A Government Designed for Accountability
Governance of the Republic
Three branches. Dual oversight. No one holds unreviewable permanent power.
A Government Designed for Accountability
Three branches. Dual oversight. No one holds unreviewable permanent power.
Institutional Architecture
Elected representatives, sortition citizens, and an independent judiciary — each with distinct selection mechanisms, term structures, and powers.
Chancellor Elisa Thorrsen
Elected by Ranked Choice Voting in a single national constituency. The Chancellor leads the cabinet, sets the policy agenda, and serves as Commander-in-Chief. Subject to recall by 55% of the Citizens' Assembly.
300 Elected Members
Proportional representation via Single Transferable Vote in 50 multi-member districts (5-7 seats each). The single-subject rule prohibits omnibus legislation. No filibuster mechanism.
150 Sortition Members
Selected by stratified random sortition from the general population, stratified across age, gender, region, income, and education. Co-legislates with the elected assembly. Immune to donor influence.
11 Justices
Selected by merit exam, sortition shortlist, and legislative confirmation. The final arbiter of all constitutional questions with judicial review over all laws and government actions.
Structure of Government
11 constitutionally mandated ministries and 6 independent agencies form the machinery of government.
Elisa Thorrsen
Fiscal policy, SWF
Law enforcement
Military, civil defense
Universal healthcare
Curriculum, research
Carbon budget, conservation
Transport, energy, housing
Business regulation
Diplomacy, treaties
UBI, disability, eldercare
AI governance, digital
MSP Index, data
Anti-corruption
Anti-monopoly
Elections, boundaries
Enforcement
Monetary policy
How Laws Are Made
Eight steps from bill introduction to law. Every bill published for 14 days before any vote. Every vote recorded and published.
Any member of either chamber or citizen initiative (2% petition). Single-subject rule applies — no omnibus legislation.
Public hearings (minimum 2 days for major bills). Mandatory impact assessment by Bureau of Metrics. AI policy simulation run (advisory, non-binding). Committee may pass, amend, or table.
Full bill text, committee report, and impact assessment published on the Open Data Ledger. No vote until 14 days have elapsed.
Open amendment process. Debate time proportionally allocated. Simple majority to pass. All votes recorded and published.
Referred to relevant committee in the second chamber. Same process: hearings, publication, floor vote. May pass as-is, amend, or reject.
If amended or rejected: 10 members (5 from each chamber, selected by lot). Produces reconciled text. Both chambers vote on final text, no further amendment. If either rejects, bill dies.
Chancellor has 15 days to sign (becomes law), veto with written reasons (returned to chambers), or take no action (becomes law after 15 days).
60% vote in both chambers overrides the Chancellor's veto. The bill becomes law without executive signature.
Direct Democracy
Citizens can bypass the legislature entirely through petitions and binding referenda.
Citizens file proposed bill text with the Electoral Commission at any time.
2% of registered voters (~100,000 signatures) must sign.
Electoral Commission verifies all signatures via the national digital identity system.
Bill introduced in Citizens' Assembly within 30 days. Normal committee and floor process follows.
If both chambers reject the bill and 5% of voters petition, a binding national referendum is held. Simple majority on turnout of 40% or more passes the bill into law.
First General Election Results
Eight parties won seats in the first election (Year 1). Compulsory voting produced 94.2% turnout. Coalition government formed by Compass Alliance, Solidarity Party, and Green Horizon (181 seats).
82 Seats · 26.3% First-Preference
Constitutional progressivism and evidence-based governance. Pro-MSP Index, full LVT implementation, green industrial policy, multilateral engagement. Leader: Chancellor Elisa Thorrsen.
61 Seats · 19.8% First-Preference
Democratic socialism within the constitutional framework. Stronger redistribution, worker ownership, expanded public housing, skeptical of trade agreements without labor standards. Leader: Marek Ossetyn.
42 Seats · 14.1% First-Preference
Economic liberalism with constitutional acceptance. Pro-market, caps on LVT, lower corporate taxes, lighter regulation, expanded SWF private investment. Leader: Conrad Blackmore.
38 Seats · 12.4% First-Preference
Eco-socialism. Accelerated carbon tax, ban new fossil fuel infrastructure, 30% protected land, degrowth-compatible economics, reweight MSP toward Ecological Stability. Leader: Talia Solberg (Environment Minister).
24 Seats · 7.9% First-Preference
Regionalist social conservatism. Defends Kelveri cultural identity, maximum regional devolution, protect traditional industries, rural infrastructure investment. Leader: Dagny Haugen.
22 Seats · 8.6% First-Preference
National-conservative populism. Skeptical of the constitutional order. Referendum to revise Constitution, abolish Citizens' Assembly, halt LVT, strengthen defense. Leader: Viktor Drent.
16 Seats · 5.1% First-Preference
Multicultural progressivism. Represents immigrant-origin communities. Expanded immigration, anti-discrimination, cultural pluralism, housing-first policies. Leader: Amira Hadid.
15 Seats · 4.8% First-Preference
Regional pragmatism for coastal communities. Sustainable fisheries, offshore wind, maritime infrastructure, balancing environment with working livelihoods. Leader: Sigrid Halvorsen.
Accountability by Design
Each layer operates independently. Failure of one layer activates the next. No single layer's compromise disables the entire system.
Final arbiter of all constitutional questions. Judicial review of all laws and government actions. Impeachment trial jurisdiction. Any person can bring a rights claim directly. Pre-enactment review available.
The keystone of citizen oversight. Sortition-selected, immune to electoral pressure. Powers include impeachment initiation (2/3), executive recall (55% triggers referendum), constitutional amendment initiation, and budget authority over all independent bodies.
Transparency Office (anti-corruption, subpoena power, asset freeze authority), Bureau of Metrics (mandatory impact assessments, independent fact-checking), Electoral Commission (election administration), and Ombudsperson (citizen complaints, free of charge).
Inter-branch oversight: legislative subpoena power, mandatory oversight hearings (minimum 2 per department per year), budget control, confirmation power, no-confidence votes on individual ministers, and independent fiscal tracking.
Universal information access (all government data public by default), citizen petitions (2% for legislation, 10% for recall, 8% for constitutional amendment), citizen litigation (broad standing, income-scaled fees), and jury participation with recognized nullification right.