New Congress Paralyzed by Gold Diggers

Day 523, 08:36 Published in Japan Japan by Tadahito Kato

It is truly disappointing. The eJapanese citizens are simply unable to sacrifice party-line voting and vote for the right candidates. Six legislations have already been proposed less than one day after the elections. They were proposed by Hans Kloss, webstartm, Mixliarder, and KemanKesh. None of these elected congressmen are living in eJapan now.

The outer territories were, again, dominated by foreigners looking for money and experience. Jeollobuk-do elected two ePolish candidates who already moved back home. Jeollanam-do elected an eCroatian.

Here is a list of candidates that should have definitely been elected but were not:
- Walorm (ISP), Kyushu
- ducPaiement (LPJ), Jeollabuk-do
- Hitori Nanashi (LPJ), Chugoku

These are people who have been active in the media, or at least had posted a presentation before the elections. They were much more active than most of eJapan, but people instead voted for kaliem, Hans Kloss, and jlgo172003. All of these three were members of the National Alliance Party (NAP) and received at least three votes. Interestingly, none of them publishes articles at all and one of them is already living in another country.

The names listed are not the only unfortunate ones. There are many more qualified candidates who should have been elected. This is not the National Alliance Party's fault and, in fact, NAP could have done nothing about it but to inform people about these unknown candidates. But even if they did, nothing could be changed much.

Liberal Party President Seixo published an article before the election listing Liberal candidates running, and mentioning one of them was possibly a gold digger. But the person got elected and is now living happily with his five GOLD in eBrazil. It is not only the system's fault for having a layout that encourages party-line voting, but also the eJapanese public's fault for voting unwisely. What can we do about this?

Some candidates have moved to another country, annoyed by the eJapanese political structure. Although I am not elected, I have decided to stay and help out as much as possible. I will be running for congress again next month, but this time it will not be in Jeollonam-do or any of the frontier regions.

I have learned that without a voter base, these regions will still be dominated by foreigners. Simply running there cannot do much to stop. I will be moving back to Hokkaido, where I started my political career, where I earned trust from the locals, and where I felt most comfortable. Thanks for reading and have a great day!

Tadahito Kato
Former Congressman from Hokkaido