Gebeesca
Flag of Gebeesca | |
Motto: Who needs a motto? | |
Region | none yet |
---|---|
Capital | Berlin |
Official Language(s) | German |
Leader | President Stephanie Brum |
Population | 80 million |
Currency | Euro |
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The Federation of Gebeesca is a a federalistic presidential democracy. For the history of Gebeesca up to beginning of the 21st century, see the Wikipedia article about Germany.
Contents
Political system
In contrast to 20th century West Germany, Gebeesca strictly separetes legislature and executive.
Parliament
The national parliament is bicameral. It consists of the Federal Assembly (Bundestag) elected through a mixture of majority and proportional representation and the States Council (Länderrat), which consists of directly elected state representatives.
Most of the states and municipalities have unicameral parliaments (Landtage/Kommunalräte) elected through the same mixed system. The legislatures of counties and regions usually consist of municipality/county parliament representatives.
Government
The head of state and head of government is the Federal President (BundespräsidentIn), elected directly by the people. The President chooses their Ministers (MinisterInnen).
The same goes for the heads of the states, which are called State Presidents (LandespräsidentInnen) and the heads of the municipalities, the Mayors (BürgermeisterInnen).
Electoral system
To elect single persons (representatives of a constituency, the President etc.), a preferential voting system is used.
Administrative divisions
Gebeesca is divided into 7 semi-autonomous states (Bundesländer). The states have separate education systems, social security systems and taxes. The state borders are purely geographical: each state is centered around a river.
Because some of the states are very big, the state authorities have branch offices in each of the 42 districts (Bezirke). Apart from that, the districts play no role as an administrative division. The districts are arranged in such a way that their capitals are easily accessible from the surrounding towns.
On the lowest level, there are about 4000 municipalities (Ämter). These are responsible for everything that can be managed locally, mainly registering and collecting taxes for citizens, companies and vehicles, as well as providing local infrastructure. The smallest municipalities have about 10,000 inhabitants.
Municipalities can choose to cooperate, forming counties (Kreise). The counties are not formed from above (by the government), but after referendums. The cooperation is focused on supporting local infrastructure, tourism and environment. This usually includes public transport.
Counties can choose to cooperate, forming regions (Landschaften). The regions, too, are formed after referendums. They usually follow historical borders, to promote themselves as homogenous entities, thus attracting potential investors and tourists.
State | Capital | Population | Area | Districts |
---|---|---|---|---|
Donauland (Danube Land) |
München (Munich) |
10 million | 55,000 km² (21,000 sq mi) |
Ingolstadt, Kempten, München, Passau, Regensburg, Sigmaringen |
Elbland (Elbe Land) |
Hamburg | 18 million | 92,000 km² (35,500 sq mi) |
Berlin, Cottbus, Dresden, Hamburg, Hof, Leipzig, Ludwigslust, Magdeburg, Weimar |
Emsland (Ems Land) |
Münster | 2.2 million | 12,000 km² (4,500 sq mi) |
Meppen, Münster |
Friesland (Frisia) |
Husum & Wilhelmshaven | 850,000 | 6,800 km² (2,640 sq mi) |
Husum, Wilhelmshaven |
Hanseland (Hanseatic Land) |
Lübeck | 3.2 million | 31,000 km² (12,000 sq mi) |
Kiel, Neubrandenburg, Schwerin |
Rheinland (Rhine Land) |
Köln (Cologne) |
38 million | 105,000 km² (40,500 sq mi) |
Aachen, Essen, Frankfurt, Freiburg, Freudenstadt, Friedrichshafen, Heilbronn, Kaiserslautern, Koblenz, Köln, Nürnberg, Paderborn, Schweinfurt, Trier |
Weserland (Weser Land) |
Bremen | 11 million | 55,000 km² (21,000 sq mi) |
Bremen, Fulda, Göttingen, Hannover, Korbach, Osnabrück |