Sutheran News Section

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Welcome to the Index Page for News in Sutherland!

SOURCES:
SBS: The state-owned broadcasting corporation in Sutherland, SBS aims to be editorially non-partisan and balanced, building on the "reasonable consensus" opinion. Founded in 1929, the corporation began through radio broadcasts, and rapidly moved to television.

 
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100 years: the legacy of Richeism in Sutherland

In 1925, the URLS, and the control of the Richeist Party, both collapsed amid a wave of socioeconomic upheaval. As we approach the Centenary, it's time to reflect on Sutherland's Years of Hate

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Clashes between the provincial police and anti-Richeists against the Richeist Statesguard like the March on Unthank (left) took place amid demise of the Richeist regime (right) in Sutherland

On the twelfth of May, 1925, the first democratic President of Sutherland, Raynard Armstrong, pronounced the "end of terror and victory of good men." The Address on Ravenscar is fondly remembered as the end of possibly the worst chapter of Sutherlander history, however one of the quotes that has remained in public consciousness was to remember what came before far more urgently:
Victory is never final, Richeism is never dead and history is never over. Freedom will fall the day that the last free man forgets whose shoulders he stands on.


What is Richeism?
Richeism can best be defined to the international community as "Sutherlander fascism," but it has relatively distinct principles and foundations not quite replicated anywhere else, especially on the role of the nationstate. While not on an extremely surface-level analysis systemically racist, Richeist parties, politicians and governments advocate for the "Sutheran nationstate," which solely legitimises the role of Gotic-derived Atlish-speaking Sutherans, and deems any other group within the jurisdiction of this nationstate as a threat to its existence. Furthermore, the notion of a "national personal duty," as applied through the persecution of the unemployed and disabled (and by the regime's end, even children who refused or failed to work,) saw widespread conscription, forced labour and anti-trade union laws passed, with the duty of work shown in propaganda as the path to national progress as well as the successful fulfillment of men's societal role as workers and breadwinners in Sutheran richeist society.

Tenets of Richeist thinking include total loyalty to the actions and history of the Sutheran nationstate viewed through a Gotic lens, a strict hierarchical structure delineated on race, gender and ability to provide to the nationstate, and a warped interpretation of the social contract in which the nationstate permits citizens to remain, live and "prosper" within its jurisdiction as well as to be protected from the horrors of land without statehood (likely derived from Early Modern conservative thinking, with 17th century figure Tomas Hensen and his literature on the "nasty and short" lives to be expected without the state being propagated) in exchange for the citizen fulfilling the duties of working, maintaining what the Richeists viewed as optimal social standards (which were, in near-totality, deeply reactionary and antithetic to social liberalism & the idea of universal rights), maintaining public infrastructure and serving the country whenever possible. The failure to commit to these duties was seen as grounds enough to be stripped of citizenship (as was the "failure" to belong to one of the diminishing in-groups of what Richeists deemed as belonging to the Sutheran nationstate), and concentration camps were set up across the country to intern communists, the unemployed and disabled, trade unionists, liberals, Cumbrishfolk and Atineans. In the 1920s, Richeists pursued eugenicist policies in order to "eliminate" disability - which incorporated homosexuality/"transvestitism" at the time, with Richeists viewing the nuclear family as the only acceptable family structure - and increase the capability of the population to fulfill the duties of the Richeist citizen. They also sought to disengage workers from trade unionism, while violently suppressing trade unionist movements as a threat to the nation's security, resulting in the Red Sunday in 1918 when trade unions clashed with Richeist paramilitaries and the police during the wider General Strike of 1918 in protest to falling wages and the return of child labour in some areas.

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(right) Images of Red Sunday in 1918, with demonstrations in cities like Prospect, Barrowland province

Other aspects key to Richeism include the concept of a nostalgic future, which builds on national destiny myths to conflate the endgoal of Richeism (an ethnostate of Gotic settlers acting entirely within their prescribed roles without question and in the national interest) with an idolised version of Sutheran history, as well as the core nature of Amendism to the state, which was viewed as both a hallmark of being a good citizen, evidence of the "workability" for unquestioned faith to unite likeminded communities of Richeist citizens, and a means to the end of both categorising who fell within societal roles, and consolidating the power of all arms of the state. Friction with the Catholic Church of Sutherland, the key denomination for the Atinean people, was such that the Church was formally disassembled and driven into secrecy in 1918 to be replaced with a government-sanctioned Church in the Divinity of Sutheran Catholicism, while practice of Druidism and other Cumbrish folk religions was strictly prohibited. The power of the Amendist Church became such that the Richeist government saw it as a threat and alternative source of faith that distracted from faith in the nationstate, leading to the Night of Greatest Sin in 1925, in which key church leaders were killed en masse and replaced by the Richeist paramilitary wing. The professional army also faced significant persecution in favour of the paramilitary wing of the Richeist Party, who owed more to the Party itself and were more unquestioning in their loyalty to the Richeist nationstate, to the extent that the army faced multiple coups, assassinations and sustained pressure from Godfred Roscow to centralise power and provide loyalty.

Richeists were notable for their relatively opaque stance in favour of corporatism from an early stage, with the Richeist Party benefitting from rigorous (but not total) aristocratic and capitalist support during the crisis years of the 1910s amid the rise of communist, trade unionist and socialist working-class paramilitaries and organisations in the URLS (largely concentrated in industrial Sutherland.) Early Richeists acting within the frameworks of the democracy as it existed prior to the state takeover in the late 1910s campaigned on a promise of stability, both aimed at exploiting the fear of middle-class workers and landowners of communist and trade unionist parties, and the urgency of industrialists and corporations to find an amicable path to protect their capital interests and wealth from seizure. The Richeist state, especially in its early years, was highly corporatist, however disagreements between corporations and the Richeist party, and the declining economic situation in the URLS, led to increased pressure from Richeists to extract profits from corporations. By the mid-1920s, the Richeist state was almost entirely based on pseudo-state-run corporations and extremely laissez-faire working laws, causing a steady and severe decline in living standards nationwide, which exacerbated the social unrest which never truly disappeared from Richeist Sutherland.

The structure of power and government in Richeist Sutherland was distinctly autocratic and centred around a culture of fear and cult of personality around Godfred Roscow, the Richeist party leader. Questioning the legitimacy of the powers of the state, or the way in which it used those powers, was viewed as no less than treason; while Roscow tolerated a minimal level of controlled opposition both within his party and arms of government, and outside his party with the tolerance of the hardline conservative nativist National Sutheran People's Party (LSFP) remaining in the legislature, these sources of opposition were either driven into silence, amalgamated into the party on the provision that they remained in total loyalty to Roscow and his structure of power, or persecuted vigorously. The structure of the aristocracy initially afforded Roscow, himself a member of the landed noble family of the same surname, a level of pragmatic support, however his tolerance to the autonomy of aristocrats fell as his regime continued and as his paranoia grew.

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(left) A photo from Redcar, Eskland, at the height of the Richeist regime in 1922

By the time that the regime began to fell, it had already been significantly hollowed out by the effects of disillusionment, the drastically shrunk base of support, socioeconomic turmoil, increasing tolerance of "societal wrongs" by increasingly autonomous police forces and provinces who wrestled power away from the state, whose military arms were either degraded and demoralised (as in the professional army) or unprofessional and easily corruptible (as in the paramilitary wing.) The Richeists tolerated largely involuntarily, with much harm to their egos, the secession of Lyvenntia in hoping that the core Sutheran nation would have its support shored up, however the chaos created by the drastic reduction of tax intake by the state, the support quickly consolidated from Lyvenntia for anti-government forces and the increasingly transparent view that the Richeist government was little more than a paper tiger with limited and inconsistent jurisdiction all resulted in the total collapse of Richeist control throughout the first half of 1925.

The treatment of Richeist government officials, many of whom remained in the state either out of faith to its continuity or fear that Roscow would have them killed, was variably brutal, while the level of loyalty of police organisations, remaining governmental structures in the provinces waned unevenly over the successive weeks and months, with the wearied Statesguard often having to be utilised in lieu of the unprofessional paramilitary wing to quell anti-Richeist protests, which were sometimes supported and sometimes suppressed by local police forces. The leader of the paramilitary wing responsible for the persecution of minorities and the disadvantaged defected from the Richeist regime by entering the socialist stronghold of Threlkeld in mid-south Sutherland unarmed on 18 March, 1925, in the hopes of negotiating his freedom and amnesty, however was shot on sight by four different men within the space of a few seconds at around 7pm. Roscow's second-in-command, Edrick Oldhamstow, was sighted by a hunter in the boreal forests of Westmorland on 31 March after attempting to escape, however was shot in the leg, and tortured over the process of two weeks by a rural landowner before being disposed of in the River Eame and sighted in mid-April. Roscow's private secretary was initially granted amnesty by a workers' council in Whitton upon defection on 28 April, however was discovered to be a key conspirator in the persecution of Cumberland in the wider Farlam Trials in the autumn of 1925, and sentenced to death. Roscow himself disappeared for four months, until he was found by the underground organisation Foryield in rural Beira under a pseudonym, and brought before the Farlam Trials.

The legacy of Richeism
(right) Image of the Restane, in the central district of the capital of Sutherland, Eamont
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While comprehensive, our memory of Richeism has faded from living memory completely now that the oldest person alive in Sutherland today was merely 17 when Roscow finally slumped out of power. Nevertheless, with the cordon sanitaire against the far-right still in place, anti-fascist iconography and communitarian values still sacrosanct in Sutherland, as well as a militant democratic structure that proscribes anti-democratic and neo-Richeist parties and media routinely, there do seem to have been lessons learnt from the darkest days of Sutherland's history. Similarly, the Constitution (in conjunction with one of the world's most activist judicial systems) and setup of the Presidency, provinces and Government all aim overtly to prevent a singular party and singular strongman from seizing power unilaterally.

Remembrance Day is still held every 14 January, to commemorate the persecution of Cumberland in particular, but also all marginalised groups at the time.

With O100 Day approaching for 12 May next year, preparations are already underway for commemorating the centenary of the end of Sutherland's darkest hour, and the start of possibly its brightest. Yet, with ongoing problems with trust in the police and inertia in states' power reforms, as well as wider inequities associated with liberal capitalism, and the continued presence of the far-right on the fringes of Sutherlander politics, it would be far too sweeping to suggest that Richeism is defeated quite so confidently.

History is never over.

Quotes on Richeism

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The next Richeist, as with the last, will run as a man of the down-trodden people in the pockets of those whose boots have crushed them, with the sole goal of controlling who the boot falls on. -
John Blake Smith, Labour leader 2020-present​
Richeism is state and corporate power in tandem. The businessman and the statesman have one cause, the furthering of the Sutheran nation within and without, and deviation is folly. - Godfred Roscow, Richeist President of the URLS and later Sutherland​
Richeism is putting the state above all that is wrong, and all that is right too. Just as unity of faith in religion is theocracy, unity of faith in the nationstate is Richeism. - Thorborn Aldredsson, Professor of the Loreshall of Whitton​
Richeism is aristocracy not afraid to be caught redhanded. - Alma Hepburn, Civic Democratic Union (VDA) leader 1966-1977​
The love of power and police is the elixir that Richeism feeds on. - Raynard Armstrong, President of Sutherland 1925-1937​
The Cumbrishfolk are not deemed man by a Richeist, but beast who stands between his beloved state and its destiny as an ethnostate. We were the forest that was burnt to the ground, and far too many of our ashes were long gone and forgotten in the wind by the time democracy prevailed. - Morwen Gryffydd, Premier of Cumberland 2006-2015​
Neo-Richeists often claim that they are not racist but nationalist, but in the same breath state that the Sutheran nation is one race. Richeism, as with all far-right ideologies, have only the willingness to not believe their own words above their horrific love for ethnostatehood. - Freda Seddon, President of Sutherland 1961-1967​
The most dangerous thing to a Richeist is to be deprived their belonging to a state. They believe both that the state deserves the right to strip personhood, but has a duty to preserve THEIR personhood - the tragic unreciprocated love of a Richeist to a nationstate that has moved on from his hatred is the sweetest victory. - Eddard Falwick, Foreign Minister 1984-1989​
 
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Over 150 leading public figures come out against Sutherland Day celebrations

"Our collective identity is forged through our common struggle for democracy and far better represented by Syeday," says the letter to the Chancellor

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Onlookers watch Sutherland Day fireworks on 31 January, 2017, in Calablanca (NOV, left) and Ljouwert (ULM, right)

The creation of the nation of Sutherland has long been a subject of controversy. However, as the atmosphere trends towards an increasingly frought debate with each passing year, this year's Sutherland Day celebrations - set to be held on the final day of January across the country - have become the target of a campaign to "ground Sutherlanders' understanding in the true history of our nation."

Signed by 157 public figures - including 16 AMs*, writers, comedians, actors, environmentalists, the leader of the Greens (Catrin Talbot), and two Premiers - the petition has dubbed Sutherland's approach to its national history "totally revisionist."

"Sutherland Day represents the day that the final Cambrian nation-state was extinguished, no less and no more, in 1711. While this is clearly a momentous day in Sutherland's history, presenting it as a day of universal celebration is deeply problematic, and a part of a wider issue with how we represent our own history."
"There remain millions of Cambrians who are expected to simply hail and celebrate the moment that their culture was deprived of its nationhood. Only on the day that Sutherland represents all of its citizens, rather than just the plurality of Atlish-speaking, Gotic-derived bylanders* who benefitted directly from the amalgamation of Camwall into Sutherlander provinces centuries ago. The date is a total irrelevancy to the many who derive entirely or primarily from folks who made the courageous decision to come halfway across the world to our beacon of opportunity, and for that reason, we believe that our collective identity is forged through our common struggle for democracy and far better represented by Syeday*, the 100th instance of which will be celebrated next year. Alternative suggestions are numerous, and almost all share the common factor that they do not disgrace an entire breadth of civilisations that lasted a year to every season that Sutherland has."
The Greens' statement alongside the declaration declared governments of all hues "complicit" in the "erasure" of Cambrian history and influence on Sutherlander society and culture, and that Sutherland Day being marked on 31 January was a core example of this. Meanwhile, the VDA has openly criticised the petition for "rewriting history," and its leader Márcia Teixeira has called for Sutherlanders to "ignore the fuss" and "feel as much joy as you want about our national day when [31 January] comes, nobody can stop you."

Alternatives?
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The letter acknowledged that there are a number of "alternatives" - but did not go into much detail over what those alternatives may be.

However, a number of the petition's co-signers have elaborated, helpfully.

Liberal backbencher* AM, and former Underreeve for Sutheran Heritage in the Redery for the Homeland, Rudyerd Þewles posted on Sutheran social media forum Kwyk* (as on right) that either 3 March (Lyde) or 12 May would be suitable replacements, while the 12 May suggestion has been parroted by a number of other signers to this petition.

3 March would commemorate the success of the Sutheran Spring in 1829, where a mixture of poor socioeconomic conditions, a poor harvest, a harsh winter and anger over conservative reversals of franchise expansion & trade union legalisation all led to a "flash" uprising over the course of several days, after which the framework of the original Kingdom of Sutherland finally fell apart. As Þewles alluded to, this marked a key point for Sutheran democratisation - the franchise was expanded by Law 143/1829 ("Polling Law 1829"), to include any man over 25 who paid a "non-token" amount of taxation per year, amongst other key acts at the time (including the abolition of child labour.)

Nevertheless, arguably more have pointed towards the more recent downfall of the Richeists in 1925 as an example of a national historic moment - which would put Sutherland Day on 12 May, the date on which the rebels to the Roscow regime pronounced their victory in Eamont. Currently known as Syeday (or Victory Day in Mercanti), this would celebrate the downfall of Sutherland's last autocrat and the end to Richeism in Sutherlander history, as well as the resumption of its democracy at a time when it looked far more resemblant of what we would today recognise as a full democracy - after all, few in the modern era would recognise a state where you had to pay tax, be born male and be over the age of 25 as a full democracy.

A few other suggestions have been mooted, including the 8 Arraliðe (roughly 8 July) date which is possibly the date that the first Gotic Longshipmen* landed in the Sound of Sutherland* to settle in the year 888AE*. Sutherland's first "King", or "kynung" as it was then known, is documented as having arrived on the south coast of the island of Kirsey in modern-day Helsing province on that day in the Saga of the Sutherlands (whilst not universally accepted, this is deemed the most likely date for his arrival by the modern consensus.)

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The future of Sutherland Day


(left) Chancellor Allister Ramsay (Liberal), speaking at the Loreshall of Hartburn (FKL) last year

Despite this recent upswell of discussion over the future of Sutherland Day, there appears to be no change of direction amongst the government. The general public are relatively ambivalent, at most, to these talks; roughly half do not know whether Sutherland Day should be moved to another day, and the remainder are split nearly down the middle (53-47 for moving it, according to ÞusHus*.)

Allister Ramsay, Sutherland's Chancellor and Liberal party leader, has not directly responded to the topic recently - this contrasts heavily with the VDA's loud counter to the petition and likely reflects his balancing act between his Liberal supporters and members (many of whom are deeply sympathetic to this idea) and his coalition (many of whom, especially the VDA* and left-conservative CDP*) . However, in 2020, he hailed the union that Sutherland Day commemorates the formation of as "a true day of unity, frelsdom* where we can all gather together to welcome a new year for Sutherland as a nation and as a people." The Free Reform Party* have stated that while they "understand concerns over its origin," that they "fundamentally cannot agree" with moving Sutherland Day from its present date.

The only government party, therefore, with leadership-level sympathy towards moving Sutherland Day from 31 January are the Moderates, whose leader Mary Cooper has used social media to voice support for the petition. Cooper further told SBS News that she "fully supports" the petition, and that she "aims to have a Sutherland whose holidays represent every Sutherlander, no matter who they are, what their mother tongue is or where they hail from."

Labour's* leader, Blake Sagan, has tentatively supported the petition as the largest Againsthood* party. In a press conference in Halfpenny, Sagan told reporters that he "would push for an open discussion over the future of Sutherland Day," while criticising the government for "somehow managing to be both disunited, and totally unreceptive, on the matter." With Labour leading the polls by a substantial margin as of 12 January, 2025, their voice may end up being the prevailing one should they form government after this year's elections.

It remains unclear whether Sutherland Day will move or stay, but the ice has been thoroughly shattered on the conversation.

AM - (A)lmoots(m)en, members of Sutherland's unicameral elected legislature, the Almoot
Bylanders - lit. "people from the peninsula," Byland represents the core of Sutherland in the southern two-thirds of the country's mainland
Syeday - lit. "Victory Day," the date on which Godfred Roscow surrendered, see more in the Alternatives? section of the article
Backbencher - an AM who isn't in a Redery role (frontbench) or þyngbord role (midbench) at present
Kwyk - a social media forum set up in the Flint Valley of Ulmere, a core tech hub of Sutherland that speaks Ulmeran
Longshipmen - the name given to Sutherlander (and other Gotic, by derivation) Vikings, after their longships
AE - Anward Eld
ÞusHus - A polling agency, coupled with a think tank and organisation campaigning for "open, representative democracy"
VDA - Civic Democratic Union, a right-of-centre Messianist Democrat party that is the second party in the Ramsay government, led by Underchancellor Márcia Teixeira
CDP - Courantist Democratic Party, a left-conservative party with social conservative, Courantist views and heartlands in Rosalia and West Beira who are in the Ramsay government
Frelsdom - an Atlish word roughly translation to "freedom/celebration/peace"
Free Reform Party - a right-wing liberal, or classical liberal/libertarian, party which is in the Ramsay government
Againsthood - Opposition
Labour (PSA) - a left-wing trade unionist, democratic socialist party which is the largest in the Almoot, but is not in government, and forms the Againsthood
 
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Týr's Tàmhas Lìosach blasts VDA for "pathetic efforts of obstruction"

"My constructive work with the Chancellor has been consistently undermined by meddling from their junior partners," the Týrrish PM told SBS

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The PM of Týr (left) has spoken of a "dichotomy" between Ramsay and Téixeira (right) in a recent press conference amid "dismissal" of Dùnaidh Accords

Raghnaid Macillìosa
Correspondent for Tyrrish Affairs
2 hours ago
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The Prime Minister of Týr's criticism of the Civic Democratic Union (VDA) and its leader, the Underchancellor Márcia Téixeira, comes amid a wider schism within the heart of the Sutherland government. Allister Ramsay, with his long history as a diplomat in Týr, has an unusually warm relationship with Lìosach; Téixeira not only lacks this, but has publicly had spats with Lìosach on multiple occasions before.

Tàmhas Lìosach, as leader of the left-of-centre, more radically nationalist Ceartas, has forged an image as a man who can both be atypically cordial with counterparts who respect his position, and vicious to those who do not. Not only has this given him a strong identity in his native Týr, but he has become a household name across Sutherland, known for his manner of speaking and forcefulness.

Allister Ramsay's diplomatic approach made his relationship with Lìosach easily the most approachable and warm in the last 50 years. Ramsay has been to the Týrrish capital of Hamhaig no fewer than six times, and the upcoming Dùnaidh Accords may be his final chance as Chancellor to continue leading Sutherland's more conciliatory approach to its most unstable province. In fact, one of Ramsay's most undeniable achievements has been in the drastic reduction of partisan warfare, and signing of multiple agreements, including one to reform the police system.

The relationship between Téixeira, Ramsay's second-in-command and leader of the centre-right VDA, and Lìosach has been far frostier. A leak caused claims that Téixeira regarded Lìosach as a "terror-sympathiser in a suit" and his Ceartas party as a "halfway house between mainstream politics and separatist guerrilla forces," while Lìosach's snub of Téixeira at the signing of the Bailadainn agreement in 2020 went viral at the time.


The press conference

Q: Would you say the Government has been receptive to you on these matters [Dùnaidh Accords]?
A: ... some of them have, some of them have, yes. Not all of them, though!
Q: Could you expand upon that, Prime Minister?
A: Gladly, Mairead [MacAsgill, C2N]. My constructive work with the Chancellor has been consistently undermined by meddling from their junior partners, which is a real shame, truly. Ramsay's a good lad, but that Téixeira and her party have been engaging in pathetic efforts of obstruction for years now. I would say that they are in the minority even in their own party, uh, coalition. You see, I know the folks on the mainland want the same things I do and we do over here, but I have a feeling Márcia [Téixeira] is too busy finding public services to cut and writing terrible laws to realise that.
Q: And-
A: I actually checked the polls on the way out here, and it seems that the good folks on the mainland agree with me, based on how poorly the VDA are doing. Deeply silly party, they are.
Q: Will you invite Téixeira over to Hamhaig along with Chancellor Ramsay and Home Reeve Bell?
A: Now, come on. What on earth would I go and do that for, precisely?
 
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Chancellor Ramsay: "We are winning the War on Dodgers"

After Ramsay's declaration that taxes would be "enforced, not hiked" and that "every penny of avoidance would be chased," the tax gap has shut dramatically

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Allister Ramsay (left) dedicated increased resources to the TWB, introduced a Beneficiary Register, encouraged whistleblowers and slashed CFC thresholds to drive down the tax gap

Edmund Albertson
Correspondent for the Economy
3 hours ago
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Five years on from Ramsay's speech arguing that tax rises following the late 2010s financial crisis suggested by Labour and the VDA could be avoided by "declaring war on tax dodgers," the BST (Board for Sutherlander Statistics) has estimated that the tax gap in the Commonwealth has been slashed from 6.2% to 3.6% of GDP, delivering approximately ʃ350-400 billion (~$225-250bn) each year including provincial tax uptake. This would constitute an increase in budget spending capacity of between four and five percentage points, with GWA, besnesboardgavel and meangains tax all seeing dramatic increases in uptake.


Allister Ramsay may have declared the War on Dodgers a won cause, but his strategy of relying on an increase to budgets from enforcement has faced wider criticism amid a wider real-terms squeeze on some rederies, such as the Redery for the Arts, which recorded a total real-terms cut of 14% between 2018 and 2024, while some more right-leaning provinces have chosen to refuse to work with Ramsay on his tax evasion programme altogether. Even the Redery for Care has faced reduced increases and a number of pay rate increase limits compared to the Labour government of 2007-2018, which has led to protracted disputes with some of the nation's most powerful public sector unions, and strengthened Labour's hand in public sector voter bases, like teachers, nurses and social carers.

Nevertheless, Ramsay appears triumphant. National debt is on target to fall back to pre-2018 levels at 55% of GDP, down from 72% in 2019, while the deficit is at a "healthy" 2.6% of GDP according to the BST, in large part thanks to Ramsay's hawkish focus on debt reduction and payment to cut servicing costs in the long-run. The All-Provincial Bank cut interest rates yet again to 3.35% last week, down from a high of 6.1% in April 2018. Economic growth, while not exceptional, has remained steady over the last five years and pulled Sutherland out of its recession at a rate of approximately two percentage-points in real terms per capita, while wage growth has - while lagging behind pre-2018 rates - maintained positive rates. A few of the indicators may be a bit weak or blinkering, but the vast majority are lighting green.

The plan taken by Ramsay is multifaceted, and five years of adaptations, legislation and Gavelgild decisions have created an extensive plan - from massively increasing the capacity and workforce of the Turnover and Worth Board (TWB), Sutherland's national auditor and tax agency, as well as introducing a national Beneficiary Register and slashing Controlled Foreign Corporation (CFC) classification thresholds, added to decreasing exceptions for tax derogations and clamping down on transfer pricing, to simple changes like co-ordinating with provincial tax collection agencies to improve the administrative capacity and co-operation between agencies to further clamp down on tax evasion, the Liberal-VDA plan has been thorough. Years passed with little substantive evidence to ascertain whether Ramsay's policies had actually made a statistical difference to the tax gap at all, and there is a very clear sense of relief within Settle House that it does indeed seem to have made a very radical diminutive effect on the tax gap.


Why is the Government lagging in the polls?
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Marten Metsmith, the leader of the far-right Progress party which has reached 10% in the polls amid anti-establishment sentiment (right)
It is no secret to many, and certainly not to the Chancellor, that his party faces a real electoral challenge. Despite a recent resurgence in the polls, the Liberals remain shy of seventeen percent in the polls, eleven points behind Labour even despite Labour's recent slight waning polling figures. The VDA is staring down the barrel of an even deeper polling deficit, just four points ahead of the hard-right party largely made up of VDA-CDP defectees, Progress, at fourteen and one-half percent. The obvious beneficiaries of the centre to centre-right collapse in the polls are Labour, whose leader increasingly acts like a Chancellor-in-waiting, but also the far-left Unite under left-populist Hamish Burton, and far-right Progress under the former VDA Reeve for Folkslore, Marten Metsmith, both of whom hold very key sectors of the population and who may prove far more critical to the formation of a government than ever before, whether the other parties like it or not. There remains a firewall, of course, but their indirect influence in squeezing the mainstream parties' share of the vote - which can be seen in the recession of Labour's polling lead from left-wing, young voters to Unite, and the near-collapse of VDA-CDP support amid the rise of Progress - is vital.

The fundamental truth, at least for now, is this: there is an election in November, and the coalition is staring down at a potential landslide ousting.

Yet, the economy's improvement appears to have little bearing on this impending electoral armageddon, which has forced the Moderates and Free Reform to unite and which has pushed the CDP to the threshold itself as it continues to rattle through the halls of Settle House. Allister Ramsay's pronouncements, which are in some way clearly justified by the data, have nudged the polls in the right direction for them - but no sea change has arrived. One Liberal aide told us that the sentiment within Settle House were "true bewilderhood," and that reeves and underreeves were "in a state of complete confusion" over the lack of resistance against the rise of "the loony hardliners" that the stable economy was proving to be.

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(left) Hamish Burton, newly-elected leader of Unite, has forged a populist, working-class character which has sent Unite from the brink of relegation from the 4% threshold to close behind Progress' 10% of the public, eating into the Labour vote and demanding anti-austerian, progressive and socialist economics


The first place to look, naturally, is what the fringes of the Againsthood are saying. Unite's newly-elected leader, Hamish Burton, has lambasted the government at this year's Anning of Annings (AA) winter conference (Winter AAC25) for "refusing to tax the rich few, at the expense of the rest of us." This aggrieved, populist rhetoric from the long-term trade unionist, who has an extensive track record of agitating for popular causes and hard-left ideological policies as well as "pro-peace" foreign policy goals, is a part of a wider strain of left-wing anti-establishment sentiment which has punctuated the public sphere in a way that the "old guard" of the far-left had often been seen to have failed to do with more specific working-class, far-left policy focuses. Burton's speech included the following excerpt, for instance.

"Yet again, the Chancellor has held a party in his own honour and decided that his economic plan is working. Yet again, he is living in a totally different world than the rest of us, where there is no slash-and-burn austerity programme that has eroded our public services and insulted our key workers by slapping wage freezes on them, where there is no social decay creeping in our streets and our workplaces as wages stagnate and as infrastructure funding is strangled, where there is no insurgent Richeist far-right proposing false miracles to angry voters and blaming the effects of decades of backsliding rights, backsliding wages and evaporating opportunities in the face of catastrophic losses to social mobility and young peoples' futures."

"The Sutherlander Way is alive, but it is under threat from the liberals' cuts and slashes, the moderate socialists' betrayals and corruption, and from the richeists' threats and slurs. The warning signs for the collapse of liberal democracies, in collapsing generational wealth, in spiralling global house prices, in rising global tensions and in collapsing global birth rates, are now unavoidably here to stay on the wrong side of Sutherlander borders. The only way to keep that decay out, save our Way and prevent our good nation falling to the same totally undemocratic liberal systems that have proliferated across backsliding capitalist economies is to roll back the social decay, ensure equity of outcomes, reintroduce service universalism, promote peace not war, build public infrastructure, fund our services truly, pay our workers fairly, and raise the tax burden on those who have profited from financial crisis the rest of us lived through!"

Conclusion
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John Blake Sagan (right), Labour leader, has called for an "end to Liberal-VDA cuts to public services" and "progressive tax reform"
The economic headline figures are on the up, but whether or not people's lives, services and living standards are following suit is clearly up for a lot of discussion. The damage done by the Recession to social mobility, wage rates, infrastructure spending and public services is in some ways undeniable, and the anger felt by many of those who have lost out in the last few years is rooted deep and not easily forgotten. Yet, the recent findings from the BST have given Ramsay a clear cause for reinvention, while his plan to squeeze the tax gap has borne significant fruit as we near the end of his second term. The argument from the Chancellor is clear - stay the course, because Sutherland is back on track.

The question that remains to be seen is whether the Liberals can hold the flood gates against the rise of the centre-left Labour party amid its renovation post-2018 under the Westmorlander John Blake Sagan's straight-talking, honest persona, and the hardliners on the left with Hamish Burton's controversial socialist co-operativist Unite partisan alliance and its divisive reputation for anti-nuclear, "pro-peace" policies, and hardliners on the right with Marten Metsmith's insurgent far-right Progress party that is desperately fighting allegations of harbouring neo-Richeist views, tolerating neo-Richeist politicians and members, and playing on xenophobic, transphobic, misogynistic and homophobic sentiments. If they cannot, the Liberals' long-term hope that existing tax rates can be consolidated and solidified without raising the tax burden on businesses and the more fortunate, and maybe even the wider hawkish approach to debt management, restrained approach to public spending and frosted relations with trade unions may be totally overturned in the very near future.
 
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Liberal deputy leader criticises Sulvener for deeming Waltalriche "flawed democracy"

"Some tidings must get over their acquiescence to Waltalriche and its backwards electoral theocracy," Pugh told C2N, "it's clear as day that Waltalriche is no democracy."

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The Sulvener (left) Democracy Index found Waltalriche at 0.740 (0-1) fell within the "flawed democracy" category; Bethan Pugh's (right) response called the Sulvener "out-of-step with reality"

Dalberna Smyþe
Correspondent for Democracy
2 hours ago
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The Sulvener's recent Democracy Index sample, ahead of the first edition which it intends upon publishing yearly, has earnt a significant amount of criticism from the left and from the Liberals for its classification of Waltalriche - deemed officially by the Sutheran statistical board BST as an "electoral theocratic regime severely lacking core civil-democratic tendencies" - as a flawed democracy.


A Labour party statement called the Index "deeply silly" and "utterly unfounded in the truth we live in," while the Liberal party's deputy leader, Bethan Pugh, answered a question from a journalist of the left-leaning Watchman on the Index by calling it "out-of-step with reality."

Pugh's off-the-cuff answer unexpectedly branded the Sulvener's CEO, Aðred Blæcklyh, a "true Bonsey." Bonsey refers to the 1920s Sutheran populist conservative-nationalist politician, Holmere Bonsey, who served in far-right Richeist URLS dictator Godfred Roscow's Redery for five years after surrendering control of the province of Longrun to him, and has long been used as an informal insult to those viewed to be acquiescent to Richeists and the far-right.
The Sulvener has since released a statement in response, calling Pugh's outburst "shameful" and called on her to "withdraw and apologise."

What's the deal with Waltalriche?
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Mary Cooper (right), leader of the left-conservative CDP, has called Pugh's criticism "mudflinging" and "media interference"

Waltalriche has long been a country of controversy in Sutherland. Sutherlander politicians, particularly on the right-flank of mainstream politics like the VDA and CDP, have been accused of having "handshake agreements" with Waltalriche based on the lucrative trade between the two nations; Sutherlander natural gas and oil are major exports to Waltalriche, the two nations' defence and aerospace manufacturers have significant deals, investment and contracts with one another, while the two have been accused of maintaining a "de facto monopoly" on lithium, inflating global prices as a result.

The country's legislature is run by majority by the so-called Liberal Democratic Party, a right-wing to far-right party that heads the dominant-party system, and almost always has been for its "democratic" history, though other parties, such as Popular Action and Messianic Reform do run and share approximately one-third of the legislature's seats. However, the state's politics are also strongly influenced by theocratic elements, such as the Ecclesiastical College (bishops appointed by the Pope), as well as the judiciary, which is largely appointed either from within or from theocratic elements like the Archbishopry, to the extent that the Security Council has theocrats such as the Archbishop and Ecclesiastical College as members.

This unconventional method of adjudicating and apportioning power in the highly conservative country is therefore the subject of a sustained argument from studies and political scholars on its apparent democratic deficit and shortfalls, while the separation of state and religion - a core tenet of Sutheran democracy and a part of the EC Charter, for comparison - is almost non-existent. While the state has little recent history of internal violence, the Passau massacre in 1967 remains in the minds of many when they think of Waltalriche. All of this not only makes Sutherland's ongoing international relationship and thaw with Waltalriche controversial, but highly suspect.

Allister Ramsay, a former diplomat and ambassador to Tyr, having seen the aftermath of terrorist attacks of revenge on the northern and southern half of the island alike and been key to the 2000s and 2010s governments' efforts to maintain the peace, was elected in November 2019 as Chancellor, and began his term promising to "temper and sever where possible ties with the Waltalricher regime." However, after the coalition with the more right-leaning CDP and VDA, of whom the CDP in particular is relatively warm to Waltalriche, Ramsay's opposition to Waltalriche softened. Yet, it appears that the largest conciliator between Ramsay, who has now been Chancellor for over five years, and the hard-right conservative government in Waltalriche was the Second War in Dučrijeka. Largely panned as the "War of Terror" in Sutherland, Ramsay's Sutherland quickly became vocal in opposition to the War by its close cultural counterpart in Andrenne, a role which Waltalriche's government also began to take up. He expelled Andrennian diplomats, withdrew Sutherlander diplomats in equal measure, provided a special budget for international aid and encouraged the EC to follow suit with its own ECA budget, suspended arms contracts and issued a one-year arms sanction that was extended twice, until it finally expired in July of 2023.

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Edward Ridley (left), the Liberal Reeve for Foreign Affairs since 2019, has been seen as key to Sutherland's foreign policy, in particular his sharp rebukes of Gothis during the War in Dučrijeka, alleging that
Dučrijeka had been "irreparably broken" by the War's "urbicides"


The aftermath of the War of Terror was siesmic. Sutherland's newest coalition government's deliberations to join the Pan-Gotic Union completely evaporated, with an internal Liberal party brief leaking that Ramsay deemed the group "a total waste of space in stopping the crimes against humanity," amid a wider statement that called for an "EC Charter enforcement" and which compared Gothis to the beleaguered, violent island of Tyr where he had served for eleven years. Free Reform Party leader Rory Bell, long-known for his interest in international aid affairs and also for his overly blunt, gaffeprone visage, went further, stating that he would personally block "any shortsighted attempt by the more forgiving of those within Sutherlander government to negotiate with terrorists."

Even the Labour party, which was typically far warmer to Andrenne and wider global international diplomacy, and who had kickstarted the movements to join the PGU before their fall from power in 2019, called the war "an uncleansable, forever-visible stain on the souls and hearts of Gothis," stating that Andrenne had "left tens of thousands of dinner tables less a loved one for the rest of the remainder's scarred lives."

The bombing of Kosada in particular triggered Ramsay to publicly state that he had "totally and utterly dropped any thought of joining [the PGU] for the time being" and that the "rule of law ended at the first instance of collective punishment;" never before had the relationship with the country Sutherlanders often deemed their ancestral homeland from bygone times been so utterly sullied.

The Sutherlander government is certainly no longer avowedly hostile to Andrenne in the way it was in 2020, having returned to sending diplomats and withdrawn , but the Chancellor has made clear he has not forgotten the War in Dučrijeka. In an interview in May 2021, Allister Ramsay told EBC News that "he had a preconception that liberal democracies could not commit barbaric atrocities at a second's notice until that day in Kosada," and that "Sutherland's doors remain open to those fleeing terror, and closed firmly to those who perpetrate it." The following year, Sutherland once again suspended its admission process, citing the "unconscionable mistake amounting to gross complicity" of allowing the Andrennian government full membership "before it had even proven its democratic credentials, never mind its meaningful distinction from the government it succeeded," the "apparent refusal of PGU nations to take responsibility for their public-facing role," and that a "mere transfer of power was insufficient to, on its own, justify the open-armed welcome of war criminals into the halls of a supposedly-reputable alliance of democracies." By 2022, Ramsay had referred to Waltalriche's strong participation in opposing war crimes as an "unlikely, but welcome, surprise" and travelled to Erlagen to reaffirm relations with the "theocratic regime," as the BST called it at the time.

The return to democratic governance in Andrenne, renewed attention to democratic deficits and the deteriorating reputation of Waltalriche amongst voters in Sutherland, and the distance put between the War in Dučrijeka and the present day over time softened Ramsay's willingness to co-operate with Waltalriche, added to numerous obiters by judges reprimanding Ramsay's "complicity in the flourishing of the military-industrial complex of an enemy of liberal, secular democracy" in one instance, and for "normalising relations with a deeply abnormal country" in another, while his hostility to Andrenne has receded in recent years in equivalent measure. This recession of hostilities has resulted from the mixture of the popular resistance to the rule of Lukas II, whom Labour party co-leader and President Astrid Redbridge called "criminal-in-chief" in a leak in 2022, as well as the concerted efforts by the Andrennian government in following years to begin repairing the damage done to international relations by the War, as well as its efforts to find and arrest members of the government at the time. However, the argument that Waltalriche and Sutherland were to sever their historic trade relationship lays appears to lie just as dead in the water as it did four years ago.


What's the deal with the Sulvener?
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Sulvener journalist Mærryn Albrycg (right), the lead name on the Index release, has been known for his controversial libertarian and right-wing stances
The Sulvener Democracy Index leaked several democratic index figures, but the main one that attracted interest - beyond Sutherland itself, which it rated at 0.960 - was indeed that for Waltalriche. Allegedly judging nations based on their political, cultural, institutional practices, systems and values, the SDI gives a value between 0 (total autocracy) to 1 (total democracy) based upon the answers to a list of 60 questions.

Few have gone so far as to allege that Waltalriche is a democracy - and including it in the otherwise innocuous press release is a clear signal to gain attention. Attention was indeed gained.

The rebuke has been wide-spanning. Labour issued a statement deeming the Sulvener's conclusion "deeply silly" and "indicative of its wider failures to address the relationship between economic democratisation, cultural democratisation, and institutional democratisation, of which Waltalriche lacks two at the very least." Allister Ramsay, though not explicitly condemning the Index, stated he was "a bit surprised" by the finding, while Márcia Téixeira of the VDA responded to a question in her home town of Monreial by answering that she "did not in fact agree with the judgement, on measure."

Even Waltalriche's warmest partner in Sutherland, Mary Cooper of the CDP, only went so far as to criticise "the Left for wading into a newspaper's critical findings based on value judgements," and suggested that the left should "make their own if they're quite so displeased by the finding." A Progress party spokesperson also told the "political class" to "kindly shut up and let the journalists do their jobs without political interference from meddling liberal virtue signallers."

The Sulvener has officially defended its findings from criticism, confirming that the Waltalriche number release was to "generate a positive, realistic conversation on the matter" and that "while there are some naysayers, the discourse is a positive sign." It also defended Albrycg from targeted criticism, stating that it would "not tolerate targeted attacks on its journalists and experts," as well as stating that Pugh's calling of its CEO as a "Bonsey" was a "shameful slur that must be withdrawn and apologised for."
 
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