Difference between revisions of "West Florida"
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|native_name = | |native_name = | ||
|conventional_long_name = Republic of West Florida | |conventional_long_name = Republic of West Florida | ||
− | |common_name = | + | |common_name = West Florida |
|image_flag = West Floridian.png | |image_flag = West Floridian.png | ||
|alt_flag = | |alt_flag = | ||
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|symbol_type = | |symbol_type = | ||
|national_motto = | |national_motto = | ||
− | |national_anthem = | + | |national_anthem = Vive La |
|royal_anthem = | |royal_anthem = | ||
|other_symbol_type = <!--Another symbol, e.g. Hymn--> | |other_symbol_type = <!--Another symbol, e.g. Hymn--> | ||
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|GDP_nominal_rank = | |GDP_nominal_rank = | ||
|GDP_nominal_year = 2023 | |GDP_nominal_year = 2023 | ||
− | |GDP_nominal_per_capita = $ | + | |GDP_nominal_per_capita = $76,983 |
|GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank = | |GDP_nominal_per_capita_rank = | ||
|Gini = 31.4 | |Gini = 31.4 | ||
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}} | }} | ||
− | West Florida, officially known as the Republic of West Florida is a | + | West Florida, officially known as the Republic of West Florida is a country along the coastal region of the {{wpl|Deep South}}. It is the only unified country in the Deep South, and has the largest population of the region. West Florida lies between the {{wpl|Mississippi River}} to the west, {{wpl|Apalachicola River}} to the east, and the {{wpl|Gulf of Mexico}} to the south. West Florida does not officially border any other nation-state, however it is bordered by the New Afrikan region to the north composed of terrorist regimes, cartels, and militarized local communities. The nation's capital and most populous city is {{wpl|Pensacola}} and its main financial center is {{wpl|Mobile}}. |
+ | West Florida has been described as a regional power with a strong economy; it has the largest economy in the deep south, the world's 26th-largest economy by {{wpl|nominal GDP}}. A global leader in oil and natural gas, West Florida's oil and natural gas reserves are the world's fourth and tenth-largest, respectively | ||
+ | |||
+ | The West Florida' oil and natural gas reserves are the world's fourth and tenth-largest, respectively. Former-President {{wpl|Ray Mabus}}, oversaw the development of West Florida by investing most of the nation's oil revenues during the oil crisis into healthcare, education, and infrastructure allowing relative economic stability in the post-collapse America. The country inherited several key large industries such as shipbuilding, arms production, and infrastructure construction. In the 21st century, West Florida has a stable diversified economy focusing on advanced shipbuilding industry, oil & gas production, and advanced technology. | ||
== Etymology == | == Etymology == | ||
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== History == | == History == | ||
− | === | + | === Native Era === |
− | === Gulf Coast Defense Force === | + | Before 1990, relatively very little was known regarding the Pensacola Culture of natives who lived along the Gulf Coast, with very few historians focused on the region. However, as West Florida began investments in new building construction, brand-new artifacts were unearthed across Pensacola and Mobile. With the thousands of brand-new artifacts unearthed, West Florida’s historical society was tasked with discovering the extent of native populations in the region. |
− | === | + | |
− | === Hurricane Katrina === | + | [[File:Seenwaw (formally known as the Bottle Creek Indian Mounds).png|thumb|left|400px|Digital recreation of the Pensacolan city of Seenwaw.]] |
− | === | + | |
+ | The region had a total of three different Mississippian cultures, Plaquemine, Pensacola, and Ft. Walton. Although the three had similarities with one another, their differences in pottery and tool use made them very distinctive archeologically. The cultures existed from 1000 AD to around 1700 AD. The three cultures lived alongside one another, with various “cities” existing across the Gulf Coast; at least 20 distinct archeological cities have been located across the Gulf Coast, the largest being that of the Seenwaw (formally known as the Bottle Creek Indian Mounds) housing over 3,500+ natives. In 2012, researchers from the University of West Florida found the remains of a translation guide for Spanish Missionaries to converse with Natives in the Gulf Coast region. The book was part of a small chest found in the remains of a church in East Pensacola, although initially thought to have been translated between natives in Cuba, it was discovered that a proto-written language for translating between Mississippian and Spanish. This discovery helped prove a missing bridge between native drawing text and written language. Uncovering the written manual revolutionized linguistic history bringing dozens of university archeological partnerships to the country to discover Native artifacts. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The archeological discoveries of permanent “cities” alongside the Spanish and French colonies caused a change in the definition of the founding dates of Pensacola and Mobile. The international founding date for Pensacola was changed to the year 1355, the earliest record of permanent Native “cities” in the region of the city; only being changed due to proven co-existence during the European colonization before the natives were expelled by the Spanish. Mobile’s original date of founding was in 1250 when Seenwaw (formally known as the Bottle Creek Indian Mounds) was said to have been found; however, the city was abandoned and the native population had moved further north to Mabila. The fortress town of Mabila was discovered by the Spanish explorer De Soto in the Battle of Mabila, the first of the bloodiest battles ever fought on the North American continent. Between 2,500-3,000 Natives were killed in the battle compared to ~130 Spanish conquistadors, resulting in the full devastation of the natives and the Spanish expedition. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Colonial Era === | ||
+ | [[File:WF Timeline.png|thumb|400px|Timeline of Control over West Florida.]] | ||
+ | ===== First Spanish rule (1513–1763)===== | ||
+ | The first European exploration of the area began in the 16th century with Diego Miruelo may have been the first European to sail into Pensacola Bay in 1516. The first Spanish settlement expedition in the region was large at around 1,500 settlers, first settling in Pensacola on August 15, 1559. Weeks later, a hurricane destroyed many of the settlements, with settlers surviving in Pensacola until 1561. Pensacola would officially be the first multi-year European settlement in the territory of what is the United States. However, the Spanish later concluded that northwest Florida was too dangerous to settle for the period and abandoned efforts to colonize the region for 137 years. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Spanish arrival.png|thumb|left|220px|Arrival of explorer Don Tristan de Luna at what would become Pensacola.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | The Spanish opted to resettle Pensacola in November 1698 as a buffer against French settlements in Louisiana and Mobile. However, in May 1719, Spain would lose Pensacola during the War of the Quadruple Alliance, when French forces led by Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville took and occupied the settlement until a larger Spanish force came in August 1719 to recover the settlement, only to then be recaptured by France the following month in September 1719. In 1720 the war concluded, and the Pensacola territory was returned to Spain, although France did not retreat until 1726 back to its forts in Mobile and Biloxi further west. | ||
+ | |||
+ | After the French retreated from Pensacola, the city was rebuilt but was ravaged by hurricanes in 1752 and 1761. However, in 1763 as part of Spanish concessions in the {{wpl|Treaty of Paris (1763)}} the the British took control of all Spanish colonial possessions east of the Mississippi River, including all of West Florida ending Spanish rule in the region. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Louisiana (New France) (1703–1763)===== | ||
+ | In 1699, French colonists established and formed the first permanent European settlement in French Louisiana, at Fort Maurepas near present-day {{wpl|Pascagoula}}. However, in 1702 French Settlers opted to construct Fort Louis de la Louisiane further east on the {{wpl|Mobile River}} to protect France's claims to the La Louisiane region, with the settlement La Mobile becoming the capital of La Louisiane. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In May 1719, Spain would lose Pensacola during the {{wpl|War of the Quadruple Alliance}}, when French forces led by Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville marched eastward to capture the settlement of Pensacola. The French maintained their hold on the settlement until a larger Spanish force came in August 1719 to recover their lost territory, only to then be recaptured by the French Navy the following month in September 1719. In 1720 the war concluded, and the Pensacola territory was returned to Spain, although France did not retreat until 1726 back to its forts in Mobile and Biloxi further west. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1720, the current location of Biloxi was settled for the first time around Fort Louis. Similarly in during the same year, the French opted to change the administrative capital of La Louisiane from La Mobile (Mobile) to Bilocci (Biloxi). | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1763 as part of French concessions in the {{wpl|Treaty of Paris (1763)}} the the British took control of all French colonial possession east of the Mississippi River, including the settlement of La Mobile and Bilocci, being renamed Mobile and Biloxi by the British. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== British West Florida (1763-1783)===== | ||
+ | In 1763, The first British troops arrived and took possession of their new colony of Florida. The British however in an attempt to organize the territories split the colony of Florida into two: {{wpl|British East Florida}}, with its capital in St. Augustine, and {{wpl|British West Florida}}, with Pensacola as its capital. In 1764, West Florida's colonial assembly was established with a basis on that currently in use with the current structure of the {{wpl|Thirteen Colonies}} along the East Coast. Royal Navy Officer George Johnstone was appointed as the first British Governor for West Florida. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Brit arrival.png|thumb|right|220px|Arrival of Royal Navy to the port of Pensacola.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | {British West Florida began to boom in the years following the British takeover, with thousands of new arrivals taking advantage of the new British lands and new government. West Florida's governmental structure included an appointed governor and lieutenant governor in an executive role. A legislature in the form of the General Assembly, with an appointer twelve-member advisory council serving as the "Upper House", and a House of Commons serving as the "Lower House", with fourteen elected members. | ||
+ | |||
+ | British West Florida was a rare exception to slavery and the slave trade, as although the practice did exist in the territory, the economy never relied on it and slavery itself remained a uncommon practice. | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida was invited by American colonists to send delegates to the First Continental Congress, however they declined the invitation due to the colonists remaining overwhelmingly loyal to the Crown during the {{wpl|American Revolution}}. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In the {{wpl|Treaty of Aranjuez (1779)}} the Spanish Empire entered the American Revolutionary War with Spanish troops marching eastward from Louisiana taking Biloxi, Mobile, and eventually the capital of Pensacola in 1781. As part of the {{wpl|Peace of Paris}} in 1783, Great Britain offically ceded the territory of West Florida back to Spain. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Second Spanish rule (1783-1821)===== | ||
+ | During the {{wpl|War of 1812}}, American troops led by General Andrew Jackson launched a series of offensive campaigns on Spanish West Florida against the Spanish and British garrisons protecting the city of Pensacola. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The first attempt to seize Pensacola in 1813 was inconclusive, however in 1814 {{wpl|General Andrew Jackson}} committed additional assets with 4,000 American infantry versus 100 British and 500 Spanish infantry. Gen. Jackson successfully seized Fort San Miguel on November 7th, 1813, however, Fort San Carlos 14 miles to the west, remained in British hands. Gen. Jackson sought to seize Fort San Carlos the following day, however, the British garrison blew up the fort before withdrawing from Pensacola. | ||
+ | |||
+ | General Andrew Jackson abandoned Pensacola to the Spanish as his forces set out to take the city of Mobile. However, when Andrew Jackson arrived in Pensacola, he had received orders to assist in the New Orleans campaign, culminating in the {{wpl|Battle of New Orleans}} on January 8, 1815, in which the British garrison suffered catastrophic losses to General Andrew Jackson's forces. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1815, Spanish forces returned to Pensacola, however, Pensacola would briefly be conquered again by the US Army in 1818. In 1819, Spain and the United States signed the {{wpl|Adams–Onís Treaty}}, officially handing West Florida to the United States on February 22, 1821, ending colonial rule over West Florida. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Republic of West Florida (1810)===== | ||
+ | [[File:1810 revolution.png|thumb|left|220px|Raid on Fort San Carlos.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | In June to September of 1810, locals of the furthest-western regions of Spanish West Florida organized an independence movement to create an independent {{wpl|Republic of West Florida}}. Several meetings of locals attempted to create an organized revolution, and on September 23, 1810, West Floridian armed rebels successfully stormed {{wpl|Fort San Carlos}} in Baton Rouge, raising the flag of the new republic and declaring independence from Spain three days later on September 26, 1810; with the capital for the Republic was located at St. Francisville, in present-day Louisiana along the Mississippi River. | ||
+ | |||
+ | U.S. President {{wpl|James Madison}} wanted the United States to seize the territory so that the region would not fall into British or French hands, however, occupation was off of the table as any military action would have incurred the wrath of the Spanish Army. | ||
+ | |||
+ | On November 7, 1810 the rebel republic held its first elections, with {{wpl|Fulwar Skipwith}} elected as governor as well as a bicameral legislature. However in Baton Rouge on December 9th, Governor Skipwith opted rather to surrender the new nation to the United States to preserve the republican values of the state in fear of retaliation by the Spanish. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === American Territory and Statehood === | ||
+ | Following the the Adams–Onís Treaty in 1821, the U.S. military moved into West Florida, and the region was combined with East Florida into the Florida Territory with Andrew Jackson serving as governor. As a result of the state merger, the capital was established in {{wpl|Tallahassee}}, halfway between the old capitals of Pensacola and {{wpl|St. Augustine}} for West and East Florida. West Florida itself would be split between the states of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama as well. The former West Floridian capital Pensacola would become Florida's westernmost city. | ||
+ | ==== American Civil War (1861-1865)==== | ||
+ | [[File:Civil war.png|thumb|right|200px|Oil painting depicting an unknown Union fort outside of Pensacola]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | All of West Florida's former regions would opt to secede from the Union to join the pro-slavery {{wpl|Confederate States of America}}. However, {{wpl|Fort Pickens}} did remain in Union hands after the secession of the region, one of the small handful of forts that remained so during the American Civil War. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The Confederacy did attempt to seize Fort Pickens on October 9, 1861 however Union troops repulsed the attack with the fort remaining in Union hands during the war. In May of 1862, Pensacola was re-captured by Union troops after Confederate forces abandoned the city, setting it on fire as they left. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1864, Confederate forces attempted to break {{wpl|Admiral David Farragut}}'s blockade in the {{wpl|Battle of Mobile Bay}}. Three Confederate gunboats and the ironclad CSS Tennessee attempted to break the twelve wooden ships, two gunboats, and four ironclad monitors, however, the overwhelming Union force overpowered the Confederate Navy, and in the following days the city surrendered to Union forces. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Early 20th Century ==== | ||
+ | During the {{wpl|Reconstruction Era}} and the early 20th century, the region of West Florida saw large infrastructure developments including the reconstruction of the entirety of Downtown Pensacola and Mobile. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Into the 1910s and 1920s, the cities of Mobile and Pensacola had become large hub for shipping, manufacturing, and commerce thanks to their developed infrastructure developments. Pensacola notably would become a regional hub for dozens of military bases including the Pensacola Naval Base. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:WW2 production line.png|thumb|left|220px|World War II production line in Mobile.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | During {{wpl|World War II}}, the Gulf Coast would be one of the most important military regions in the United States, with Pensacola serving as a primary training center for naval aviation and Mobile serving as a large shipbuilding site producing Liberty Ships, freighters, {{wpl|Fletcher-class destroyers}}, and minesweepers; as well as helping produce aircraft for the USAAF. Between 1940 and 1943, 89,000+ people had moved into Mobile to work as part of war industries. During World War II, dozens of new airstrips would be constructed across the Gulf Coast, including {{wpl|Keesler Field}}, Brookley Army Air Field (today known as the {{wpl|Brookley Aeroplex}}), {{wpl|Naval Air Station Whiting Field}}, {{wpl|Eglin Army Air Field}}, and {{wpl|Tyndall Army Air Field}}. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Cold War ==== | ||
+ | During the Cold War, the Gulf Coast would continue to serve as primarily a military region, with all branches of the military represented in the region. Major shipbuilding for the US Navy would also show up in the form of {{wpl|Ingalls Shipbuilding}} in Pascagoula, Ms.. The Gulf Coast military bases would be mobilized several times due to threats by Communist Cuba continuously until the 1990s | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Collapse of America & Independence (1993-1996) === | ||
+ | ==== Collapse of America ==== | ||
+ | Researchers typically argue that the starting point of America's Collapse was {{wpl|Ronald Reagan}}'s assassination by {{wpl|John Hinckley Jr.}} on March 30th, 1981 in Washington DC. Following the assassination, Vice-President {{wpl|George H. W. Bush}} would take office as the American public watched horrified as another president had been assassinated on live television. George H. W. Bush would take several measures to "ensure the safety of the American public" including increased surveillance of American citizens. The measures taken were questionable, with many Democrat leaders questioning the legitimacy of the policies accusing Bush of having "Taken advantage of a time of tragedy". | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Rodney king.png|thumb|right|220px|Rodney King riots in 1992.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | Due to relative unpopularity, George H. W. Bush lost the Republican Primary to {{wpl|Bob Dole}} who promised to repeal Bush's unpopular laws. However, after ascending to the presidency in 1989, Dole double-backed his pledges to repeal Bush's laws as he claimed them now to be "necessary", sparking widespread protests against the government by democrats and moderates across the country. In 1992, the acquittal of 4 {{wpl|Los Angles Police Department (LAPD)}} officers recorded beating {{wpl|Rodney King}} sparked nearly a month of race-related protests and rioting, causing widespread crackdowns by police and the deployment of the national guard to various regions across the nation, with multiple large cities placed on lockdown such as LA, Atlanta, Montgomery, Chicago, and Washington DC. In response to the widespread riots, Republicans in Congress passed the Patriot Act, seeking to create a comprehensive "list" of those participating in "anti-democratic activities". The combination of the Rodney King riots and the Patriot Act as well as Democrats protesting the vote led to none of the candidates being projected to win the election outright. | ||
+ | |||
+ | On December 14th, 1992, the Electoral College met to select the winner of the election, but none of the candidates received the 270 votes required to win. Various news agencies speculated if it could be possible to have "no leader" with rather Congress acting as the de-facto executive branch, however, concerns regarding constitutional legitimacy sparked threats by far-right Republicans who feared a forceful democratic takeover of the nation. | ||
+ | |||
+ | On January 6th, 1993 as Congress met to vote on the future of government, right-wing militants stormed the U.S. capitol, killing Vice-President {{wpl|Jack Kemp}} and several dozen members of Congress. State capitols in Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, California, South Dakota, South Carolina, Ohio, Arkansas, Florida, Oregon, Washington, Michigan, and Virginia are also attacked with varying degrees of success. Throughout the deep south, the lingering pain of Rodney King led to many Black Power movements taking up radical Islamic thought, with a group of terrorists detonating a truck {{wpl|bomb at the base of 1 World Trade Center}}, causing over a thousand casualties. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Jan 6th.png|thumb|left|220px|Protests at the U.S. Capitol just prior to turning into a riot.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | The US Military on January 10th, 1993 was given the order throughout the Gulf Coast region to form the "Gulf Coast Defense Force", to protect several key military installations and cities across the region from potential terrorist attacks, with command for the Defense Force based at NAS Pensacola. The Gulf Coast Defense Force had set up a "designated perimeter" of safety, with some troops having come into conflict with the radical Islamic African-American nationalists along the northern regions of the perimeter. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The Floridian government remains in tatters following its storming of the State Capitol. Various regions across Florida have essentially become politically separate, as South Florida argues that the state should move the capital to {{wpl|Miami}}, a plan that was in the works but was declined several times by the previous governments. Both Jacksonville and Pensacola argued that Tallahassee should remain the capital as moving the capital to Miami would disrupt the balance within the state, putting the full priority on the south of the state, and ignoring the northern regions. The {{wpl|Florida Congress}} was set to hold a vote regarding the legitimacy of the southern representative's intentions to move the capital. However, come the day of the vote, southern representatives refused to let the northern senators and representatives into the temporary capital building, causing the northern efforts to challenge Miami to collapse as no northern representatives were allowed to vote. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Northern representatives questioned the plausibility of appealing to the {{wpl|United States Supreme Court}} about the legality of moving the state's capital to Miami, calling it unlawful, as the southern representatives failed to allow for elections to take place as well as avoided quorum rules. Northern representatives, led by {{wpl|Katherine Harris}}, officially lodged their case against the south, suing {{wpl|Bob Butterworth}} in his capacity of Florida Attorney General for accepting the results of the voting process with the case is lodged in the Supreme Court docket as Harris v. Butterworth. | ||
+ | |||
+ | This fight between the north and south of Florida was slowly destroying the already differing cultural divide in the state, especially as the rest of the United States have begun to fight for their independence such as {{wpl|California}} and {{wpl|Texas}}. Southern politicians continued to claim that the North was trying to keep the same policies that led to the chaos of previous administrations while the north claimed that the South was trying to prioritize their region. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The US Supreme Court opted to stay in session over the typical winter break due to dozens of important cases needing rulings, with this became known as the "Christmas Court". The Supreme Court voted 5-4 in favor of Harris, with the majority of justices calling for there to be elections, and that the election was unlawful as a quorum was not reached. The dissenting opinion argued that it was in the representative's capacity, and that due to the total number of active members in the state congress, the quorum of living representatives had been reached and therefore the vote was legal. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Following Harris v. Butterworth, the state of Florida was even more split than it had been before, as the only way to now declare elections was via Miami. The majority of Northern citizens called to abandon election efforts as even an attempt of an election would just favor the South. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The city of {{wpl|New Orleans}} in March 1994 formally requested that the Gulf Coast Defense Force leave the city and the state of Louisiana as a whole. The force's leadership, led by {{wpl|Norman Schwarzkopf Jr.}} and {{wpl|Russel L. Honoré}}, obliges to the request as the logistics of containing the city was becoming increasingly difficult as the rise of Black Rower rebels attacked logistics groups in the city and across the highway supply routes. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:National guard deployment.png|thumb|right|220px|Deployment of National Guard in New Orleans for stability.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | In April 1994, Miami continued to refuse to give up the capital, with even various Northern politicians' properties ransacked by state troopers to find evidence on them. Following the raids, northern representatives met and formerly discussed the prospect of forcing South Florida out of the Florida Union by dissolving Andrew Jackson's 1821 decree that had merged West and East Florida. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Miami on June 7th, 1994 officially declares intent to split the state of Florida in a "State Divorce" to settle the question of control over the state. The formal declaration would lead to the state being split into 5 sections: West Florida, Jacksonville, South Florida, Conch Republic (led by Key West), and a buffer zone between all of the states. All sides of the debate agreed to this proposal, although West Florida and the Conch Republic would remain as part of the United States under the Gulf Coast Defense Force. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The governments of Alabama and Mississippi officially are dissolved by Black Power rebels who had risen against whites in the deep south seeking to create their own "New Afrika" in the deep South. Many southern politicians leave for the Gulf Coast Defense "safe zone". The leftover governments of Alabama and Mississippi operating out of Mobile and Biloxi petitioned to become closer with the region of West Florida, effectively combining to become one singular state, with a capital in Pensacola. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== Independence ==== | ||
+ | By August 1994, much of the South was under the rule of the "New Afrika" rebel groups, it became a logistical difficulty to deliver much-needed logistical support to West Florida and the Conch Republic from the United States. As a result, the United States asked local politicians if the regions would desire de-facto independence in order to properly set up proper trade lines for the millions along the Gulf Coast. The regional West Floridian and Conch governments delivered a joint note to the US Congress that stated that the debate over possible independence would have to be voted upon by both the political branch as well as the citizens. | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida states that should the state elect for independence, the US military equipment as part of the "Gulf Coast Defense Force" would be handed over and reorganized into the West Floridian Armed Forces. The {{wpl|United States Congress}} accepts the proposal as coordinating the military from Washington was becoming increasingly difficult. West Florida representatives propose that the US Armed Forces would be allowed deployments if independence is voted upon. Upon the return of the representatives the West Floridian Defense Force was officially founded on August 23, 1994, with the mission to be protection of the State of West Florida. West Florida and the United States sign an agreement called the "Treaty of Washington" stating that the United States will support West Floridian independence, if the public was to vote in favor. | ||
+ | |||
+ | On August 29th, 1994, the West Florida General Assembly votes in favor to hold a public vote on independence, with it set to take place in 1995. The West Floridian General Assembly on November 18th, 1994 declared that the public vote for independence would be held on December 3, 1995. Following the announcement of voting, the General Assembly introduced a single-time mandate that all adults over the age of eighteen would be required to vote in the independence vote to get the opinions of all adults. During this time, the United States would continue to collapse as entire regions across the United States declared total independence and hostility towards the remnant USA, who only still possessed {{wpl|New England}} and portions of the {{wpl|Eastern Seaboard}}. In mid-1995 the remnant USA would lose {{wpl|Washington DC}} as the capital, swaying voters in West Florida to look towards independence as the safest scenario for the region. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Voting.png|thumb|left|220px|Voters in line for the December 3, 1995 independence referendum.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | On December 3, 1995, West Florida voted 94%-6% in favor of political independence from the United States, marking West Florida as the only nation to have left the Union through peaceful means. Over the following days, West Florida notifies the US Congress that it will begin the separation proceedings, however, it will establish a trilateral alliance with the USA-West Florida-Conch Republic for national security. on December 4, 1995, the United States formally recognized West Florida's independence declaration and moved to establish relations. | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida officially ratified independence on March 5, 1996, declaring itself independent. The national government is formally established, as well as the Constitution is ratified with both the government structure and constitution mirroring that of the US Constitution. {{wpl|Israel}} is the second nation to have formally recognized West Florida, with the Israelis concerned about the future of the {{wpl|Sa'ar 5-class corvette}}. West Florida opts to not seize the Israeli ships, instead offering to complete them with a partially renegotiated contract, officially launching the independent West Floridian defense and shipbuilding industry. | ||
+ | |||
+ | On April 7, 1996, an emergency {{wpl|United Nations}} session is called in {{wpl|Geneva}}, {{wpl|Switzerland}} regarding West Florida's independence as the only successor state of the USA formally recognized by the remnant USA. Due to the USA's endorsement, West Florida is officially recognized by the UN which begins the admission process and the joining of various UN councils and demarcation of land and sea borders. | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida in the post-independence world slowly became a key nation for oil supplies due to the Oil Crisis caused by the collapse of the USA, {{wpl|Russia}}, and the overall global economy. Due to greater stability, dozens of oil companies had moved out of {{wpl|Louisiana}} to West Florida, giving West Floridian companies de-facto control of many oil platforms within New Orleans {{wpl|EEZ}}. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 1997, West Florida officially declared the region of "New Afrika", composed of dozens of un-organized city-states, terrorist groups, private militaries, and warlords, as a threat to national security. The West Floridian Department of Defense places threat level presented by New Afrikan threats as the top-most threat to national security, with the implementation of {{wpl|conscription}} laws for all men over the age of 18 for a total of two years. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === 21st Century === | ||
+ | ==== 2000-2005 ==== | ||
+ | The effects of the Oil Crisis began to plateau, with West Florida begins taking advantage of its massive offshore oil reserves to build up national wealth after struggling for roughly a decade in the global economic collapse during the late 1990s. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 2004, Hurricane Ivan hit Pensacola, major damage was widespread, however proper hurricane readiness allowed for the lack of many deaths in the nation. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===== Hurricane Katrina ===== | ||
+ | On August 29, 2005, the Category 5 {{wpl|Hurricane Katrina}} impacted New Orleans, causing mass damage across the nation with 87% of all {{wpl|levees}} across the cities breaking due to poor maintenance by the New Orleans government. Prior to the impact, 95% of the population evacuated to West Florida or Texas in order to escape the devastation. West Florida itself issues a total evacuation of Gulfport and Biloxi to eastern portions of the country. West Florida is the largest hub for the refugees, taking in nearly a million refugees from the city. Part of the New Orleans Air Force evacuates to West Florida due to lack of hanger space in Baton Rouge. After landfall and the initial reports of devastation reach foreign nations, dozens of nations plan to deliver aid to New Orleans via West Florida and Texas. | ||
+ | |||
+ | After initial reports of widespread destruction, the West Floridian Air Force (WFAF) opts to conduct reconnaissance flights to the city of New Orleans to analyze the destruction. Images of the city re transmitted to West Floridian President {{wpl|Bob Riley}}, confirming the complete destruction of the city due to levee breaches. The images are "leaked" to the press, causing shock and horror across the world as New Orleans becomes the largest city lost to {{wpl|climate change}}. President Riley approves a WFAF operation to {{wpl|paratroop}} into the former {{wpl|Joint-Base New Orleans}} as a primary support center. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Hurricane Katrina.png|thumb|right|220px|Hurricane Katrina just prior to its second landfall on August 29.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | The United Nations shifts its attention rather to assist WF efforts in helping construct housing for nearly a million refugees. International efforts over the following days try and rescue more from the city using helicopters and warships, with several nations sending warships to try and help. | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida and international aid engineers determine the situation is beyond repair, calling off any attempt to recover the city due to the situation’s worsening conditions. Evacuation searches would be held for at least 2 weeks, after the 2 weeks, West Florida closes and demolishes portions of the I-10 and the Pontchartrain Causeway due to crumbling and unsafe infrastructure. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The leftover New Orleans government issues a formal request to the West Floridian General Assembly asking that for the safety and security of the region, that West Florida’s military is invited to step in to take control of the collapsing situation. West Florida accepts the request, occupying the {{wpl|Florida Parishes}} including Baton Rouge, but stopping at the {{wpl|Mississippi River}}. | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida immediately grants New Orleans citizens West Floridian citizenship if they can present a New Orleans or former American passport. Meanwhile, the old New Orleans government and the West Floridian government sit down to hold formal discussions on how to proceed with the situation. In November, the New Orleans government announced that the nation of New Orleans would cease to exist and would transfer all overseas and current assets to the West Florida government. Pelican Oil, New Orleans’s primary offshore and oil refinery company was split 80-20 between West Florida and Texas, with Texas taking a portion of the westernmost assets in return for financial assistance with the Katrina reconstruction project and West Florida takes the remaining 80% of the company. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The large communities of New Orleans migrants are spread across West Florida, causing some mild strain on current job opportunities. However, it presented CEOs and business owners a unique opportunity of being able to create more jobs to account for the surging population, with lower-income jobs such as construction, plumbing, oil work, etc now having a new labor market to develop with. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== 2005-2010 ==== | ||
+ | In 2006 the General Assembly voted in favor of expanding conscription laws to all women over the age of 18 for a total of two years to compensate for an increasingly aggressive communist Cuba threatening the status quo of the Gulf and expanding efforts in New Afrika. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==== 2010-present ==== | ||
+ | In 2010 West Florida is invited to participate in the June {{wpl|2010 G20 Toronto summit}}. This decision was made in an effort by the existing {{wpl|G20}} nations to conduct outreach towards the stabilized US remnant states. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Around the start of early 2010, the West Floridian economy began to surge in wealth as the relative level of chaos within the region settled, allowing for greater international investment into the nation, with international benefactors hoping to take advantage of West Florida's stable and mixed-industry economy. The West Floridian government would see a plethora of new connections to foreign states and companies attempting to invest in the nation. Due to the future of the economy, President {{wpl|Amy Tuck}} began funding various development projects during her tenure including the {{wpl|Norman Schwarzkopf Jr.}} International Airport, redevelopment of Pensacola & Mobile, setting up plans for a national rail system, setting up the {{wpl|Choctaw}} National Park, redevelopment of local schools, and constructing four new colleges. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:West Floridian revival.png|thumb|left|220px|Gulf Coast Revival architectural style present in new buildings.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | On April 12th, 2012, President of West Florida Amy Tuck was the victim of a targeted assassination via a "kamikaze drone" during an outdoor campaign event in Baton Rouge. An additional 5 individuals were also killed with dozens others injured after the drone impacted the stand in which political VIPs were attending. Then Vice-President Doc Foglesong took over the role as President that night, being sworn in while visiting the United States on a diplomatic mission. IS-Karolina claimed responsibility for the strike as a response to a successful West Floridian raid against an ISIS detachment outside Mobile, resulting in 7 being tried for treason and put to death while the remaining 2 were convicted of conspiracy to commit a crime. President Foglesong would only serve for 7 months as former President {{wpl|Ray Mabus}} pledged a strong response to the attack and to continue Tuck's investment programs, but moving more to a centrist position. He would officially take office in 2013 to begin his second non-consecutive term. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 2013, West Florida opens its 3rd new nuclear power plant with two 1200 MW reactors to add to the current {{wpl|Joseph M. Farley}} & River Bend facilities in order to diversify West Florida's energy sources. at the opening ceremony, President Ray Mabus announced that West Florida would seek national clean energy as the way forward, sparking concerns by the media over Mabus attempting to eliminate oil even though it provided West Florida's initial wealth, a later statement by the Mabus government would clarify that Mabus did not state that West Florida would abandon oil. Later that year, West Florida was invited to {{wpl|OPEC}} (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) as the nation was a leading exporter of oil and natural gas which gained the interest of the {{wpl|Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia}}, {{wpl|Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud}}, who sought to expand the international influence of the state. | ||
+ | |||
+ | President Ray Mabus announced on December 4th, 2015 that West Florida would re-open {{wpl|Palmer Station}} in {{wpl|Antarctica}} as a partnership program between the West Floridian government and local universities seeking research on the effects of climate change in the region and how rising sea levels could affect the nation. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In 2016, West Florida was ranked as one of the top destinations for investment in the {{wpl|Western Hemisphere}} with the West Floridian government providing subsidies to crucial industries as well as being noted as one of the few stable nations in North America after the collapse of the United States. | ||
+ | |||
== Geography == | == Geography == | ||
+ | West Florida has a total area of 91,955km2 (35,504 sq mi). | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida is geographically very low relative to sea level and is considered a very flat country, with about much of its coastline cities only a handful of meters above sea level. The northern parts of the country is for the most part flat, with rolling hills in the northeast of the nation, up to a height of no more than 105 m (345 feet), making it one of the flattest nations in the world. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Beach.png|thumb|right|220px|Panama City Beach.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Much of West Florida has been formed by water, with the {{wpl|Apalachicola River}} to the east, {{wpl|Mississippi River}} to the west, and {{wpl|Mobile River}} running through the middle of the nation. The West Floridian coastline along the {{wpl|Gulf of Mexico}} is composed of dozens of {{wpl|barrier islands}}, with the islands protecting numerous bays and inlets providing as a barrier to oncoming waves from the Gulf. much of the coastline of West Florida is dotted with many bays and inlets, with all major cities being along the bays as a holdover of European colonization. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Climate === | ||
+ | The Gulf Coast in West Florida {{wpl|climate}} is humid subtropical, with much of the year being warm-to-hot, while the three winter months bring periods of cool weather mixed with mild temperatures. The region area is susceptible to extreme weather with {{wpl|hurricanes}}, {{wpl|flash floods}}, and {{wpl|severe thunderstorms}} being extremely common due to the warm waters of the region sparking heavy rain and wind. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Nature === | ||
+ | The Gulf Coast is one of the most naturally diverse regions in North America, with 15 natural parks, including Apalachee Bay National Park composed of Apalachicola National Forest & large segments of internationally recognized "unclaimed" land. The largely untouched regions in the Apalachee Bay National Park have seen it occupied by hundreds of bird species, 140 tree species, 46 amphibians, 70 reptile species, as well as various endangered species such as the {{wpl|Rice's whale}}. West Florida inherited much of the former state of Florida's natural protections in the eastern Gulf of Mexico. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The National Conservation Society of West Florida has re-introduced several species into Apalachee Bay National Park such as the {{wpl|Red Wolf}}, {{wpl|Cougar}}, and {{wpl|manatees}}. As part of a multinational effort, abandoned fields and homes were demolished in the region and thousands of trees were planted in former fields. | ||
+ | |||
== Government and Politics == | == Government and Politics == | ||
− | === Administrative divisions=== | + | === Constitution === |
+ | WIP | ||
+ | |||
+ | === National Anthem === | ||
+ | [[File:Anthem of WF.png|thumb|right|220px|Lyrics of the West Florida National Anthem.]] | ||
+ | ''"Vive La!"'' (Pronounced Viv-a-Lay) is the national anthem of West Florida. It was originally the Anthem of the West Floridian Rebellion in 1810 and was re-purposed to become the West Floridian Anthem in 1995 after independence was declared. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The lyrics of the national anthem refer to the unsuccessful 1810 revolution against the Spanish Empire, attempting to create an independent republic based on democratic values of the United States. After independence, West Florida requested that the Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, former capital of the West Florida revolution, hand over all official artifacts of the 1810 revolution, including that of the Army Battle Anthem. Due to no established constitution nor national anthem, the government of West Florida opted to adopt the revolution of the past as part of the formal history of the region as the Battle Anthem showed historical relevance to proving West Florida's long historical presence in the world as a former colony of three empires, participant in two Civil Wars, two democracies, and one failed revolution before having finally achieved independence. The West Floridian anthem tells a story about the revolution in Baton Rouge and how the outnumbered rebel forces managed to overthrown the Commander Shepherd Brown and the Governor of Spanish West Florida, Don Carlos de Hault de Lassus. | ||
+ | |||
+ | The West Floridian Anthem is played before all sporting events as well as during Olympic ceremonies. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Administrative divisions === | ||
=== Military === | === Military === | ||
− | {{Main|West Florida | + | {{Main|West Floridian Armed Forces}} |
+ | The West Floridian Armed Forces was formed in 1996 from the Gulf Coast Defense Force (GCDF), a regional command in the Deep South commanded by {{wpl|U.S. Southern Command}} officers and personnel. The Gulf Coast Defense Force was turned over to West Florida, as the nucleus of its defense forces with the formation of West Florida. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Although inheriting swaths of equipment, West Florida only commissioned less than 35% of its inherited units, with many being placed in reserve, sold off, or formally decommissioned. However in the mid 2000s the West Floridian Armed Forces began an extensive reorganization process with Cuba regularly threatening to violate West Floridian sovereignty. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Patrol ship.png|thumb|left|220px|West Floridian Navy PASSEX with the Yucatán Navy.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | The West Floridian armed forces have grown significantly over the years since independence and are equipped with some of the most modern weapon systems, with much of the armed forces composed of inherited systems from the United States upgraded to meet modern 21st Century standards. West Florida also produces its own military equipment and is currently a top 10 military exporter. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Most officers of West Florida are graduates of the West Florida Military Academy (WFMA) at {{wpl|Corry Station}}, with others having attended the United States Military Academy at {{wpl|West Point}}. The United States is one of the most important allies of West Florida with the US providing assisting with defense cooperation, training and military assistance. | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida regularly does conduct international military deployments with most notably being the construction of a West Floridian military base in {{wpl|Yucatán}} as part of West Florida's commitment to Yucatán for protection against Cuba. West Florida has similarly deployed in {{wpl|Colombia}} and {{wpl|Haiti}} primarily in the counter-narcotics role, with controversial actions including targeted assassinations against high-level drug kingpins or gang leaders without official permission of host governments. | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida is currently a leading figure against various terrorist groups in the region of "New Afrika", with targeted airstrikes, anti-personnel, and pre-emptive strikes. West Florida leads the efforts against "New Afrikan" terror groups such as the {{wpl|Atlanta}}-based "Barcas" and the Islamic State – Karwlyna Province in the {{wpl|Savannah}} & {{wpl|Charleston}}-area. West Florida has been accused of having violated conventional rules of war within "New Afrikan" lands with accusations of {{wpl|anti-personnel mines}}, {{wpl|chemical weapons}}, refusal to give a "fair and legal trial" to {{wpl|prisoners of war}}, refusal to allow {{wpl|Red Cross}} access to certain regions, and questionable first-strike using {{wpl|unmanned combat aerial vehicles}} (UCAVs) | ||
+ | |||
+ | The West Florida intervened in the 2nd Guatemalan Civil War in support of President {{wpl|Óscar Berger}}'s Guatemalan Armed Forces in its conflict with the the {{wpl|URNG}}, Cuban-supported communist revolutionaries. | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida has been a large exporter of military equipment since independence, as arms productions has been a key national industry to the region since the 1940s. Since the mid-2000s, West Florida has been pushing for increased national autonomy in the production of military equipment, with the aim to replace former inherited American military assets. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:Fa-15 image.png|thumb|right|220px|F/A-15F of the West Floridian Air Force.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | Examples of national military development programs include the formation of Pentagon Technologies Engineering Ltd. which consolidated large parts of West Florida's expansive military industry into a singular company with the divisions including PT Aerospace, PT Marine, PT Land Systems, and PT Electronics. PT Marine is one of the largest subdivision with the production capacity to build {{wpl|destroyers}}, {{wpl|frigates}}, {{wpl|corvettes}}, {{wpl|patrol boats}}, {{wpl|amphibious ships}, {{wpl|submarines}}, and various auxiliary ships. PT Aerospace primarily handles modernization & upgrades of various civilian and military aircraft within West Florida. Other companies present include {{wpl|L-3 Communications}}, Mississippi Army Ammunition Plant, Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control (MFC), Naval Construction Battalion Center (NCBC), {{wpl|Halter Marine Group, Inc.}} and {{wpl|Cadillac Gage}}; all of which produce various equipment for the West Floridian Military including missiles, {{wpl|tanks}}, {{wpl|Infantry Fighting Vehicles}}, small arms equipment, electronics & radars, and various others | ||
+ | |||
+ | The West Floridian Air Force (WFAF) operates the {{wpl|General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon}} F-16C/D Block 60+ developed between Lockheed Martin and PT Aerospace, as well as the older F-16C/D Block 40. West Florida also operates the McDonnell Douglas F/A-15F Dagger Multirole Strike Fighter as its primary strike aircraft customized by West Florida. West Florida also indigenously produces the {{wpl|Super Tucano}} in both the A-29A and A-29B versions for close air-support operations and training. The West Floridian Army operates a customized M1 Abrams tank designated the M1A2WF, as well as produces the PGTC C7 Jaguar main battle tank in both the C7A1 and C7A2 versions. West Florida hosts the Emerald Coast Defense Expo (EXDE) on an annual basis, with it being one of the largest defense expos in the world. | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida has mandatory military service for both males and females, for 24 months in order to bulk up the West Floridian active and reserve personnel. | ||
==== Nuclear Policy==== | ==== Nuclear Policy==== | ||
− | West Florida is not confirmed to be in the possession of weapons of mass destruction, and has not ratified the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) has argued that West Florida is in possession of undeclared chemical warfare capabilities and a biological warfare program. | + | West Florida is not confirmed to be in the possession of {{wpl|weapons of mass destruction}}, and has not ratified the {{wpl|Non-Proliferation Treaty}} (NPT). The Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) has argued that West Florida is in possession of undeclared chemical warfare capabilities and a biological warfare program. Officially, West Florida neither confirms nor denies possessing nuclear weapons. |
+ | |||
+ | == Economy == | ||
+ | Since initial colonization by the Spanish in the 16th century, {{wpl|shipbuilding}}, {{wpl|fishing}}, {{wpl|agriculture}}, and {{wpl|trade}} have been leading sectors of the West Floridian economy. West Florida in 2022 currently benefits from a high level of economic freedom with its economy ranked the one of the most competitive economy in the world by the Swiss International Institute for Management Development. West Florida after the collapse of the United States of America inherited a number of specialized industries such as shipbuilding, aerospace technologies, nuclear industry, oil production & refinement, as well as agriculture and car industries. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:West Fl. econ..png|thumb|left|300px|West Floridian GDP Growth Rate 1995-2022.]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | As of 2022, the key trading partners of West Florida were {{wpl|Texas}}, {{wpl|Yucatán}}, the {{wpl|United States}}, the {{wpl|United Kingdom}}, {{wpl|Japan}}, {{wpl|Brazil}}, {{wpl|China}}, and {{wpl|Russia}}. West Florida is one of the world's 10 leading exporting countries as a primary exporter of oil, aerospace, and shipbuilding construction. Other major industries of West Florida include {{wpl|Natural Gas}}, machinery, electrical goods, trade, services, and {{wpl|tourism}}. | ||
+ | West Florida has the 25th-largest economy in the world with a top-ten ranking in GDP (nominal) per capita. West Florida has low-income inequality, but wealth inequality is relatively high. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Mobile is the financial and business capital of West Florida, with the Mobile Stock Exchange (XMOB) being one of the largest stock exchanges on the North American continent, although still behind those in the USA, California, Texas, and Canada. West Florida's stock exchange in Mobile primarily focuses on oil, shipbuilding, aerospace, and other energy companies. West Florida opted to make {{wpl|Mobile}} the primary economic capital of West Florida as part of government efforts to spread the general wealth & power out of just a single city, with {{wpl|Pensacola}} acting as the political capital, {{wpl|Biloxi}}-{{wpl|Gulfport}} as a shipbuilding & resort city for gambling, and {{wpl|Panama City}} as a tourism hub. | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Megaprojects === | ||
+ | West Florida has self-funded various megaprojects (projects costing > $1 Billion) in efforts to grow and diversify the national economy. Priority funding is directed towards infrastructure programs such as the Mobile Financial Center & Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Power Plant. Leveling up of the national economy via oil profits has come as a similar strategy to Middle Eastern states such as the UAE, Qatar, and Kuwait. However, without having to fight a desert climate and a repressive Islamic government structure, West Florida has been able to easily promote infrastructure investments to international investors. Key investors in West Florida include the European Union, China, and Middle Eastern states. The flagship foreign investment project into West Florida was the production of two additional 1200 MW nuclear reactors for the Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Power Plant with European Union investments. | ||
+ | |||
+ | West Florida has similarly invested in large civil investment programs, specifically in infrastructure. The $4 billion Norman Schwarzkopf Jr. International Airport was one of the largest projects creating a new international airport outside Pensacola permitting new widebody aircraft. Two years later, the steel cutting of the Pensacola-Mobile metro systems, connected to the Norman Schwarzkopf Jr. Airport. Although other regions of the former United States remain car-centric, West Florida remains one of the most accessible nations for transportation. Existing multi-billion dollar projects inherited by West Florida include the three existing nuclear power plants, I-10 highway system, Intracoastal Waterway, and the Mobile & Pascagoula port systems. | ||
− | |||
== Demographics == | == Demographics == | ||
== Culture == | == Culture == |
Latest revision as of 23:38, 18 August 2024
Republic of West Florida | |
---|---|
Flag | |
Anthem: Vive La | |
Location of West Florida (dark blue) | |
Capital | Pensacola |
Official languages | English |
Recognised national languages | Spanish, French Creole |
Demonym | West Floridian |
Government | Federal Presidential Constitutional Republic |
• President | Janine Davidson |
• Vice-President | Sam Jones |
• House Speaker | Phil Ehr |
• Chief Justice | Tom Parker |
Establishment | |
• Gulf Coast Defense Region | March 1993 – November 18, 1995 |
• Christmas Court Ruling | December 27, 1993 |
• Alabama and Mississippi Governments Dissolved | August 1994 |
• Independence | December 3rd, 1995 (As part of the Treaty of Washington) |
• Founding of the House and Senate | March 5, 1996 |
• Current Constitution | July 5, 2007 |
Population | |
• 2022 estimate | 7,110,617 (102nd) |
GDP (PPP) | 2023 estimate |
• Total | $339,040 USD |
• Per capita | $64,403 (13th) |
GDP (nominal) | 2023 estimate |
• Total | $347.4 Billion |
• Per capita | $76,983 |
Gini (2020) |
31.4 medium |
HDI (2022) |
0.895 very high |
Currency | Dollar ($) |
Time zone | CST (UTC-6) |
Date format | mm-dd-yyyy |
Drives on the | right |
Calling code | +1 |
ISO 3166 code | WFR |
Internet TLD | .wf |
West Florida, officially known as the Republic of West Florida is a country along the coastal region of the Deep South. It is the only unified country in the Deep South, and has the largest population of the region. West Florida lies between the Mississippi River to the west, Apalachicola River to the east, and the Gulf of Mexico to the south. West Florida does not officially border any other nation-state, however it is bordered by the New Afrikan region to the north composed of terrorist regimes, cartels, and militarized local communities. The nation's capital and most populous city is Pensacola and its main financial center is Mobile.
West Florida has been described as a regional power with a strong economy; it has the largest economy in the deep south, the world's 26th-largest economy by nominal GDP. A global leader in oil and natural gas, West Florida's oil and natural gas reserves are the world's fourth and tenth-largest, respectively
The West Florida' oil and natural gas reserves are the world's fourth and tenth-largest, respectively. Former-President Ray Mabus, oversaw the development of West Florida by investing most of the nation's oil revenues during the oil crisis into healthcare, education, and infrastructure allowing relative economic stability in the post-collapse America. The country inherited several key large industries such as shipbuilding, arms production, and infrastructure construction. In the 21st century, West Florida has a stable diversified economy focusing on advanced shipbuilding industry, oil & gas production, and advanced technology.
Contents
Etymology
The first documentary evidence of the phrase "West Florida" dates back to the British colonial era in the Royal Proclamation of 1763, with West Florida and East Florida, separated by the Apalachicola River. The term "West Florida" is derived by Spanish translation "Florida Occidental", itself derived from the Spanish conqueror and explorer Juan Ponce de León's name for the region "Florida" meaning "full of flowers".
West Florida derived the name "Republic of West Florida" from the short-lived 1810 revolution in the region against colonial Spanish rulers in an attempt to create a independent democratic republic. In 1994 the Gulf Coast Defense Force reorganized using the old name for the region from the old revolutionary forces.
History
Native Era
Before 1990, relatively very little was known regarding the Pensacola Culture of natives who lived along the Gulf Coast, with very few historians focused on the region. However, as West Florida began investments in new building construction, brand-new artifacts were unearthed across Pensacola and Mobile. With the thousands of brand-new artifacts unearthed, West Florida’s historical society was tasked with discovering the extent of native populations in the region.
The region had a total of three different Mississippian cultures, Plaquemine, Pensacola, and Ft. Walton. Although the three had similarities with one another, their differences in pottery and tool use made them very distinctive archeologically. The cultures existed from 1000 AD to around 1700 AD. The three cultures lived alongside one another, with various “cities” existing across the Gulf Coast; at least 20 distinct archeological cities have been located across the Gulf Coast, the largest being that of the Seenwaw (formally known as the Bottle Creek Indian Mounds) housing over 3,500+ natives. In 2012, researchers from the University of West Florida found the remains of a translation guide for Spanish Missionaries to converse with Natives in the Gulf Coast region. The book was part of a small chest found in the remains of a church in East Pensacola, although initially thought to have been translated between natives in Cuba, it was discovered that a proto-written language for translating between Mississippian and Spanish. This discovery helped prove a missing bridge between native drawing text and written language. Uncovering the written manual revolutionized linguistic history bringing dozens of university archeological partnerships to the country to discover Native artifacts.
The archeological discoveries of permanent “cities” alongside the Spanish and French colonies caused a change in the definition of the founding dates of Pensacola and Mobile. The international founding date for Pensacola was changed to the year 1355, the earliest record of permanent Native “cities” in the region of the city; only being changed due to proven co-existence during the European colonization before the natives were expelled by the Spanish. Mobile’s original date of founding was in 1250 when Seenwaw (formally known as the Bottle Creek Indian Mounds) was said to have been found; however, the city was abandoned and the native population had moved further north to Mabila. The fortress town of Mabila was discovered by the Spanish explorer De Soto in the Battle of Mabila, the first of the bloodiest battles ever fought on the North American continent. Between 2,500-3,000 Natives were killed in the battle compared to ~130 Spanish conquistadors, resulting in the full devastation of the natives and the Spanish expedition.
Colonial Era
First Spanish rule (1513–1763)
The first European exploration of the area began in the 16th century with Diego Miruelo may have been the first European to sail into Pensacola Bay in 1516. The first Spanish settlement expedition in the region was large at around 1,500 settlers, first settling in Pensacola on August 15, 1559. Weeks later, a hurricane destroyed many of the settlements, with settlers surviving in Pensacola until 1561. Pensacola would officially be the first multi-year European settlement in the territory of what is the United States. However, the Spanish later concluded that northwest Florida was too dangerous to settle for the period and abandoned efforts to colonize the region for 137 years.
The Spanish opted to resettle Pensacola in November 1698 as a buffer against French settlements in Louisiana and Mobile. However, in May 1719, Spain would lose Pensacola during the War of the Quadruple Alliance, when French forces led by Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville took and occupied the settlement until a larger Spanish force came in August 1719 to recover the settlement, only to then be recaptured by France the following month in September 1719. In 1720 the war concluded, and the Pensacola territory was returned to Spain, although France did not retreat until 1726 back to its forts in Mobile and Biloxi further west.
After the French retreated from Pensacola, the city was rebuilt but was ravaged by hurricanes in 1752 and 1761. However, in 1763 as part of Spanish concessions in the Treaty of Paris (1763) the the British took control of all Spanish colonial possessions east of the Mississippi River, including all of West Florida ending Spanish rule in the region.
Louisiana (New France) (1703–1763)
In 1699, French colonists established and formed the first permanent European settlement in French Louisiana, at Fort Maurepas near present-day Pascagoula. However, in 1702 French Settlers opted to construct Fort Louis de la Louisiane further east on the Mobile River to protect France's claims to the La Louisiane region, with the settlement La Mobile becoming the capital of La Louisiane.
In May 1719, Spain would lose Pensacola during the War of the Quadruple Alliance, when French forces led by Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville marched eastward to capture the settlement of Pensacola. The French maintained their hold on the settlement until a larger Spanish force came in August 1719 to recover their lost territory, only to then be recaptured by the French Navy the following month in September 1719. In 1720 the war concluded, and the Pensacola territory was returned to Spain, although France did not retreat until 1726 back to its forts in Mobile and Biloxi further west.
In 1720, the current location of Biloxi was settled for the first time around Fort Louis. Similarly in during the same year, the French opted to change the administrative capital of La Louisiane from La Mobile (Mobile) to Bilocci (Biloxi).
In 1763 as part of French concessions in the Treaty of Paris (1763) the the British took control of all French colonial possession east of the Mississippi River, including the settlement of La Mobile and Bilocci, being renamed Mobile and Biloxi by the British.
British West Florida (1763-1783)
In 1763, The first British troops arrived and took possession of their new colony of Florida. The British however in an attempt to organize the territories split the colony of Florida into two: British East Florida, with its capital in St. Augustine, and British West Florida, with Pensacola as its capital. In 1764, West Florida's colonial assembly was established with a basis on that currently in use with the current structure of the Thirteen Colonies along the East Coast. Royal Navy Officer George Johnstone was appointed as the first British Governor for West Florida.
{British West Florida began to boom in the years following the British takeover, with thousands of new arrivals taking advantage of the new British lands and new government. West Florida's governmental structure included an appointed governor and lieutenant governor in an executive role. A legislature in the form of the General Assembly, with an appointer twelve-member advisory council serving as the "Upper House", and a House of Commons serving as the "Lower House", with fourteen elected members.
British West Florida was a rare exception to slavery and the slave trade, as although the practice did exist in the territory, the economy never relied on it and slavery itself remained a uncommon practice.
West Florida was invited by American colonists to send delegates to the First Continental Congress, however they declined the invitation due to the colonists remaining overwhelmingly loyal to the Crown during the American Revolution.
In the Treaty of Aranjuez (1779) the Spanish Empire entered the American Revolutionary War with Spanish troops marching eastward from Louisiana taking Biloxi, Mobile, and eventually the capital of Pensacola in 1781. As part of the Peace of Paris in 1783, Great Britain offically ceded the territory of West Florida back to Spain.
Second Spanish rule (1783-1821)
During the War of 1812, American troops led by General Andrew Jackson launched a series of offensive campaigns on Spanish West Florida against the Spanish and British garrisons protecting the city of Pensacola.
The first attempt to seize Pensacola in 1813 was inconclusive, however in 1814 General Andrew Jackson committed additional assets with 4,000 American infantry versus 100 British and 500 Spanish infantry. Gen. Jackson successfully seized Fort San Miguel on November 7th, 1813, however, Fort San Carlos 14 miles to the west, remained in British hands. Gen. Jackson sought to seize Fort San Carlos the following day, however, the British garrison blew up the fort before withdrawing from Pensacola.
General Andrew Jackson abandoned Pensacola to the Spanish as his forces set out to take the city of Mobile. However, when Andrew Jackson arrived in Pensacola, he had received orders to assist in the New Orleans campaign, culminating in the Battle of New Orleans on January 8, 1815, in which the British garrison suffered catastrophic losses to General Andrew Jackson's forces.
In 1815, Spanish forces returned to Pensacola, however, Pensacola would briefly be conquered again by the US Army in 1818. In 1819, Spain and the United States signed the Adams–Onís Treaty, officially handing West Florida to the United States on February 22, 1821, ending colonial rule over West Florida.
Republic of West Florida (1810)
In June to September of 1810, locals of the furthest-western regions of Spanish West Florida organized an independence movement to create an independent Republic of West Florida. Several meetings of locals attempted to create an organized revolution, and on September 23, 1810, West Floridian armed rebels successfully stormed Fort San Carlos in Baton Rouge, raising the flag of the new republic and declaring independence from Spain three days later on September 26, 1810; with the capital for the Republic was located at St. Francisville, in present-day Louisiana along the Mississippi River.
U.S. President James Madison wanted the United States to seize the territory so that the region would not fall into British or French hands, however, occupation was off of the table as any military action would have incurred the wrath of the Spanish Army.
On November 7, 1810 the rebel republic held its first elections, with Fulwar Skipwith elected as governor as well as a bicameral legislature. However in Baton Rouge on December 9th, Governor Skipwith opted rather to surrender the new nation to the United States to preserve the republican values of the state in fear of retaliation by the Spanish.
American Territory and Statehood
Following the the Adams–Onís Treaty in 1821, the U.S. military moved into West Florida, and the region was combined with East Florida into the Florida Territory with Andrew Jackson serving as governor. As a result of the state merger, the capital was established in Tallahassee, halfway between the old capitals of Pensacola and St. Augustine for West and East Florida. West Florida itself would be split between the states of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama as well. The former West Floridian capital Pensacola would become Florida's westernmost city.
American Civil War (1861-1865)
All of West Florida's former regions would opt to secede from the Union to join the pro-slavery Confederate States of America. However, Fort Pickens did remain in Union hands after the secession of the region, one of the small handful of forts that remained so during the American Civil War.
The Confederacy did attempt to seize Fort Pickens on October 9, 1861 however Union troops repulsed the attack with the fort remaining in Union hands during the war. In May of 1862, Pensacola was re-captured by Union troops after Confederate forces abandoned the city, setting it on fire as they left.
In 1864, Confederate forces attempted to break Admiral David Farragut's blockade in the Battle of Mobile Bay. Three Confederate gunboats and the ironclad CSS Tennessee attempted to break the twelve wooden ships, two gunboats, and four ironclad monitors, however, the overwhelming Union force overpowered the Confederate Navy, and in the following days the city surrendered to Union forces.
Early 20th Century
During the Reconstruction Era and the early 20th century, the region of West Florida saw large infrastructure developments including the reconstruction of the entirety of Downtown Pensacola and Mobile.
Into the 1910s and 1920s, the cities of Mobile and Pensacola had become large hub for shipping, manufacturing, and commerce thanks to their developed infrastructure developments. Pensacola notably would become a regional hub for dozens of military bases including the Pensacola Naval Base.
During World War II, the Gulf Coast would be one of the most important military regions in the United States, with Pensacola serving as a primary training center for naval aviation and Mobile serving as a large shipbuilding site producing Liberty Ships, freighters, Fletcher-class destroyers, and minesweepers; as well as helping produce aircraft for the USAAF. Between 1940 and 1943, 89,000+ people had moved into Mobile to work as part of war industries. During World War II, dozens of new airstrips would be constructed across the Gulf Coast, including Keesler Field, Brookley Army Air Field (today known as the Brookley Aeroplex), Naval Air Station Whiting Field, Eglin Army Air Field, and Tyndall Army Air Field.
Cold War
During the Cold War, the Gulf Coast would continue to serve as primarily a military region, with all branches of the military represented in the region. Major shipbuilding for the US Navy would also show up in the form of Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, Ms.. The Gulf Coast military bases would be mobilized several times due to threats by Communist Cuba continuously until the 1990s
Collapse of America & Independence (1993-1996)
Collapse of America
Researchers typically argue that the starting point of America's Collapse was Ronald Reagan's assassination by John Hinckley Jr. on March 30th, 1981 in Washington DC. Following the assassination, Vice-President George H. W. Bush would take office as the American public watched horrified as another president had been assassinated on live television. George H. W. Bush would take several measures to "ensure the safety of the American public" including increased surveillance of American citizens. The measures taken were questionable, with many Democrat leaders questioning the legitimacy of the policies accusing Bush of having "Taken advantage of a time of tragedy".
Due to relative unpopularity, George H. W. Bush lost the Republican Primary to Bob Dole who promised to repeal Bush's unpopular laws. However, after ascending to the presidency in 1989, Dole double-backed his pledges to repeal Bush's laws as he claimed them now to be "necessary", sparking widespread protests against the government by democrats and moderates across the country. In 1992, the acquittal of 4 Los Angles Police Department (LAPD) officers recorded beating Rodney King sparked nearly a month of race-related protests and rioting, causing widespread crackdowns by police and the deployment of the national guard to various regions across the nation, with multiple large cities placed on lockdown such as LA, Atlanta, Montgomery, Chicago, and Washington DC. In response to the widespread riots, Republicans in Congress passed the Patriot Act, seeking to create a comprehensive "list" of those participating in "anti-democratic activities". The combination of the Rodney King riots and the Patriot Act as well as Democrats protesting the vote led to none of the candidates being projected to win the election outright.
On December 14th, 1992, the Electoral College met to select the winner of the election, but none of the candidates received the 270 votes required to win. Various news agencies speculated if it could be possible to have "no leader" with rather Congress acting as the de-facto executive branch, however, concerns regarding constitutional legitimacy sparked threats by far-right Republicans who feared a forceful democratic takeover of the nation.
On January 6th, 1993 as Congress met to vote on the future of government, right-wing militants stormed the U.S. capitol, killing Vice-President Jack Kemp and several dozen members of Congress. State capitols in Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, California, South Dakota, South Carolina, Ohio, Arkansas, Florida, Oregon, Washington, Michigan, and Virginia are also attacked with varying degrees of success. Throughout the deep south, the lingering pain of Rodney King led to many Black Power movements taking up radical Islamic thought, with a group of terrorists detonating a truck bomb at the base of 1 World Trade Center, causing over a thousand casualties.
The US Military on January 10th, 1993 was given the order throughout the Gulf Coast region to form the "Gulf Coast Defense Force", to protect several key military installations and cities across the region from potential terrorist attacks, with command for the Defense Force based at NAS Pensacola. The Gulf Coast Defense Force had set up a "designated perimeter" of safety, with some troops having come into conflict with the radical Islamic African-American nationalists along the northern regions of the perimeter.
The Floridian government remains in tatters following its storming of the State Capitol. Various regions across Florida have essentially become politically separate, as South Florida argues that the state should move the capital to Miami, a plan that was in the works but was declined several times by the previous governments. Both Jacksonville and Pensacola argued that Tallahassee should remain the capital as moving the capital to Miami would disrupt the balance within the state, putting the full priority on the south of the state, and ignoring the northern regions. The Florida Congress was set to hold a vote regarding the legitimacy of the southern representative's intentions to move the capital. However, come the day of the vote, southern representatives refused to let the northern senators and representatives into the temporary capital building, causing the northern efforts to challenge Miami to collapse as no northern representatives were allowed to vote.
Northern representatives questioned the plausibility of appealing to the United States Supreme Court about the legality of moving the state's capital to Miami, calling it unlawful, as the southern representatives failed to allow for elections to take place as well as avoided quorum rules. Northern representatives, led by Katherine Harris, officially lodged their case against the south, suing Bob Butterworth in his capacity of Florida Attorney General for accepting the results of the voting process with the case is lodged in the Supreme Court docket as Harris v. Butterworth.
This fight between the north and south of Florida was slowly destroying the already differing cultural divide in the state, especially as the rest of the United States have begun to fight for their independence such as California and Texas. Southern politicians continued to claim that the North was trying to keep the same policies that led to the chaos of previous administrations while the north claimed that the South was trying to prioritize their region.
The US Supreme Court opted to stay in session over the typical winter break due to dozens of important cases needing rulings, with this became known as the "Christmas Court". The Supreme Court voted 5-4 in favor of Harris, with the majority of justices calling for there to be elections, and that the election was unlawful as a quorum was not reached. The dissenting opinion argued that it was in the representative's capacity, and that due to the total number of active members in the state congress, the quorum of living representatives had been reached and therefore the vote was legal.
Following Harris v. Butterworth, the state of Florida was even more split than it had been before, as the only way to now declare elections was via Miami. The majority of Northern citizens called to abandon election efforts as even an attempt of an election would just favor the South.
The city of New Orleans in March 1994 formally requested that the Gulf Coast Defense Force leave the city and the state of Louisiana as a whole. The force's leadership, led by Norman Schwarzkopf Jr. and Russel L. Honoré, obliges to the request as the logistics of containing the city was becoming increasingly difficult as the rise of Black Rower rebels attacked logistics groups in the city and across the highway supply routes.
In April 1994, Miami continued to refuse to give up the capital, with even various Northern politicians' properties ransacked by state troopers to find evidence on them. Following the raids, northern representatives met and formerly discussed the prospect of forcing South Florida out of the Florida Union by dissolving Andrew Jackson's 1821 decree that had merged West and East Florida.
Miami on June 7th, 1994 officially declares intent to split the state of Florida in a "State Divorce" to settle the question of control over the state. The formal declaration would lead to the state being split into 5 sections: West Florida, Jacksonville, South Florida, Conch Republic (led by Key West), and a buffer zone between all of the states. All sides of the debate agreed to this proposal, although West Florida and the Conch Republic would remain as part of the United States under the Gulf Coast Defense Force.
The governments of Alabama and Mississippi officially are dissolved by Black Power rebels who had risen against whites in the deep south seeking to create their own "New Afrika" in the deep South. Many southern politicians leave for the Gulf Coast Defense "safe zone". The leftover governments of Alabama and Mississippi operating out of Mobile and Biloxi petitioned to become closer with the region of West Florida, effectively combining to become one singular state, with a capital in Pensacola.
Independence
By August 1994, much of the South was under the rule of the "New Afrika" rebel groups, it became a logistical difficulty to deliver much-needed logistical support to West Florida and the Conch Republic from the United States. As a result, the United States asked local politicians if the regions would desire de-facto independence in order to properly set up proper trade lines for the millions along the Gulf Coast. The regional West Floridian and Conch governments delivered a joint note to the US Congress that stated that the debate over possible independence would have to be voted upon by both the political branch as well as the citizens.
West Florida states that should the state elect for independence, the US military equipment as part of the "Gulf Coast Defense Force" would be handed over and reorganized into the West Floridian Armed Forces. The United States Congress accepts the proposal as coordinating the military from Washington was becoming increasingly difficult. West Florida representatives propose that the US Armed Forces would be allowed deployments if independence is voted upon. Upon the return of the representatives the West Floridian Defense Force was officially founded on August 23, 1994, with the mission to be protection of the State of West Florida. West Florida and the United States sign an agreement called the "Treaty of Washington" stating that the United States will support West Floridian independence, if the public was to vote in favor.
On August 29th, 1994, the West Florida General Assembly votes in favor to hold a public vote on independence, with it set to take place in 1995. The West Floridian General Assembly on November 18th, 1994 declared that the public vote for independence would be held on December 3, 1995. Following the announcement of voting, the General Assembly introduced a single-time mandate that all adults over the age of eighteen would be required to vote in the independence vote to get the opinions of all adults. During this time, the United States would continue to collapse as entire regions across the United States declared total independence and hostility towards the remnant USA, who only still possessed New England and portions of the Eastern Seaboard. In mid-1995 the remnant USA would lose Washington DC as the capital, swaying voters in West Florida to look towards independence as the safest scenario for the region.
On December 3, 1995, West Florida voted 94%-6% in favor of political independence from the United States, marking West Florida as the only nation to have left the Union through peaceful means. Over the following days, West Florida notifies the US Congress that it will begin the separation proceedings, however, it will establish a trilateral alliance with the USA-West Florida-Conch Republic for national security. on December 4, 1995, the United States formally recognized West Florida's independence declaration and moved to establish relations.
West Florida officially ratified independence on March 5, 1996, declaring itself independent. The national government is formally established, as well as the Constitution is ratified with both the government structure and constitution mirroring that of the US Constitution. Israel is the second nation to have formally recognized West Florida, with the Israelis concerned about the future of the Sa'ar 5-class corvette. West Florida opts to not seize the Israeli ships, instead offering to complete them with a partially renegotiated contract, officially launching the independent West Floridian defense and shipbuilding industry.
On April 7, 1996, an emergency United Nations session is called in Geneva, Switzerland regarding West Florida's independence as the only successor state of the USA formally recognized by the remnant USA. Due to the USA's endorsement, West Florida is officially recognized by the UN which begins the admission process and the joining of various UN councils and demarcation of land and sea borders.
West Florida in the post-independence world slowly became a key nation for oil supplies due to the Oil Crisis caused by the collapse of the USA, Russia, and the overall global economy. Due to greater stability, dozens of oil companies had moved out of Louisiana to West Florida, giving West Floridian companies de-facto control of many oil platforms within New Orleans EEZ.
In 1997, West Florida officially declared the region of "New Afrika", composed of dozens of un-organized city-states, terrorist groups, private militaries, and warlords, as a threat to national security. The West Floridian Department of Defense places threat level presented by New Afrikan threats as the top-most threat to national security, with the implementation of conscription laws for all men over the age of 18 for a total of two years.
21st Century
2000-2005
The effects of the Oil Crisis began to plateau, with West Florida begins taking advantage of its massive offshore oil reserves to build up national wealth after struggling for roughly a decade in the global economic collapse during the late 1990s.
In 2004, Hurricane Ivan hit Pensacola, major damage was widespread, however proper hurricane readiness allowed for the lack of many deaths in the nation.
Hurricane Katrina
On August 29, 2005, the Category 5 Hurricane Katrina impacted New Orleans, causing mass damage across the nation with 87% of all levees across the cities breaking due to poor maintenance by the New Orleans government. Prior to the impact, 95% of the population evacuated to West Florida or Texas in order to escape the devastation. West Florida itself issues a total evacuation of Gulfport and Biloxi to eastern portions of the country. West Florida is the largest hub for the refugees, taking in nearly a million refugees from the city. Part of the New Orleans Air Force evacuates to West Florida due to lack of hanger space in Baton Rouge. After landfall and the initial reports of devastation reach foreign nations, dozens of nations plan to deliver aid to New Orleans via West Florida and Texas.
After initial reports of widespread destruction, the West Floridian Air Force (WFAF) opts to conduct reconnaissance flights to the city of New Orleans to analyze the destruction. Images of the city re transmitted to West Floridian President Bob Riley, confirming the complete destruction of the city due to levee breaches. The images are "leaked" to the press, causing shock and horror across the world as New Orleans becomes the largest city lost to climate change. President Riley approves a WFAF operation to paratroop into the former Joint-Base New Orleans as a primary support center.
The United Nations shifts its attention rather to assist WF efforts in helping construct housing for nearly a million refugees. International efforts over the following days try and rescue more from the city using helicopters and warships, with several nations sending warships to try and help.
West Florida and international aid engineers determine the situation is beyond repair, calling off any attempt to recover the city due to the situation’s worsening conditions. Evacuation searches would be held for at least 2 weeks, after the 2 weeks, West Florida closes and demolishes portions of the I-10 and the Pontchartrain Causeway due to crumbling and unsafe infrastructure.
The leftover New Orleans government issues a formal request to the West Floridian General Assembly asking that for the safety and security of the region, that West Florida’s military is invited to step in to take control of the collapsing situation. West Florida accepts the request, occupying the Florida Parishes including Baton Rouge, but stopping at the Mississippi River.
West Florida immediately grants New Orleans citizens West Floridian citizenship if they can present a New Orleans or former American passport. Meanwhile, the old New Orleans government and the West Floridian government sit down to hold formal discussions on how to proceed with the situation. In November, the New Orleans government announced that the nation of New Orleans would cease to exist and would transfer all overseas and current assets to the West Florida government. Pelican Oil, New Orleans’s primary offshore and oil refinery company was split 80-20 between West Florida and Texas, with Texas taking a portion of the westernmost assets in return for financial assistance with the Katrina reconstruction project and West Florida takes the remaining 80% of the company.
The large communities of New Orleans migrants are spread across West Florida, causing some mild strain on current job opportunities. However, it presented CEOs and business owners a unique opportunity of being able to create more jobs to account for the surging population, with lower-income jobs such as construction, plumbing, oil work, etc now having a new labor market to develop with.
2005-2010
In 2006 the General Assembly voted in favor of expanding conscription laws to all women over the age of 18 for a total of two years to compensate for an increasingly aggressive communist Cuba threatening the status quo of the Gulf and expanding efforts in New Afrika.
2010-present
In 2010 West Florida is invited to participate in the June 2010 G20 Toronto summit. This decision was made in an effort by the existing G20 nations to conduct outreach towards the stabilized US remnant states.
Around the start of early 2010, the West Floridian economy began to surge in wealth as the relative level of chaos within the region settled, allowing for greater international investment into the nation, with international benefactors hoping to take advantage of West Florida's stable and mixed-industry economy. The West Floridian government would see a plethora of new connections to foreign states and companies attempting to invest in the nation. Due to the future of the economy, President Amy Tuck began funding various development projects during her tenure including the Norman Schwarzkopf Jr. International Airport, redevelopment of Pensacola & Mobile, setting up plans for a national rail system, setting up the Choctaw National Park, redevelopment of local schools, and constructing four new colleges.
On April 12th, 2012, President of West Florida Amy Tuck was the victim of a targeted assassination via a "kamikaze drone" during an outdoor campaign event in Baton Rouge. An additional 5 individuals were also killed with dozens others injured after the drone impacted the stand in which political VIPs were attending. Then Vice-President Doc Foglesong took over the role as President that night, being sworn in while visiting the United States on a diplomatic mission. IS-Karolina claimed responsibility for the strike as a response to a successful West Floridian raid against an ISIS detachment outside Mobile, resulting in 7 being tried for treason and put to death while the remaining 2 were convicted of conspiracy to commit a crime. President Foglesong would only serve for 7 months as former President Ray Mabus pledged a strong response to the attack and to continue Tuck's investment programs, but moving more to a centrist position. He would officially take office in 2013 to begin his second non-consecutive term.
In 2013, West Florida opens its 3rd new nuclear power plant with two 1200 MW reactors to add to the current Joseph M. Farley & River Bend facilities in order to diversify West Florida's energy sources. at the opening ceremony, President Ray Mabus announced that West Florida would seek national clean energy as the way forward, sparking concerns by the media over Mabus attempting to eliminate oil even though it provided West Florida's initial wealth, a later statement by the Mabus government would clarify that Mabus did not state that West Florida would abandon oil. Later that year, West Florida was invited to OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) as the nation was a leading exporter of oil and natural gas which gained the interest of the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, who sought to expand the international influence of the state.
President Ray Mabus announced on December 4th, 2015 that West Florida would re-open Palmer Station in Antarctica as a partnership program between the West Floridian government and local universities seeking research on the effects of climate change in the region and how rising sea levels could affect the nation.
In 2016, West Florida was ranked as one of the top destinations for investment in the Western Hemisphere with the West Floridian government providing subsidies to crucial industries as well as being noted as one of the few stable nations in North America after the collapse of the United States.
Geography
West Florida has a total area of 91,955km2 (35,504 sq mi).
West Florida is geographically very low relative to sea level and is considered a very flat country, with about much of its coastline cities only a handful of meters above sea level. The northern parts of the country is for the most part flat, with rolling hills in the northeast of the nation, up to a height of no more than 105 m (345 feet), making it one of the flattest nations in the world.
Much of West Florida has been formed by water, with the Apalachicola River to the east, Mississippi River to the west, and Mobile River running through the middle of the nation. The West Floridian coastline along the Gulf of Mexico is composed of dozens of barrier islands, with the islands protecting numerous bays and inlets providing as a barrier to oncoming waves from the Gulf. much of the coastline of West Florida is dotted with many bays and inlets, with all major cities being along the bays as a holdover of European colonization.
Climate
The Gulf Coast in West Florida climate is humid subtropical, with much of the year being warm-to-hot, while the three winter months bring periods of cool weather mixed with mild temperatures. The region area is susceptible to extreme weather with hurricanes, flash floods, and severe thunderstorms being extremely common due to the warm waters of the region sparking heavy rain and wind.
Nature
The Gulf Coast is one of the most naturally diverse regions in North America, with 15 natural parks, including Apalachee Bay National Park composed of Apalachicola National Forest & large segments of internationally recognized "unclaimed" land. The largely untouched regions in the Apalachee Bay National Park have seen it occupied by hundreds of bird species, 140 tree species, 46 amphibians, 70 reptile species, as well as various endangered species such as the Rice's whale. West Florida inherited much of the former state of Florida's natural protections in the eastern Gulf of Mexico.
The National Conservation Society of West Florida has re-introduced several species into Apalachee Bay National Park such as the Red Wolf, Cougar, and manatees. As part of a multinational effort, abandoned fields and homes were demolished in the region and thousands of trees were planted in former fields.
Government and Politics
Constitution
WIP
National Anthem
"Vive La!" (Pronounced Viv-a-Lay) is the national anthem of West Florida. It was originally the Anthem of the West Floridian Rebellion in 1810 and was re-purposed to become the West Floridian Anthem in 1995 after independence was declared.
The lyrics of the national anthem refer to the unsuccessful 1810 revolution against the Spanish Empire, attempting to create an independent republic based on democratic values of the United States. After independence, West Florida requested that the Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, former capital of the West Florida revolution, hand over all official artifacts of the 1810 revolution, including that of the Army Battle Anthem. Due to no established constitution nor national anthem, the government of West Florida opted to adopt the revolution of the past as part of the formal history of the region as the Battle Anthem showed historical relevance to proving West Florida's long historical presence in the world as a former colony of three empires, participant in two Civil Wars, two democracies, and one failed revolution before having finally achieved independence. The West Floridian anthem tells a story about the revolution in Baton Rouge and how the outnumbered rebel forces managed to overthrown the Commander Shepherd Brown and the Governor of Spanish West Florida, Don Carlos de Hault de Lassus.
The West Floridian Anthem is played before all sporting events as well as during Olympic ceremonies.
Administrative divisions
Military
The West Floridian Armed Forces was formed in 1996 from the Gulf Coast Defense Force (GCDF), a regional command in the Deep South commanded by U.S. Southern Command officers and personnel. The Gulf Coast Defense Force was turned over to West Florida, as the nucleus of its defense forces with the formation of West Florida.
Although inheriting swaths of equipment, West Florida only commissioned less than 35% of its inherited units, with many being placed in reserve, sold off, or formally decommissioned. However in the mid 2000s the West Floridian Armed Forces began an extensive reorganization process with Cuba regularly threatening to violate West Floridian sovereignty.
The West Floridian armed forces have grown significantly over the years since independence and are equipped with some of the most modern weapon systems, with much of the armed forces composed of inherited systems from the United States upgraded to meet modern 21st Century standards. West Florida also produces its own military equipment and is currently a top 10 military exporter.
Most officers of West Florida are graduates of the West Florida Military Academy (WFMA) at Corry Station, with others having attended the United States Military Academy at West Point. The United States is one of the most important allies of West Florida with the US providing assisting with defense cooperation, training and military assistance.
West Florida regularly does conduct international military deployments with most notably being the construction of a West Floridian military base in Yucatán as part of West Florida's commitment to Yucatán for protection against Cuba. West Florida has similarly deployed in Colombia and Haiti primarily in the counter-narcotics role, with controversial actions including targeted assassinations against high-level drug kingpins or gang leaders without official permission of host governments.
West Florida is currently a leading figure against various terrorist groups in the region of "New Afrika", with targeted airstrikes, anti-personnel, and pre-emptive strikes. West Florida leads the efforts against "New Afrikan" terror groups such as the Atlanta-based "Barcas" and the Islamic State – Karwlyna Province in the Savannah & Charleston-area. West Florida has been accused of having violated conventional rules of war within "New Afrikan" lands with accusations of anti-personnel mines, chemical weapons, refusal to give a "fair and legal trial" to prisoners of war, refusal to allow Red Cross access to certain regions, and questionable first-strike using unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs)
The West Florida intervened in the 2nd Guatemalan Civil War in support of President Óscar Berger's Guatemalan Armed Forces in its conflict with the the URNG, Cuban-supported communist revolutionaries.
West Florida has been a large exporter of military equipment since independence, as arms productions has been a key national industry to the region since the 1940s. Since the mid-2000s, West Florida has been pushing for increased national autonomy in the production of military equipment, with the aim to replace former inherited American military assets.
Examples of national military development programs include the formation of Pentagon Technologies Engineering Ltd. which consolidated large parts of West Florida's expansive military industry into a singular company with the divisions including PT Aerospace, PT Marine, PT Land Systems, and PT Electronics. PT Marine is one of the largest subdivision with the production capacity to build destroyers, frigates, corvettes, patrol boats, {{wpl|amphibious ships}, submarines, and various auxiliary ships. PT Aerospace primarily handles modernization & upgrades of various civilian and military aircraft within West Florida. Other companies present include L-3 Communications, Mississippi Army Ammunition Plant, Lockheed Martin Missiles and Fire Control (MFC), Naval Construction Battalion Center (NCBC), Halter Marine Group, Inc. and Cadillac Gage; all of which produce various equipment for the West Floridian Military including missiles, tanks, Infantry Fighting Vehicles, small arms equipment, electronics & radars, and various others
The West Floridian Air Force (WFAF) operates the General Dynamics F-16 Fighting Falcon F-16C/D Block 60+ developed between Lockheed Martin and PT Aerospace, as well as the older F-16C/D Block 40. West Florida also operates the McDonnell Douglas F/A-15F Dagger Multirole Strike Fighter as its primary strike aircraft customized by West Florida. West Florida also indigenously produces the Super Tucano in both the A-29A and A-29B versions for close air-support operations and training. The West Floridian Army operates a customized M1 Abrams tank designated the M1A2WF, as well as produces the PGTC C7 Jaguar main battle tank in both the C7A1 and C7A2 versions. West Florida hosts the Emerald Coast Defense Expo (EXDE) on an annual basis, with it being one of the largest defense expos in the world.
West Florida has mandatory military service for both males and females, for 24 months in order to bulk up the West Floridian active and reserve personnel.
Nuclear Policy
West Florida is not confirmed to be in the possession of weapons of mass destruction, and has not ratified the Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). The Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) has argued that West Florida is in possession of undeclared chemical warfare capabilities and a biological warfare program. Officially, West Florida neither confirms nor denies possessing nuclear weapons.
Economy
Since initial colonization by the Spanish in the 16th century, shipbuilding, fishing, agriculture, and trade have been leading sectors of the West Floridian economy. West Florida in 2022 currently benefits from a high level of economic freedom with its economy ranked the one of the most competitive economy in the world by the Swiss International Institute for Management Development. West Florida after the collapse of the United States of America inherited a number of specialized industries such as shipbuilding, aerospace technologies, nuclear industry, oil production & refinement, as well as agriculture and car industries.
As of 2022, the key trading partners of West Florida were Texas, Yucatán, the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, Brazil, China, and Russia. West Florida is one of the world's 10 leading exporting countries as a primary exporter of oil, aerospace, and shipbuilding construction. Other major industries of West Florida include Natural Gas, machinery, electrical goods, trade, services, and tourism.
West Florida has the 25th-largest economy in the world with a top-ten ranking in GDP (nominal) per capita. West Florida has low-income inequality, but wealth inequality is relatively high.
Mobile is the financial and business capital of West Florida, with the Mobile Stock Exchange (XMOB) being one of the largest stock exchanges on the North American continent, although still behind those in the USA, California, Texas, and Canada. West Florida's stock exchange in Mobile primarily focuses on oil, shipbuilding, aerospace, and other energy companies. West Florida opted to make Mobile the primary economic capital of West Florida as part of government efforts to spread the general wealth & power out of just a single city, with Pensacola acting as the political capital, Biloxi-Gulfport as a shipbuilding & resort city for gambling, and Panama City as a tourism hub.
Megaprojects
West Florida has self-funded various megaprojects (projects costing > $1 Billion) in efforts to grow and diversify the national economy. Priority funding is directed towards infrastructure programs such as the Mobile Financial Center & Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Power Plant. Leveling up of the national economy via oil profits has come as a similar strategy to Middle Eastern states such as the UAE, Qatar, and Kuwait. However, without having to fight a desert climate and a repressive Islamic government structure, West Florida has been able to easily promote infrastructure investments to international investors. Key investors in West Florida include the European Union, China, and Middle Eastern states. The flagship foreign investment project into West Florida was the production of two additional 1200 MW nuclear reactors for the Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Power Plant with European Union investments.
West Florida has similarly invested in large civil investment programs, specifically in infrastructure. The $4 billion Norman Schwarzkopf Jr. International Airport was one of the largest projects creating a new international airport outside Pensacola permitting new widebody aircraft. Two years later, the steel cutting of the Pensacola-Mobile metro systems, connected to the Norman Schwarzkopf Jr. Airport. Although other regions of the former United States remain car-centric, West Florida remains one of the most accessible nations for transportation. Existing multi-billion dollar projects inherited by West Florida include the three existing nuclear power plants, I-10 highway system, Intracoastal Waterway, and the Mobile & Pascagoula port systems.