitzhaber (Ffederalydd leading majority coalition of Ffederalydd, Y Wladfa, and Werdd Coch)
2001-2001: Ifan Kitzhaber (Ffederalydd minority)
2001-2007: Ifan Kitzhaber (Ffederalydd majority)
2007-2011: Siân Hayes (Ffederalydd majority)
2011-2011: Siân Hayes (Ffederalydd minority)
2011-2011: Dafydd Wu (Ffederalydd minority)
2011-2012: Pedr DeFazio (Ffederalydd minority)
2012-2012: Morgan Wehby (Corhedydd leading minority coalition of Corhedydd and Rhyddid)
2012-2013: Sawyl Adams (Werdd Coch minority)
2013-: Sawyl Adams (Werdd Coch majority)
Can you tell me what the parties represented in Oregon are in english.
 
How odd, Corhedydd translates to Corridor in google translate, and The Colony as the The Country...
Also, what are the ideologies of Meadowlark and The Colony.
It's not impossible that whatever translation service I used failed me.
Corhedydd is a fairly standard right-wing party with its base among suburbanites (as opposed to Rhyddid, with its base in the rural East), and Y Wladfa is a Welsh-identity party with a vague left-wing tilt to its campaign and a right-wing tilt to its governance (think the OTL Scottish National Party).
 
It's not impossible that whatever translation service I used failed me.
Corhedydd is a fairly standard right-wing party with its base among suburbanites (as opposed to Rhyddid, with its base in the rural East), and Y Wladfa is a Welsh-identity party with a vague left-wing tilt to its campaign and a right-wing tilt to its governance (think the OTL Scottish National Party).
I find it interesting how the Greens are represented so early on, unless the Greens are of a different ideology to what is green politics. Also how conservative Oregon politics is until the Red Green government comes in.
 
I find it interesting how the Greens are represented so early on, unless the Greens are of a different ideology to what is green politics. Also how conservative Oregon politics is until the Red Green government comes in.
Nominally, yes, but Ffederalydd is not all that closely tied, ideologically speaking, to the federal Federalists - under Hatfield it was fairly centrist, arguably even center-left, and Kitzhaber’s political machine was... less concerned with ideology than power, but mostly on the left. It’s not too dissimilar to the BC Liberals in reverse.
As for the Plaid Werdd, they never rose above a half-dozen members until they became the main left-wing opposition to Kitzhaber.
 
Nominally, yes, but Ffederalydd is not all that closely tied, ideologically speaking, to the federal Federalists - under Hatfield it was fairly centrist, arguably even center-left, and Kitzhaber’s political machine was... less concerned with ideology than power, but mostly on the left. It’s not too dissimilar to the BC Liberals in reverse.
As for the Plaid Werdd, they never rose above a half-dozen members until they became the main left-wing opposition to Kitzhaber.
How many members are in the Oregon Legislature?
 
Sorry i have not posted that much I am busy doing a California election statewide precinct map for another site (a Everest-sized mountain of data) but on my list:

- Timeline of 20th century
- Country Profile of China, the first failed state
- East Florida state house. Full FPTP, with 148 seats. EF previously had a problem of ballooning seat counts thanks to the states radical growth - at one point the province had close to 500 reps. Now EF has capped their seat count at 150 (which the total fluctuates around) unlike other provinces with no ceiling, and instead adjusts based on population.
- Illinois State House. The Only province that still has map lines in the hands of provincial officials rather then citizen/national commissions. The province lacks large amounts of Philadelphia funds that were tied to the commission transition, but still maintains their grotesque lines. Politics has evolved as an everyone vs Madigan environment.
 
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