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The Provisional Democratic Republic of the UK (the PDRUK).
Timeline: 1962: The Apocalypse

OTL equivalent: The West Midlands region, Western Nottinghamshire, Eastern Staffordshire, Northern Gloucestershire, North Leicestershire and west Leicestershire, south, east and west Derbyshire, Wrexham, Montgommeryshire, Radnorshire, Brecknockshire, Glamorgan, Carmarthenshire, Ceredigion, Gwent, parts of Oxfordshire plus enclaves S.W. Cheshire and an enclave around Dorridge.
Flag Coat of Arms
Flag Coat of Arms
Location of The Provisional Democratic Republic of the UK (the PDRUK).
Location of The Provisional Democratic Republic of the UK (the PDRUK).

Motto
Rule Britannia! (Standardised UK English)

Capital: Mercian Federal District, 1.5 kilometers north of Stafford
Largest city: Tamworth
Other cities: Burton-upon-Trent, Ashbourne (in Derbyshire), Leicester, Uttoxeter, Repton, Willington (in Derbyshire), Loughborough, Chipping Norton, Hook Norton, Wrexham, Chirk, Stone (staffordshire), Worcester, Hereford, Chastleton, Stafford, Melton Mowbray, Worcester, Warwick, Hereford, Shrewsbury, Stafford, New radnor, Stone, Bridgnorth, Bewdley, Telford, Leek (in Staffordshire), Oswestry, Rhondda, Merthyr Tydfil (Merthyr Tudful), Cwmbrân, Hirwaun, Aberdare, Tonypandy, Brynmawr, Monmouth and Blaenau Gwent.
Language:
  official:
 
Standardised UK English
  others: Welsh, Estuary English, Scots, Irish Gealic, Bajan, Punjabi some Kashmiri. Welsh is the official language of the ex-Welsh S.S.R.
Religion: Church of England and some Sunni Islam and Sikhism.
Ethnic groups:
  main:
 
English
  others: Welsh, Scottish, Irish, Afro-Caribbean and South Asian.
Demonym: British
Type of government: Semi-presidential democratic republic
  government: The elected ‘Union Assembly’ (AKA- Parliament)
President: Geoff Hoon
Deputy President: John Percey Evans
Prime minister: David Pieter Legg
Area: (claimed) km²
Population: est. 1,728,854 (2010) 421,000 (are from the former the devolved Welsh SSR, which was annexed in 1995. 224,500 are also from the recently annexed minor state of Loughborough and Leicester.). 
Independence: 1965 as veriouse local geo-entities. December 18th, 1999- Constitution formed.
Currency: British Federal Pound and some Barter in rural places.
Organizations: Centro


Stats[]

The Provisional Republic of the UK (PRUK) is a democratic UK survivor nation based in the English Midlands and-mid Wales. It uses 'UK' in it's name in reference to the pre-war United Kingdom (UK).

Anthem[]

God Save the Queen.

History[]

OTL Banbury snow 2011

Nuclear winter in Heanor, Amber Valley in 1962.

Banbury otl 2012 (2)

Ashbourne in April, 1964.

Also see- History of the Provisional Republic of the UK.

1962: The Apocalypse ("Doomsady")[]

On "Doomsday", the region was in a precarious position, caught between the major nuclear targets of Birmingham and Manchester, and also near the nuclear targets of Greenham Common AFB, Sheffield, Nottingham, and the NATO airbases in Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire.

Nottinghamshire’s RAF Langar and RAF Syerston were toast under 2 separate 1kt missiles. A 10kt device had destroyed Nottingham. Sinfin was a southern suburb of Derby and historically speaking, it was a separate village. It once contained the main centre of Rolls-Royce, on Nightingale Road, as well as the housing developments of new Sinfin and Stenson Fields, which was hit by a 1kt missile and Derby was missed by a 10Kt one (it reportedly detonated in the rural Derbyshire Borough of High Peak, near the Staffordshire border). Ratcliffe-on-Soar Power Station, Long Eaton, RAF Hucknall and the East Midlands Airport were targeted, but the 1kt ICBMs failed to go off and only broke up on impact, spewing radiation over them, dirty bomb style. Oddly, the Ironbridge power stations grouping was never even targeted by the USSR in the first place.

The West Midlands County was destroyed by heavy nuclear assault. 1kt device had exploded in the north of the city of Crewe, whilst another 1kt and 10kt device had missed Upper Heyford and hit Banbury instead.

Other missile strikes were at-

Also see- WP Targets in the UK and Ireland.

Survival[]

OTL Banbury snow 2011 (4)

The nuclear winter on Cannock Chase, in late 1962.

Banbury snow 2 (9)

Temperatures fell six degrees below average in the nuclear winter of 1962-63. The field is near Hook Norton. Radiation has ruined the film.

Banbury OTL photo 003 (4)

Temperatures rose to five degrees above average in the nuclear summer of 1963.

Also see- Some ad hock weather data for Hereford Holy Cross CoE secondary school

Following Doomsday, all the counties that would form The Provisional Republic of the UK cared about was survival. Most towns kept to themselves, desperately cultivating the land and trying to care for the sick and wounded while the remaining councillors and police chiefs of the old shire governments forming loose confederacies over each county in an attempt to restore order to the regions as thousand fled towards the Staffordshire Moorlands, Clun Valley, Shropshire Hills and Malvern Hills.

2 of the 5 West Midlands’ RSGs were destroyed- The Drakelow Tunnels, near Kidderminster had caved-in and the offices in Shirley, Birmingham, were leveled. The serving 3 were at The ammunition store at Swynnerton in Staffordshire, Shrewsbury Police HQ and the United Kingdom Warning and Monitoring Organization bunker at Lawford Heath near Rugby. Neither could communicate due to the EMP hitting communications, power outages and a wrecked transport system; but they at least managed to hold sway over the greater part of each of their counties in the early months.

As the public fled to rural regions such as the Staffordshire moorland and the Derbyshire dales, chaos and anarchy loomed. Radiation sickness, septic wounds and starvation would take their toll to. With radiation levels as high they were, Derby was evacuated and quarantined for several years, while drinking from the River Trent and River Derwent was outlawed for the foreseeable future by the various local militias, community committees and criminal gangs that ran the former Ashbourne-Derby-Nottingham-Hazelwood zone. The relatively unscathed towns of Burton-upon-Trent, Melton Mowbray and Loughborough did what it could to help, but were also suffering from radiation sickness and a crime wave.

Melton Mowbray RDC and Loughborough UDC (who were not directly hit) managed to organise and maintain a refugee community, but radiation would be a major killer in the early years. Loughborough slowly expanded over the years, to include minor towns of Shepshed, Castle Downington and Coalville by 1985.

Others gathered around the towns of Hook and Chipping Norton. The effects of radiation sickness, exposure, septic wounds and starvation would take their toll to. With radiation levels as they were, Abingdon, Banbury, Oxford and Bicester were evacuated and quarantine for several years, while drinking from the River Cherwell was banned for the foreseeable future by the various local militias, community committees and criminal gangs that ran the former Banbury-Chalcombe zone. The relatively unscathed town of Hook Norton did what it could to help, but were also suffering from radiation sickness and a crime wave.

Serviving places like Chipping Norton, Right Role-right, Over Norton, South Newington, Wroxton, Chadligton, Enstone, Wiggington, Mollington, Epwell, Hornton, Hanwell, Hook Norton and Brackley were soon flooded with refugees.

As the majority of the region’s survivors fled in to mid Wales, chaos and major shortages also hit Breconshire, Radnorshire, Montgomeryshire and Shropshire by early 1963.

A severe famine and a cholera outbreak hit the region, killing many people during 1963 and most of 1964.

1965-1988[]

As the South Welsh moved farther north in to Radnorshire and east through the forest of Dean, they clashed with the locals, but Mercia was willing to give some settlement rights in the western Herefordshire, Clun Valley, the Shropshire Hills and Wye Valley after the Mercians (one of the founders of the Provisional Republic of the UK) realized that they had a heavy manpower shortage in 1974.

This treaty would be abandoned in 1976 after a Welsh attempt to annex the regions in to Breconshire. Machynlleth and Llanidloes chose to join Mercia out of fear of the Welsh S.S.R. in 1979. Hack Green RSG bunker granularly drifted under the control of Shropshire and Staffordshire after 1966 and joined Staffordshire in 1972.

First contact was made between the Mercians and the South English Republic in early 1976, in a series of border clashes in and around Rugby and Long Buckby.

Federalisation[]

In 1989 on the same day that Warwickshire and Staffordshire became States, the Mercian Community became the Mercian Federal Republic. They adopted a Constitution similar to the United States and established a presidency, making it one of the few truly republican nations to be home-grown in the Isle of Great Britain. The rallying cry went out to Derbyshire, Brackley, the Welsh SSR and the minor city states of Oxfordshire, north Gloucestershire and south Cheshire.

The Provisional Republic of the UK[]

Döner kebabs or döner kebaps have become rather popular since there introduction by Izmirie immigrants in 1999. 

Defence and transport was jointly run with by the nations since 1989. The various nations came together in 1999 and formed the federal nation of ‘The Provisional Republic of the UK’. Brackley joined the union in 2006, after the death of its right wing and isolationist warlord due to dysentery. Loughborough and Leicester had started integrating in 1996, but only fully entered the PRUK in 2006. 

The 2007 treaty of Rhyl[]

In the 2007 treaty of Rhyl, the Welsh SSR/PRUK/Pembrokeshire borders were re-drawn as follows-

  1. Monmouth BC, Monmouth RDC, Chepstow RDC, Chepstow MDC, Aberystwyth UDC, Aberystwyth RDC, and Tregarnon RDC Hey-on-Wye town and Radnorshire joined the PRUK.
  2. Lampiter BC, Aberaeron UDC and Aberaeron RDC join Pembrokeshire.
  3. The rest of Monmouthshire joins the Welsh SSR.
  4. New Quay MDC joins Ireland.
  • New Quay joined Ireland after a 75% yes vote in a 1999 referendum on the issue, held under UN supervision.

Natural disasters[]

Earthquake[]

An earthquake rocked the ruins of Dudley town and a large surrounding aria, reaching out as far as Hereford, in the early morning of 22 September 2002 (as in OTL) . It registering 4.7 on the Richter scale according to scientists in the Kingdom of Lille-Wallonia and the PRUK, and lasted approximately 20 seconds. An aftershock of magnitude 2.7 occurred on 23 September at the same time, but was not felt beyond Reddich.

Bad weather[]

The heat waves of early 2006 and 2007 killed 2 people in Bloxham and one person in Leek respectively.

There was major flooding between June and August 2007, in which 7 people died.

The 2009 Great Britain and Ireland floods worst affected was the English county of Cumbria, Galloway, Dublin, Cork, Antrim, Dunfieshire and the Irish counties of Clare, Cork, Montgommeryshire, Galway and Westmeath. Deaths were widespread with 1 in Whitehaven, 1 in Cockermouth, a Cornish trader in Poundsgate in Devon. 2 women died when a bridge collapsed at Newtown and Talybont-on-Usk in Montgomeryshire. 2 also died in Dublin, At the time, Taoiseach Brian Cowen described the situation in Ireland as an "ongoing emergency" that was going to get worse.

The winter blizards of 2009-2010 was the worst in 50 years, in which 8 fatalities occurred.

A gale and giant hail, which was the size of golf balls, devastated Kibworth, Loughborough, Melton Mowbray and Kettering, killing 2 people in Loughborough and a horse in Kibworth in the June of 2012.

The floods and hurricanes of June and July 2012 Killed 2 Walloon tourists in Cardiff, a middel aged man in Shropshire, a pensioner was killed in Long Eaton and a 7 year old girl in Staffordshire.

The honorific floods and cyclone of November 22-28, 2012, devastated the former UK and Ireland. It finally killed a total of 42 people (39 citizens and 3 tourists)- 4 in Newlyn, 1 in Honiton, 1 in Truro, 3 in Exeter, 1 in Bovney Tracy, 2 in Shrewsbury, 2 in Gloucester, 2 in St Asaph, 1 in Wexford, 1 in Preston, 1 in Penrith 1 in Ayr, 1 in Cambridge, 3 in Monmouth, 2 in Northallerton, 2 in Kempsey, 1 in Chester, 1 Warwick, 1 in Derby, 1 Bridgewater, 3 in Upton-upon-Severn and 4 in Malmesbury, plus 3 Lower Saxon tourists in Warwick. It was the worst flooding incident in nearly 100 years! Aid came from Hexanshire, Durhamshire, Scarborough, Ayrshire, Perthshire, Denmark, Sussex, Willihamshaven, Kingdom of Lille-Wallonia, and the Neo-Roman Empire.

Former refugee camps[]

Refugee camps were built in several places between 1962 and 1972, including-

  • Hook Norton
  • Chipping Norton
  • Alton Towers
  • Ashbourne (in Derbyshire),
  • Melton Mowbray
  • Clun Valley,
  • Much Wenlock
  • Great Malvern
  • Chepstow
  • Brackley
  • New Radnor.
  • Lampiter


  • It was reckoned, as of 2004, by the Europa Alliance, that about 36,400,000 died across the UK out of a population of 53,292,000, as a result of the Soviet attack. The 16,796,000 survivors were mostly in rural places. 1,500,000 later died off due to their wounds, growing ill health, and in the environmental chaos that followed afterwards.
  • It was reckoned, as of 2004, by the Europa Alliance, EMPs (electro-magnetic pulses) from air-burst weapons destroed some 70% of the electronic apliacece and equipment s across the Northern Hemisphere.

Military[]

Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F027433-0012, Flugzeuge F-104 Starfighter, MFG 1

6 West German fighter crews on a tour of duty in the UK remained at RAF Throckmorton after Doomsday.

338-ekka07 06 2008r 812y000

Spare F-104 Airframe

The military uses mostly old material from the 60's salvaged from the still partially operative (as of 1975) RAF Throckmorton and RAF Codsall, though a number of primitive weapons have entered usage. The army is experienced from civil wars and skirmishes with both Welsh and Trans-Pennine tribes. It is undergoing a modernisation as assimilated Irish and Scottish Highlander individuals hammer the army into shape and they are equipped with crude but effective Scottish weapons. Pistols replaces swords and bows in 1985. The military was also trained up and expanded from being merely a improvised force of serviving police, securty guards, and troopers, plus some volunteer citizens' militias, in to a proper force by 1987. The armed forces are a volunteer force of 35,000.

Army[]

  1. 10x Chevrolet RD 4x2 trucks
  2. 6x T17E1 Staghound armoured Cars (2 are known to be in storage)
  3. 6x Leopard 1 Tanks
  4. 8x Centurion tanks (4 are known to be in storage)
  5. 4x Charioteer tank destroyers
  6. 2x Ferret armoured cars
  7. 5x AEC Matador 4 x 4 medium artillery tractor
  8. 2 x Humber armoured cars


Air force[]

3 Supermarine Mk XIV Spitfires, 4 light aircraft, 2 transport aircraft, 1 medium helicopter and 4 light helicopters are in use. There are also 4 F-104 Starfighters fighter planes in storage, the other 2 being used for spare parts.

Weapons[]

  1. Colt M911 (side arm)
  2. Stokes mortar
  3. Enfield No. 2 Mk I Revolver
  4. The Rifle, Anti-Tank, .55in, Boys commonly known as the "Boys Anti-tank Rifle" (or incorrectly "Boyes", nicknamed the "elephant gun")
  5. Austen submachine gun
  6. Short Magazine Lee-Enfield Mk I (1903)
  7. Canon de 75 modèle 1897
  8. Canon de 75 modèle 1912 Schneider
  9. The 7.7 cm Feldkanone 96 neuer Art (7.7 cm FK 96 n.A.)
  10. Ordnance QF 18 pounder
  11. Ordnance QF 25 pounder
  12. BL 4.5 inch Medium Field Gun
  13. Thompson Sub-machine gun
  14. The MG 42 (shortened from German: Maschinengewehr 42)
  15. The French Darne machine gun.
  16. The M60 (formally named United States Machine Gun, Caliber 7.62 mm, M60)
  17. Mauser C96 (Construktion 96)
  18. The FN Model 1903 (M1903, Browning No.2, FN Mle 1903 or FN Ml 1903),

Battles[]

The 1977 Battle of Hinckley saw an outright fight between a 30 man South English Republic assault team on one side and both 20 Derbyshire Republic and 5 Mercian volunteers on the other. It was deemed a draw as both sides fled the battlefield in disarray and with heavy losses (15 South English Republic dead, 6 Derbyshire Republic dead and 1 Mercian volunteer died). The ruined Leicestershire border town of Moira was formally annexed in 1979 and Hinckley was annexed a year later.

The 1977 battle of Clun occurred after rebel Welsh settlers had effectively taken control Clun Valley, and were also laying came to the increasingly ethnically Welsh Shropshire Hills. The Mercians were feeling increasingly threatened by the ethnic imploding of Shropshire and Herefordshire, so they took up the challenge and invaded the Welsh rebel stronghold at Clun. It was a face battle with the Mercian forces and local English militias versus the South Welsh Army and local Welsh insurrectionists. With the result of 20 Mercian military dead (including 2 cavalry horses), 12 Mercian civilian dead along with 35 dead Welsh dead and 20 Welsh civilian deaths, as well as the destruction of Clun Bridge. The Welsh SSR's government became unstable once more. Mercia took over the Monmouth, New Radnor and Hey-on-Wye districts shortly afterward. The Welsh state gradually fell under the economic rule of Mercia and was fully assimilated by 1995.

The Journeys of Discovery[]

Balnaine (b) (3)

A destroyed farm near Kineton in 2009, that was photographed by the Irish media.

The Oxfordshire expeditions of the 1980’s[]

A now flourishing (as of 1997) group of minor survivors’ hamlets was found to existed at Great Bourton, Chacombe, Cropredy, Wardington, Broughton, Epwell, Mollington, North Newington and South Newington in 1982. The combined population was estimated to be about 1,457 in 1982. These people were assimilated in 1994.

Small survivor communities were also found in the remains of Bloxham, Upper Heyford and Lower Heyford in 1984 and assimilated in 1994.

Several small survivor communities were found in Barton-On-The–Heath, Whichford, Lyneham, Tadmarton and Barford St. Michael during 1986. Some had gone permanently bald due to heavy α-radiation exposure in Newington. The combined population was estimated to be about 1,457 in 1987. These people were assimilated in 1989.

The deserted RAF airfields at RAF Barford St John and RAF Upper Heyford apparently survived after both the 1kt missiles had apparently malfunctioned and hit the nearby town of Banbury instead. In 1988 the combined population was estimated to be about 300 in 1989. These people were mostly assimilated in 1991.

A few people were found living on the eastern extremities of the remnants of Banbury (most of who were either deformed or had skin cancer) as of 1984. There were well documented cases of widespread mutation in a 5 km zone around the ruins of Banbury during the 35 years immediately after the war, with nearly 452 animals were born with gross deformities such as missing or extra limbs, missing eyes, heads or ribs, multiple ears or deformed skulls; in comparison, only 3 abnormal births had been registered in the town in the 10 years prior to the attack. These communities are as yet unassimilated and number about 600 soles in total.

The Coventry expedition of 1984[]

Another small survivor communities are known to be in the Dorridge- Widney Manor-Hatton Cross region, ruins of Kenilworth town as of 1984.

The northern expeditions of 1988 and 1989[]

A modest (about 15,000 strong) survivor community was found in the remains of Crewe, Cheshire in 1988. A 1kt device had exploded in the north of the city. A small village was found on the site of the former town of Ambergate in 1989.

The southern and northern expeditions of 1989[]

A now flourishing group of minor survivors’ hamlets was found to exists at Great Bourton, Chacombe, Cropredy, Wardington, Broughton, Epwell, North Newington and South Newington. The combined population was estimated to be about 450. A small survivor community was also found in the remains of Bloxham and Heyford in 1989. The deserted RAF airfields at RAF Barford St John and RAF Upper Heyford apparently survived after both the 1kt missiles had apparently malfunctioned and hit the nearby town of Banbury instead. The small Hinton-in-the-Hedges Airfield was still off limits and under the control of the ageing Warlord of Brackley as of May 1989.

Government and politics[]

The republic has a Parliamentary election once every 3 years, and a Presidential election once every 3 years. Local government Elections occur every 4 years. Parliamentary and local elections use Alternative Vote (AV) system, while Presidential elections use First Pass the Post (FPTP).

Offical secrets[]

The UK's Official Secrets Act of 1911 was the main basis for the Federal Republic's Official Secrets Act of 1995.

Peerages[]

There is no honors system in the Provisional Republic and all existing peerages are now rendered only of symbolic value. Toffs are fairly rare and the goverment has no honors list system either.

State motto[]

The national motto is "Rule Britannia".

Party Alignment[]

  1. Labour - Centre to Centre-left (Revisionist Socialist)
  2. Socialist Labour - Centre-left (Moderate Socialist)
  3. Communist - Far-left (Marxist)
  4. Liberal - Centre to Centre-right (Liberal Conservative)
  5. Christian Democrats- Centre to Centre-right (Christian Democrat)
  6. Republican - Centre-right (Thatcherite and republican)
  7. Green - Centre-left to Far-Left (Green Socialist)
  8. Conservative - Centre-right (Churchilian)
  9. The National Front – Far-Right (fachist and royalist)
  10. Plaid Cymru- Centre-left (Welsh Nationalist and Socialist)
  11. Brackleyite - Centre-right (Brackley nationalist and Thatcherite)
  12. Militant Labour - Far-left (Marxist)
  13. Fascist - Far-Right (fachist and republican)

Local government[]

  • Brackley and Hinton-in-the-Hedges Union- (Brackleyite Party 66%, Republicans 33%, Socialists 1%)
  • State of Stafford -(Labour 45%, Conservatives 40%, Communists 10% and Liberals 5%)
  • Salopian Republic- (Conservatives 55%, Labour 45% and Plaid Cymru 0%)
  • Federation of Worcestershire- (Conservatives 55%, Labour 45)
  • Warwickshire Social Republic -(Conservatives 55%, Labour 45% and The National Front 0%)
  • Nation of Herefordshire- (Liberals 45%, Conservatives 35% and Plaid Cymru 20%)
  • The Free Town of Oswestry -(Conservatives 45%, Labour 45%, Liberals 5% and Plaid Cymru 5%)
  • The Republic of Strafford- upon- Avon (Conservatives 95%, Labour 5% and Liberals 0%)
  • The Llangollen- Chirk federation- (Conservatives 25%, Politically Independents 25%, Plaid Cymru 25%, Labour 24% and Republican 1%)
  • The Republican city-state of Wrexham (Labour 25%, Politically Independents 25%, Plaid Cymru 25%, Conservatives 24% and Christian Democrats 1%)
  • The Republic of Derbyshire –(Labour - 44%, Communist - 16%, Liberal - 14%, Republican - 12%, Socialist-10%, Independent – 2.5% and Green – 1.5%)
  • The Republic of the Nortons - (Conservatives 94%, Labour 5% and Liberals 1%)
  • The Indipendent community of Montgomeryshire -(Liberals 88%, Indipendents 5%,Republican 5% and Plaid Cymru 2%)
  • Mercian Federal District-( Conservatives 40%, Labour 35%, Socialist Labour 10%, Communists 5%, Liberals 5% and Green 5%)
  • Loughbourgh City-(Conservatives 40%, Labour 35%, Liberals 15% and Green 10%)
  • Leicester City- (Labour 40%, Conservatives 35%, Liberals 14.5%, Green 9.5% and Independents 1%)

2008 Parliamentary Election[]

The major parties and the percentage of votes they got in the 2008 election are:

  • Labour - 44% (Coalition)
  • Communist - 26%
  • Liberal - 14% (Coalition)
  • Republican - 12%
  • Green – 1.5%
  • Independent – 2.5%
  • The National Front – 0%
  • Militant Labour - 0%
  • Fascist - 0%

2009 Presidential Election[]

  • Geoff Hoon (Labour) - 31% (Winner)
  • Paul David Holmes (Liberals) - 29%
  • William Benfield (Communist) - 20%
  • Patrick McLoughlin (Republican) - 16%
  • Catherine Angeline Bookbinder (Green) - 4%
  • Lucy Susan Ball (Christian Democrats) – 0%
  • Rhodi Griffith (Welsh Communist) - 0%

2010 Chamber of Review election (upper house)[]

The major parties and the percentage of votes they got in the 2010 election are:

2010 Chamber of Review

2010 electoral result.

  • Labour - 33.3%/20MPs (Coalition)
  • Communist - 22.5%/12MPs (Coalition)
  • Republican - 15.5%/7MPs
  • Liberal - 12%/ 6MPs
  • Conservative – 6%/3 MPs (Coalition)
  • Green – 5%/2 MPs (Coalition)
  • Independent – 2%/ 1MP
  • Welsh Communist - 1.5%/1MP
  • Militant Labour - 1.5%/1MPs
  • Fascist - 1.5%/1MP
  • Plaid Cymru -1.2% 1MP (Coalition)

2011 Parliamentary election (lower house)[]

The major parties and the percentage of votes they got in the 2011 election are:

PRUK 2011 electorial arch

2011 electoral result.

  • Labour - 35%/22MPs (Coalition)
  • Communist - 22.5%/15MPs (Coalition)
  • Republican - 15%/9MPs
  • Liberal - 12%/ 7MPs
  • Conservative – 6%/3 MPs (Coalition)
  • Green – 5%/2 MPs (Coalition)
  • Independent – 1%/ 1MP
  • Welsh Communist - 1.5%/1MP
  • Militant Labour - 1%/1MPs
  • Fascist - 1%/1MP
  • The prime minister is the popular Hereford born ex-teacher and Conservative party's president, David Pieter Legg. The Other cabinet ministers are-
  1. Rajiv Havind Singh
  2. Vikki Merrikin
  3. Caroline Freeman
  4. Stacy Chalmers
  5. Wanda Anastacia Butcher
  6. Pieter Tyler
  7. David Long
  8. Ben Ryder
  9. Brenda Ann Barns
  10. Josephina Jacqueline Robbson
  11. Pieter Davy Smyth
  12. Julia Caroline Prentice
  13. Shirley Prentice
  14. Chandra  Shafilia Desai

2012 Presidential Election[]

  • Geoff Hoon (Labour) -  65.5% (winner)
  • Pauline Latham (Liberals) - 10.5%
  • William Benfield (Communist) - 10%
  • Patrick McLoughlin (Republican) - 7.5% 
  • Catherine Bookbinder (Green) - 6.5% 
  • Lucy Ball (Christian Democrats) – 0%
  • Rhodi Griffith (Welsh Communist) - 0%

President Geoff Hoon regards him self as regent until a remaining British royal is found and installed as monarch. King Charles of Scarboroughshire's daughter, Steffie has said she will become leader of both Scarboroughshire and the PRUK on King Charles's death or abdication and Geoff Hoon's retirement.

Economy[]

Balnaine (b) (2)

A ruined farm near Abergate in 2009. It was taken by a Irish explorer.

Ealing corbus2

A estate in the south of Repton in 2008.

Farm Buildings at Wolmore, Staffordshire - geograph org uk - 692751

A farm Wolmore in 2005.

Like most other post-Doomsday European nations, especially British ones, the economy is poor and suffers from labour shortages. Most of the economy is weighted towards agricultural production though there is some industrial aspects to the economy around the major towns and cities, but it is nowhere near the capability of nations like Southern England or the Republic of Durhamshire. Brackley territory’s It is largely dependent on agriculture and stone exports to East Anglia and the Provisional Republic.

Agriculture[]

Fruit farming, dairy farming, production of the Worcester Black Pear, oats, wheat, barley and the cultivation of hops are the major agricultural activities in rural parts of the country.

Mining[]

Brackley has a major iron stone mine. Over the years, the coal mines at Coalville.Swadlincote. Baddersley Colliery, Daw Mill Colliery and Abercynon Colliery have all reopened.

Industry[]

A new steel mill and cokeing plant were opened in the Capital Territory, by Brenda Barns MP, during 2009.

Trade with Ireland, the West Country, Durhamshire and the former France.[]

Relations with Wessex, Sussex, Gloucester, Cornwall, Brittany, the Channel Islands, Normandy and the Somme Republic become ever closer since the singing of the 2004 free trade deal.

Ireland, Wessex and Durhamshire are the nation's main trading parters. Ireland is it's main suppler of agricultural equipment and Durhamshire was the nation's main source of coal until 1996.

Energy[]

Bio-mass[]

A small bio-mass power station was built in south of Worcester in 2001 and slightly enlarged in 2009.

Coal mines[]

Over the years, informal, ad-hock coal mining by the citizens of New Derbyshire and Loughborough has taken off near Coalville. A new, official, P.R.U.K. owned mine was opened there in 2005, by Geoff Hoon. Swadlincote coal miner’s slag heap and stockpiles was looted ever since Doomsday. Small scale operations have taken place since it’s reopening in 1998. Only a few short-tones are produced every year and the pit was closed for safety reasons between 2002 and 2004. Warwickshire’s Baddersley Colliery reopened in 1990 and the nearby Daw Mill Colliery reopened to small scale workings in 2005. Staffordshire’s Bateswood Opencast coal mine in (which has long been worked by looters) and the Abovepark Colliery are slated for reopening in 2012. The Abercynon Colliery located in Abercynon reopened by the Welsh SSR in 1992 and was highly productive ever since. Bedwas Navigation Colliery located in Bedwas was slated for reopening by the P.R.U.K. at around 1999-2000, but never were due to technical difficulties. Albion Colliery located in the village of Cilfynydd was planned to reopen in 2011-2012.

Energy[]

The Windward Electrical Project system was founded by Rutland, the P.R.U.K., Market Harborough and Central Northamptonshire and Buckinghamshire in 1998. Other nations joined the project in 1999 and 2004. Connection was between 2005 and 2009, depending on location.

Education[]

Compulsory schooling is from ages 5 to 17. A small university opened in Shrewsbury in 2004.

Transport[]

78019 on the Quorn Straight

A 1 BR Standard Class 2 2-6-0 steam loco 78019 on the Quorn Straight, Leicestershire, in the 1950's.

There are a some alcohol, petrol and sunflower oil vehicles, but many petrol driven tractors are in use across the republic. Alcohol powered motor bikes and byciclas also soccer in more places as time goes by. Horses are still popular in the nation, despite the resent, but short lived, outbreak of equine ethmoid hematoma in 1984 and equine testicular and skin cancers in the 1970’s.

The Erewash Canal has been in light use since it’s reopening in 1988. The Trent and Mersey Canal and Caldon Canal serve Etruria, Froghall and Leek also reopened to heavier traffic in 1989. Recently numerous improvements to the canal system have been made. The rivers Wye and Lugg were navigable from Hereford to the Bristol Channel. Trent Barton’s 5 serving buses and 2 long conscripted taxis sporadically serve the main towns of Burton-upon Trent, Ashbourne and Uttoxeter. They are fuelled by a high proof alcohol bio-fuel made in a former Burton-upon Trent brewery. 5 buses imported from Ireland in the 1980’s, and also fuelled on high-strength alcohol, run twice every week day between the Mercian Federal District, Stafford and Stone. The nations railways system as a whole was, like many of its lines, repaired by cannibalising old stock in the 1980’s. Birmingham and the former West Midlands conurbanisaion were quarantined in 1978 and later by-passed.

  • The loco and carriage stock is as follows-
  1. 10 LMS Stanier Class 5 4-6-0
  2. 1 LMS Fowler Class 3F 0-6-0T steam loco
  3. 1 GWR 2251 Class steam loco
  4. 1 GWR 2021 Class steam loco
  5. 1 GWR 5700 Class steam loco
  6. 1 BR Standard Class 2 2-6-0 steam loco
  7. 1 GWR 1600 Class steam loco
  8. 2 LMR 600 Gordon steam loco
  9. 2 Thompson Class O4/8 steam locos
  10. 2 GC Class O4 No. 6311 steam locos
  11. 10 GWR Pannier Tank 7714 steam locosw
  12. 25 MK1 BR coaches
  13. 12 GUV Freight wagons
  14. 15 GWR coal trucks
  15. 5 GWR break vans
  16. 1 British Rail Class 02 shunter that was once owned by the National Coal Board was found at the Baddersley Colliery near Tamworth and is in the process of being converted to run on high-strength alcohol, but this is proving to be rather problematic, since the engineers converting it keep on drinking the alcohol!


12 trains run a day on Monday, Thursday and Fridays between the Mercian Federal District, Stafford, Tamworth, Oswestry, Worcester, Warwick, Hereford, Shrewsbury, Stone, Bridgnorth, Bewdley and Telford. 3 train run 3 daily journeys on Swadlincote coal mine since 1991. The stations served by it are Long Eaton railway station (once on Tuesdays only), Nuneaton, Belper railway station, Willington railway station, Loughborough railway station, Burton-on-Trent railway station and Swadlincote coal mine (a single pit workers’ train on Mondays) since 1992. None of the stations are open at weekends or on Wednesdays. Two models of salvaged Simplex light rail locomotive and a Ruston Hornsby light rail locomotive were reported to be operating on an exsperimental, apparently on alco-fuel, near a army major outpost to the south east of the remnants of Market Bosworth. The government has shown a reset interest in incorporating these in to their fleet.

The 5 Nations Railway Project[]

The 5 Nations Railway Project was founded by Daventry, and Loughborough, the P.R.U.K., Market Harborough and Central Northamptonshire and Buckinghamshire on July the 15th, 1998. East Anglia joined in 6 weeks later. Several there nations joined the project in 1999.

Healthcare[]

After Doomsday, the region found it hard to import medicine. The medical supplies shortage resulted in the various interim governments making the controversial decision to legalize medical marijuana in 1966. Even though, this choice led to and initial small increases in marijuana smoking and other crimes, the government believes the pros of the medical marijuana act outweigh the cons. This was revoked in 1978, because, in the long term, it had caused a generation of drug addicts to occur. The thyroid and skin cancer cases have dropped steadily since 1972.

There has been a reasonably successful healthy living media campaign running in the media since 20097 concerning binge drinking and high blood fat levels.

Narcotics[]

32% of citizens told a 2012-2013 government survey that they thought there children were occasional secretly taking Psilocybe semilanceata mushrooms, valium and/or glue sniffing after or during school. 7% also reckoned there teenage children were habitual drunks and anoter 2% said they thought there kids regularly did Hyoscyamus niger (henbane) and Psilocybe semilanceata mushrooms.

The PRUK's national police force estimated that about 28% of road accidents in 2007, 2008 and 2009 were caused by drunk and drugged driving. Some cars even had beer cans, wine bottles, Swiss valium pills and cannabis joints stashed away in them.

Waterworks[]

OTL King's sutton 1

The River Erewash in flood by Kirkby-in-Ashfield during the nuclear summer of 1963-4.

Using crane to joint pipes

A new, joint Irish-Mercian water works was built in Hereford during 2009.

A new waterworks has been situated at lowest bridging point of the River Erewash, at Long Eaton, since 2004 and anther was opened up stream in Kirkby-in-Ashfield during 2009. 2 older ones are also on the River Ecclesbourne, which was once the only safe source of water in the region.

The nation has 7 other major water supply points, with sand bed filtering works at Stratford, Hereford, Shrewsbury and Oswestry . Informal usage of the River Cherwell, Stour Brook, River Leam, Wan Broook and local wells are the country’s other main water source.

The Cherwell River was officially declared safe to drink from in 1987.

The Permo-Triassic aquifer in the South Staffordshire and North Worcestershire region was test drilled by the PRUK, near Stafford and Kidderminster in 2008.

Media[]

Newsnight_-_early_1980s

Newsnight - early 1980s

The hard hitting hour long weekday Provisional Evening News program would have a lead in, style and studio something like this, but obviously with the different name.

The Leicester Mercury was relaunched in 1979. Burton Mail, Stafford Express & Star, Tamworth Express & Star, began reprinting in 1988. Loughborough's local newspaper is the Loughborough Echo began reprinting in 1989 and become a nation-wide publication, along with the offical Mercian Express & Star in 2003. The national Shrewsbury Chronicle and Shropshire Star started reprinting as a joint Shropshire Journal in 1990. The Worcester News began reprinting in 1991. The Hook Norton and Heyford journal is a 5 page news sheet that was printed weekly since 2006.

The national MW radio station is called Radio Mercia and broadcasts in medium and short wave from Stafford, Ludlow, Derby, Hereford and Warwick on week days only since it's lauch in 1999.

The local radio stations are Wyvern FM (Hereford and Worcester) which broadcasting on 97.6FM, Radio Ludlow (97.1FM), Moorlands Radio on 103.7FM (Leek and Biddulph), Radio Derby on 99.6FM and Staffordshire Pit Bull (Stafford, Stone and Tamworth) on 98.1FM, both began operation in 2001.

Radio Loughborugh FM (98.5-98.7FM), Radio Leicester FM (96.5-96.7FM) and the P.R.U.K. overseas MW/LW Radio Mercia services opened in Loughborough during 2009. Higher strength SW Radio Mercia broadcasts started in 2011.

A experimental TV service began operation in Worcestershire and Staffordshire at weekends after May 2002, which became permanent in 2005. It was expanded to the Tamworth and Rugby in 2009. The leading news program is Provisional Evening News, the hard hitting hour long weekday evening news.

Beer and pies[]

Hook Norton beer is enjoyed in the PRUK, Ireland and East Anglia. Traditional Melton Mowbray pork pies are a local speciality in the former Melton Mowbray and Bingham Republic. They are enjoined in Kettering, North Derbyshire, Lincolnshire and trough-out the PRUK.

Sport[]

Shrewsbury Town F.C. and Loughborough F.C. are the nation’s football teams. Merthyr Tydfil F.C. The 2 matches in 1985, 1996 and 1998, between Shrewsbury Town F.C. and Merthyr Tydfil F.C. were noted for their off pitch violence. Many other local soccer, netball, hockey and rugby teams exist. Pool and snooker are popular to.

The arts[]

The 16th century Stratford-upon-Avon poet and playwright, William Shakespeare, is commonly considered to be the finest writer in World History. He is famous for his 38 plays, such as Hamlet, Macbeth, A Midsummer Night's Dream, King Lear, and Romeo and Juliet. Both before Doomsday and after, his works are still widely beloved and very popular in the nation. The 20th century poet laurriet John Betchemen is also verry popular in the Republic too.

The Death Penalty[]

  • Murderers.
  • Sex predators, (like rapists, and child molesters).
  • Traitors and enemy spies are executed with the hangman’s rope.
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