Politics of Ordrey

Ordrey is a,   functioning under a Noyonist- political and economic model, which it has observed since the conclusion of the Ordrish Revolution in 1978. While the Workers' Party of Ordrey formally relinquished their monopoly on governmental authority with the 1999 Constitution, they still retain significant de facto authority in national politics due to continued electoral and legislative success. The Constitution of 1978, which precedes its modern form, describes the Workers' Party's role in the nation as the "principal steward of society and the state", and though it is not officially referenced in the modern constitution, the party's legacy in the formation, propagation, and execution of Noyonist policies in the nation ensures its continued prominence, at least for the foreseeable future. Beyond the party, the nation identifies its key political foundations as being from the writings and theories of not just Acoul Noyon, but also of his contemporary Jois Duchesne, and 19th Century Lathadun jurist and radical Pol Cabmuc.

The nation has a collective vested in the seven-member Federal Council of Commissars, led  by the First Commissar, with the current officeholder being Comla Mievlen since 2020. The is Samo Oclin (incumbent since 2019), the First Representative, who presides over the Federal Assembly. In addition to their role as head of government, Oclin is the current General Secretary of the Workers' Party of Ordrey. The is operated as a  system under the Federal Assembly, though the Committee of Representatives, composed of the senior member of the Assembly from each of the nation's twenty-eight constituencies and the First Representative exercises legislative power while the Assembly is not in session. The is independent of both other houses of national government and run by Procurator-General Lara Mallet (since 2021), who presides over the Commonwealth Court.

Ordrey is characterized by the World Forum as a, high-transparency democracy, one of the "big three" nations adhering to a government adhering to the main branches of blue politics - with Ordrey as the foremost Noyonist nation, alongside Velorenkya (for Revivalism) and [TRADSOC NATION] (for Gezeikism). Its proponents laud Ordrey's great degree of economic equality, standard of living, and open political process, while critics point to the country's tight regulation of the national media and prohibition of non-blue political philosophies in the public sphere as points for concern.