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Sovereign Kingdom Party
v.
The Crown of the Kingdom of Alexandria
v.
The Crown of the Kingdom of Alexandria
I. Jurisdictional Statement
This Court has jurisdiction over this suit through Alex. Const. Part III Sec. 15. Specifically, Sec. 15 describes this Court has exclusive jurisdiction over constitutional questions.
II. Parties
- The Sovereign Kingdom Party is a duly registered party within the Kingdom of Alexandria, governed by her laws, and subject to regulations regarding elections.
- The Crown of the Kingdom of Alexandria is the legal body recognized for proper service of suits alleging constitutional violations. See Reallmza v. The Crown, Case 1 (Ch. 2025) (Where this Court dismissed plaintiffs suit, but not before determining that plaintiff had proper standing to challenge the crown).
- On April 8, 2025, the Ministry of Internal Affairs promulgated the Party Policy document.
- Within the Party Policy document, the ministry of internal affairs listed the requirements for maintaining party registration. That list required the Party Secretary to respond to their registration thread with the following: 1) Total party membership, 2) party leadership, 3) the number of members currently in parliament, 4) the number of members who hold an Alexandrian government job, 5) the updated Party Mainfesto, 6) the party corporation, 7) the estimated amount of donations and expenditures of the party corporation, 8) and a brief statement of the previous month's activities in the party's thread on the forums
- The same policy listed this must be done "during the first 7 days of each month to be considered a registered party."
- The same policy listed that "parties who do not complete this will be unregistered and must wait until the 15th of the month to apply to become a registered party."
- The same policy listed that players could register their political parties "at any point in April."
- On May 7, 2025, the Labour Party, the Alexandria's Public Service Party, and the United Central Party all failed to properly maintain their registration as described within the party policy requirements. See Exhibit D; Exhibit E; Exhibit F.
- On May 9, 2025 (UTC), the Ministry of Internal Affairs announced that parties would be able to maintain their registration until May 15, 2025, and silently updated the Party Policy document to reflect these changes. See Exhibit A; Exhibit B; Exhibit C.
- On May 9, 2025 (UTC), the Sovereign Kingdom Party, a political entity lawfully incorporated and properly maintaining its registration with the Ministry of Internal Affairs noticed this announcement and brought forth this lawsuit.
- The timeline for party registration concluded, and parties at that point were deregistered. As a result, they no longer existed as political entities which may oppose the Sovereign Kingdom Party in free and fair elections.
- In order to prevent this, the Ministry of Internal Affairs took steps to arbitrarily change their policy documents in order to allow these parties to run in the election.
- This arbitrary change treats parties which properly registered in time and followed all applicable laws and regulations substantially differently from parties which failed to properly meet their deadlines.
- Under Alex. Const. Part V, Sec. 22, Sub. 10, all players are "equal before and under the law."
- Because the Sovereign Kingdom Party was treated substantially differently from all other parties, and because the Ministry of Internal Affairs acted to purposefully grant additional time to parties other than the Sovereign Kingdom Party, the Ministry of Internal Affairs has treated the deregistered parties substantially unequally leading to harm against the Sovereign Kingdom Party.
- Additionally, the Ministry of Internal Affairs silently changed the month requirement for party registration from April to at any point.
- This change resulted in the ability for parties to register a mere 7 days from the election, despite longstanding guidance on the issue dating back at least a month.
- As a result, any party that would be delisted may register despite this longstanding guidance at any point up to and including into the election.
Therefore, because the Ministry of Internal Affairs acted to unfairly discriminate against the Sovereign Kingdom Party, the plaintiff requests that this Honorable Court strike down the current party policy document and revert it back to the May 8, 2025 version. Additionally, the Sovereign Kingdom Party requests this Honorable Court instruct the Ministry of Internal Affairs to deregister the Labour Party, the Alexandria's Public Service Party, and the United Central Party until such time they comply with the law. We ask this Court issue declaratory relief that the Labour Party, the Alexandria's Public Service Party, and the United Central Party were not registered during the previous policies required time period, and thus were not properly registered for the May Elections.
Respectfully Submitted,
Joseph Ibney
General Counsel
Sovereign Kingdom Party
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