Carolina
Carolina; officially the Commonwealth of Carolina (Spanish: La Mancomunidad de Carolina) is a country in the southern cone of South America.
History
Spanish Rule
The Argentine Purchase
Colonization and expansion under British rule
War of the Montoneras
Carolina in the 20th century
Argentino revolts and the Argentine Troubles
Ejército Argentino de Liberación Nacional (EALN): Argentine Secessionism; Center-left; Nationalism
Government and Politics
In the present day Carolina is a federal parliamentary constitutional monarchy with the crown monarch of the United Kingdom as the sovereign monarch. According to the Caroline constitution, the Crown holds final executive power; but since 1914 the crown has acted as a figurehead monarch while the government Carolina is ran as a parliamentary democracy. The Crown is represented by an appointed representative called the Governor General of Carolina who in effect communications and mediates between the Crown and the elected government of Carolina. The government of Carolina uses a unicameral system where the executive branch derives power from the legislature (composed of members of parliament or MPs who represent a proportional population constituency of the country). Additionally, Carolina has 6 provincial governments which run day to day affairs and certain cultural and internal policy of the country (divisions of power are outlined in the Caroline Constitution).
Administrative Divisions
The 6 provinces of Carolina are:
- Rio Plata (capital: Buenos Aires)
- New South Wales (capital: Port Leonabelle)
- The Banda Orienta (capital: Sacramento)
- Argentine (capital: Córdoba)
- Patagonia (capital: New York)
- the Folkland Islands (capital: PLACEHOLDER)