Government of Cadenza

The government of Cadenza is made up of 3 branches. The Executive branch, the House of Councils, and the Judiciary Branch. The House of Councils is made up of 14 councils, each chaired by an elected Representative and 6 members, all led by the Chairman of the House. The House is responsible for the creation reform, and enactment of laws and acts, as well as overseeing their enforcement. The House resides in a massive double tower structure in the middle of Cadenza City. The executive branch is led by the President and seconded by the Vice President. The responsibility of the Executive branch is to sign off on laws put forth by the House and to lead the country in war, alongside the Secretary of War. The Judiciary branch is led by the Supreme Judge and forms the Supreme Hall, the last step in the court system of Cadenza. The Supreme Judge, along with 8 other members make up the Judiciary branch, which is responsible for the judgment of laws deemed unconstitutional.

Executive Branch

The Executive Branch is led by the President and seconded by the Vice President. The Chairman of the House and Supreme Judge are also considered as parts of the Executive Branch. The Executive Branch's primary role in the Cadenzan government is to oversee the general running of the nation. The Executive Branch oversees the Representatives of the House of Councils to sign and enact the bills they create. The Executive Branch is also responsible for enforcing said bills into laws, usually by employing and overseeing the Councils necessary to do the job.

House of Councils

The House of Councils makes up the majority of the Cadenzan Government. The House is overseen by the Chairman of the House. The House is comprised of 14 councils, each chaired by an elected Representative. Each Council contains 6 members who are also elected. The 14 councils are as follows:

When it comes to making proposing a bill, the proposing council first needs to agree 5 out of 7 on the terms of said proposal. The Representative of the proposing council then presents the proposal to the House of Councils and Executive Branch. Once this is done, the proposal then becomes a bill. At this point, if the bill concerns the nature of any of the other councils, they must account for their part in the bill and also come to a unanimous decision about it. Once all involved councils have reached a 5/7 decision, the bill is put in front of the President, who can either veto the bill for reconsideration or sign the bill into law.

Judiciary Branch