Robert Delari: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 23:
|successor2 = Jeremy Kunthe
|majority2 = 59,602 (61.5%)
|birth_name = Robert Sinter KrassmannKrasmann Delari
|birth_date = 7 September 1914
|birth_place = Fort Jubrayn, [[Staynes]], [[Great Morstaybishlia]]
Line 35:
|website =
}}
'''Robert Dolari''' (''Robert Sinter KrassmannKrasmann Dolari; 7 September 1914 - 21 February 2003'') was a former [[Staynes|Staynish]] politician and former [[MBE Democrats|Democratic]] [[wikipedia:Prime Minister|Prime Minister]] of [[Great Morstaybishlia]] from 1986 to 1991. He served as MP for Montinay for his entire political career from 1957 until his retirement in 1998 and is the last Democratic Prime Minister to hold office.
 
Delari was a hard centrist. His ministry was remembered for its compromising views with [[wikipedia:social welfare|social welfare]], early advocating for [[wikipedia:gay rights|gay rights]] and the Meremaa Civil War.
 
==Delari Administration===
 
In 1989 he passed the Civil Partnership Act 1989 which allowed same sex couples to enter a civil partnership. He reformed some of the social welfare policies introduced in the 1930s and 1940s.
 
Delari sided with the Republican Forces of Meremaa and defiantly withdrew Morstaybishlian endorsement of the Meremain Government in the beginning of 1990 following a military shooting on a labour strike. He announced Morstaybishlia would support the Republican Forces to promote democracy in the region and Morstaybishlia entered the Meremaa Civil War in May 1990. His ministry gained large scrutiny for its public support of the Republican Forces after they began burning down Asatru temples and killing religious adherents.
 
During the war, Delari sent in and lost his first ''Celidizia''-class aircraft carrier MBS ''Augustine'', the results of which saw parliament motion a vote of no confidence. Delari refused to resign and said he would win the 1991 Great Morstaybishlia General Election but ultimately lost. His legacy tarred the public opinion of the [[MBE Democrats|Democratic Party]] in the 1990s and 2000s to such an extent that it nearly dissolved.