Chapter 306: Why is the situation in Yumoyan always so bad?

"What's wrong with the republic?" Several people present were stunned. "It looks like the Republic's frontline advance has slowed down since our troops stopped their offensive and started grinding on the border." Black Rose said with a smile, "So naturally someone inside started to ...... Anyway, it's time to start making trouble. ”

"Trouble?"

The internal problems of the Yumayan Republic are a very complex topic. In general, people think of the republic as a left-wing republic, and it is true. But the left does not mean that there is only one party, and in fact there are several parties in the Assembly of the Republic. Due to the current wartime, the normal electoral system was put on hold for the time being, and former Deputy Speaker of the Jumayan Parliament, Blake, temporarily served as President of the Republic until the end of the civil war.

At first glance, there is no problem, but just because they are both left-wing parties does not mean that they share the same opinion. On the contrary, in many cases, parliamentarians from different political parties will quarrel with each other, and even within the same party, they accuse each other of leaning to the left or the right because of their political differences.

The Yomoyan Labor Party wanted to move forward quickly and advocated the establishment of a centralized government to ensure state control during the transitional period; The Yumayan Social Democratic Party believes that the primary purpose at present is to stabilize the war situation, temporarily focus on the traditional democratic form of government, restore the economy first, and ensure the people's livelihood before considering the reform of the political system; The Yomoyan Liberal Party (mainly anarcho-syndicalist) believed that the Labour Party was only trying to establish a Second Empire in Yumoyan, and that the Social Democrats were too weak, and they demanded that the government should first protect the people's livelihood, and that many people were displaced by the civil war and that the country's economy had suffered a heavy blow, and that no matter how urgent the revolution was, ensuring the people's livelihood should be the first priority; The Yomoyan Democrats, on the other hand, are strong advocates of preserving the existing democratic institutions, and they often quarrel with the Labour Party in Parliament......

All in all, it is almost common for these parties to quarrel with each other in the Assembly of the Republic, but it is normal. The Democrats call it "a negligible price that must be paid to preserve democracy." However, as the war reached a stalemate, Yang Yi's troops began to fish under the orders of their superiors, and the Republican Guard was obviously unable to push the Council troops supported by the Empire, and the unstable factors within the Republic began to be gradually amplified.

Due to the prolonged war, Yumoyan's domestic economy gradually began to decline, and even faintly showed signs of collapse, many civilians living in the republic were displaced because of the war, a large number of refugees gathered near the republic and Yumoyan's capital, and charitable organizations in the Republic and various parts of the star sector could only distribute a bowl of gruel to the refugees every day so that they could barely starve to death. The war has led to the destruction of a large number of buildings, the destruction of many production buildings due to critical care, and the interruption of many production chains, the bankruptcy of many small and medium-sized enterprises due to the government's financial inability to help, the unemployment of a large number of workers on the streets, and the gradual breeding of violence and crime among refugees on the outskirts of the city and on the streets of the city.

The Yumoyan Labour Party blamed the external counter-revolutionary forces and the internal counter-revolutionaries for the cause, declaring in parliament that "it is the tyrant Akturs Monsk and his counter-revolutionary lackeys who have done all this!" The Liberals oppose this view, and many anarcho-syndicalists see it as the work of the Labour Party's corrupt bureaucracy, which has seen many refugees seeking a job run from one institution to another and back again, when there are large numbers of refugees in and out of the city, and the rebuilding of the republic requires a large number of labourers, but the republic has never been able to combine the two because of the corrupt bureaucracy; The SPD is more liberal and sees economic reconstruction as more important, but they are also centrist in favor of pushing outward rather than focusing solely on domestic reconstruction.

Generally speaking, this kind of party divide is at best so much that it does not turn the republic into a powder keg that can ignite at any moment. But the bad thing was in the battle to defend the capital of the republic.

When the capital of the Republic was besieged by government forces, many parliamentarians refused to follow the instructions of the Republican Guard to temporarily evacuate the capital and take refuge in the rear, choosing instead to fight in person. This move did boost morale, but it also led to the death of many parliamentarians, especially many high-ranking and prestigious parliamentarians, in street battles in the capital. Most of them were Labour MPs, and many of them often led the Republican Guard or the Self-Defense Forces of local residents to fight the government forces building after building, which led to the fact that when the fighting with the government forces was over and when Parliament reconvened, it was found that Labour's voice was greatly reduced because there were not many people in Parliament who could speak.

Again, this is a complex topic. On the one hand, from the perspective of party supporters, after many Labour MPs took the lead, shared weal and woe with front-line soldiers, and sacrificed themselves for the republic, there were obviously a lot more voters who supported the Labour Party, which did give the Labour Party a lot of voice. But on the other hand, because a large number of MPs died on the front line, most of the MPs who came on to replace them were radicals who were temporarily elected – even more radical than Labour MPs.

Generally speaking, in the original parliament, even if the far-left Labour MPs wanted to get a bill passed, it was nothing more than a rather drastic wording, they would still follow the established process, first draft the bill, and then go to lobby the MPs that other parties might support, try to drive out the MPs who might oppose it, and then submit it to the parliament, and then, bang, hammer, or the bill did not pass, and let them loudly denounce the counter-revolutionary behavior of other MPs and parties. Either the bill passed thanks to the supporters present at the barabala.

But this new group of parliamentarians ...... But they were born out of the lowest level of the soldiers' and workers' Soviets – well, the peasant class did not exist in the Star Zone, either the bourgeoisie like the farmer or the horticultural workers who worked in greenhouses and planting sheds, although they still called themselves peasants – and the fire of revolution burned in their bosoms......

Well, in fact they knew nothing about politics, and they were so disgusted with politics that they thought that the republic had come to such a state as a result of them—and to some extent, it was—that these new members of parliament had destroyed almost the whole of parliament, and they were so hot-tempered and extremely hostile to other parties, and even to dissidents of the same party, that it had become commonplace to turn tables and draw weapons, and several meetings had been forced to adjourn temporarily.

Apparently, all the others are very unhappy with these "rude pauper councillors". But these "poor councillors" are not limited to Labour, other parties are in a similar situation, and they cannot solve the problem by kicking Labour out of parliament alone – and Labour's supporters will not allow it, and they soon find that they have no time to do so.

Before Black Rose came to Keha, she had heard that Parliament had once again been forced to adjourn after a Liberal "pauper" had threatened to commit suicide in Parliament with a gun. It's hard to say what will happen next, and many people, including A1 and A6, fear that it will escalate into a second civil war in the Republic.

This is not unfounded, not only because the parties have the support of a large number of revolutionary masses, but also because the parties retain their own armed forces – which is part of the agreement. Many feared that Blake's ban on UHP would happen again, and it was mandatory for the parties to maintain a directly partisan armed force, i.e., upgrade from the original SS to the SS, militarize training, and distribute lethal weapons, while increasing numbers. What was supposed to be a force for partisan self-defense has now become a dangerous factor for further instability.