National Reconstruction Front (Daxia): Difference between revisions

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Yang Qiu invariably won the election of 1984 but dropped fourteen percentage points from his first victory, down to sixty nine percent of the vote. Going by the rule that the party fraudulently doubled the number of votes received, it can be said with confidence that Qiu won no more than thirty six percent in truth. Strangely for Daxian presidential elections to that date, the president was dogged throught the campaign by the candidate of a small, recently formed political formation named the [[Party of Daxian Democrats]]. Its candidate was a total unknown, some accountant who looked as if he had been plucked from a catalogue of bureaucrats, but this [[Linge Chen]] was a strident and irascible orator who shamelessly mocked his elderly rival. At one point in the campaign [[Linge Chen]] sought out the president at a campaign stop in [[Minxia City]] and confronted him about the continued spilling of industrial waste on [[Lake Zhenzhu]], at one point pointing at Qiu with his finger and poking him in the chest. The president tried to play the elder statesman but looked clearly annoyed and rattled before the cameras. [[Linge Chen]] would later be arrested and charged with disrespecting the president and be prevented from continuing to campaign by a court order but nonetheless he made an impact; his small party would get almost twenty percent of the vote. In his book 'The Wave', [[Linge Chen]] revealed that important members of the NRF both from the Politburo and regional party leaderships met with him in secret and offered their resources to his project. Chen further claims that it was his ideas that attracted them but the truth may be less flattering, scared and sidelined members of the nomenklatura hedging their bets against a Yang Qiu loss. It is this quiet transfer of cadres from one party to another that may have been the deciding factor in the shocking surprise victory of [[Linge Chen]] and the [[Party of Daxian Democrats|PDD]] in 1986, snatching the [[Mirzak|capital]] from the government. The defeat in the largest city of the country was a great  humiliation to the party and to the president personally. Many NRF insiders attribute the defeat to treason by important cadres who either switched sides and funneled NRF votes to [[Linge Chen]]'s party or simply enacted a campaign of 'limp wrists', that is they basically surrendered the election without a fight. Both options are viable as the NRF local structure in the city was deepy aggrieved by the imposition of a candidate who was not well known in [[Mirzak]] and who had been put forth over the heads of more competitive options. The [[Party of Daxian Democrats|PDD]] may also have offered to overlook and paper over cases of corruption by the NRF administrations of the city if they got to power. Yang Qiu responded to the rumors of backstabbing by having the party initiate proceedings to first sanction and then expel several important party bosses of the capital. This restored party discipline on the surface but Qiu's leadership had already been near fatally damaged by the ordeal and it would only continue to weaken in the last two years of his presidency. The final stretch of his second term were spent trying to reactivate an economy saddled with large debts and a worrying trend of capital flight due to the high costs imposed on businesses by government corruption and the growing insecurity in many regions due to a renewed insurgency by the emboldened [[Communist Party of Daxia|CPD]]. The [[Communist Party of Daxia|CPD]] once more began a campaign of attacking state security forces and kidnapping wealthy individuals to fund its activities, activities that the [[National Intelligence Bureau]] increasingly failed to stop thus losing the government the support of the economic elites.
Yang Qiu invariably won the election of 1984 but dropped fourteen percentage points from his first victory, down to sixty nine percent of the vote. Going by the rule that the party fraudulently doubled the number of votes received, it can be said with confidence that Qiu won no more than thirty six percent in truth. Strangely for Daxian presidential elections to that date, the president was dogged throught the campaign by the candidate of a small, recently formed political formation named the [[Party of Daxian Democrats]]. Its candidate was a total unknown, some accountant who looked as if he had been plucked from a catalogue of bureaucrats, but this [[Linge Chen]] was a strident and irascible orator who shamelessly mocked his elderly rival. At one point in the campaign [[Linge Chen]] sought out the president at a campaign stop in [[Minxia City]] and confronted him about the continued spilling of industrial waste on [[Lake Zhenzhu]], at one point pointing at Qiu with his finger and poking him in the chest. The president tried to play the elder statesman but looked clearly annoyed and rattled before the cameras. [[Linge Chen]] would later be arrested and charged with disrespecting the president and be prevented from continuing to campaign by a court order but nonetheless he made an impact; his small party would get almost twenty percent of the vote. In his book 'The Wave', [[Linge Chen]] revealed that important members of the NRF both from the Politburo and regional party leaderships met with him in secret and offered their resources to his project. Chen further claims that it was his ideas that attracted them but the truth may be less flattering, scared and sidelined members of the nomenklatura hedging their bets against a Yang Qiu loss. It is this quiet transfer of cadres from one party to another that may have been the deciding factor in the shocking surprise victory of [[Linge Chen]] and the [[Party of Daxian Democrats|PDD]] in 1986, snatching the [[Mirzak|capital]] from the government. The defeat in the largest city of the country was a great  humiliation to the party and to the president personally. Many NRF insiders attribute the defeat to treason by important cadres who either switched sides and funneled NRF votes to [[Linge Chen]]'s party or simply enacted a campaign of 'limp wrists', that is they basically surrendered the election without a fight. Both options are viable as the NRF local structure in the city was deepy aggrieved by the imposition of a candidate who was not well known in [[Mirzak]] and who had been put forth over the heads of more competitive options. The [[Party of Daxian Democrats|PDD]] may also have offered to overlook and paper over cases of corruption by the NRF administrations of the city if they got to power. Yang Qiu responded to the rumors of backstabbing by having the party initiate proceedings to first sanction and then expel several important party bosses of the capital. This restored party discipline on the surface but Qiu's leadership had already been near fatally damaged by the ordeal and it would only continue to weaken in the last two years of his presidency. The final stretch of his second term were spent trying to reactivate an economy saddled with large debts and a worrying trend of capital flight due to the high costs imposed on businesses by government corruption and the growing insecurity in many regions due to a renewed insurgency by the emboldened [[Communist Party of Daxia|CPD]]. The [[Communist Party of Daxia|CPD]] once more began a campaign of attacking state security forces and kidnapping wealthy individuals to fund its activities, activities that the [[National Intelligence Bureau]] increasingly failed to stop thus losing the government the support of the economic elites.


The disaster of the economy and the electorial fiasco of the capital turned Yang Qiu into a paper tiger inside the party. At a meeting of the Politburo where he tried to put forward the name of one of his trusted henchmen as the next presidential candidate for 1988, he was criticized for selfishness and disregarding the wellbeing of the party. Most of the Politburo instead aligned behind the growing reformist wing of the party and its dark horse candidate, [[Tao Zexian]], who  was seen as the one hope of convincing the public to maintain the NRF in power (with minimal vote rigging).
The disaster of the economy and the electorial fiasco of the capital turned Yang Qiu into a paper tiger inside the party. At a meeting of the Politburo where he tried to put forward the name of one of his trusted henchmen as the next presidential candidate for 1988, he was criticized for selfishness and disregarding the wellbeing of the party. Most of the Politburo instead aligned behind the growing reformist wing of the party and its dark horse candidate, [[Tao Zexian]], who  was seen as the one hope of convincing the public to maintain the NRF in power (with minimal vote rigging). [[Tao Zexian]] was an economist by trade and his time in government had been in the intelligence agencies, he was seen as a young rising profile, sleeker and oriented to modernity. Having no hope of quelling the revolt without destroying the party, Yang Qiu stepped back and accepted [[Tao Zexian]] would be the candidate. The president spent the last months of his term out of the public eye, trying to devise ways to repair his public image to no avail.
 


===Tao Zexian era and collapse===
===Tao Zexian era and collapse===
The campaign of 1988 was the most hotly contested in [[Daxia]]n history. [[Linge Chen]] took leave from running the capital to compete once more for the highest office, his experience of running the largest city of the country giving him the credentials to do so. In contrast the younger [[Tao Zexian]] was seen by many as a neophyte controlled by the same old men from the NRF.
===Persecution of remnants===
===Persecution of remnants===
===Rehabilitation===
===Rehabilitation===

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