Máe No More

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Ne Máe Iniháó (Korémalà)
Predecessor
  • Túwapovihetan Anti-Establishment Alliance
  • Te Olànatéàrika (The People's Stateholder)
Formation1998; 25 years ago (1998), Déıimàıéa, Ton'ıqa Tan'ıjí, Koré'hetanùa
TypeActivist group
PurposeAnti-establishment activism, libertarian activism, republican activism
HeadquartersPàxùqa, Vou Kégúrava Koré'hetanùa
Region served
Koré'hetanùa
Membership
736,000
Official language
Australic Coscivian, Korémalà
President
Arıdin Linik
Main organ
Máe No More Cabinet, arranged every five years in the Alliance General Council
Staff
168
Volunteers
1470
Websitehttps://www.máenomore.kh/home

Máe No More is a anti-establishment, libertarian, and republican activist group active in Koré'hetanùa. The group campaigns for limitation to the Koré'hetanùan government's power and an increase in personal liberties for the populace of Koré'hetanùa. The group was founded back in 1998 when the Túwapovihetan Anti-Establishment Alliance and Te Olànatéàrika (or the People's Stateholder as it's known in English) merged into a single group. With Equalitarian party leader Levené Hanoà proposing men be required to take parental leave from work when their wife has a child the group initially formed to advocate for men's rights. However, over time the group shifted towards generally opposing the government and advocating for more personal freedoms for everyone in Koré'hetanùa. The group is still active to this day, though it is significantly more active when progressive governments are in office. Current group President Arıdin Linik states that the group is not ideologically bent despite its history of opposing more progressive and left-leaning governments. The group is currently headquartered in Pàxùqa, Vou Kégúrava, where much of the group's support base originates. The majority of the group's membership is from Vou Kégúrava province, but membership in the province only accounts for 37%. The rest of the groups membership is extremely spread out across the country, with the second and third most activity coming from the Kàogò'vera (21% of total membership) and Túwapovi (12% of total membership) provinces respectively.