The Republic of New York or more commonly New York is a federal presidential constitutional republic consisting of seven states and two federal districts. New York was formed in the aftermath of the collapse of the United States, and a new government was created quickly after it was established that the United States was no more. Then-governor Herbert H. Lehman was appointed interim President while elections were yet to be held. It was decided that the basic principles of the former United States would be carried on into New York, creating a similar constitution and and electoral process to continue the republican traditions of the former United States.
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| - New York (Yellowstone: 1936)
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| - The Republic of New York or more commonly New York is a federal presidential constitutional republic consisting of seven states and two federal districts. New York was formed in the aftermath of the collapse of the United States, and a new government was created quickly after it was established that the United States was no more. Then-governor Herbert H. Lehman was appointed interim President while elections were yet to be held. It was decided that the basic principles of the former United States would be carried on into New York, creating a similar constitution and and electoral process to continue the republican traditions of the former United States.
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abstract
| - The Republic of New York or more commonly New York is a federal presidential constitutional republic consisting of seven states and two federal districts. New York was formed in the aftermath of the collapse of the United States, and a new government was created quickly after it was established that the United States was no more. Then-governor Herbert H. Lehman was appointed interim President while elections were yet to be held. It was decided that the basic principles of the former United States would be carried on into New York, creating a similar constitution and and electoral process to continue the republican traditions of the former United States. Immediately following the Yellowstone Eruption the state of New York became a target for refugees from immigrants from nearby regions, contributing to the massive food shortages in the first few years of independence. New York's geographic position towards the north of the United States would also make it susceptible to long periods of cold weather and snow storms, causing occasional crop failure and starvation. New York rose in the post-destruction period to become a state worthy of note, largely thanks to its pre-Yellowstone condition in the United States economically. Large portions of the state's poor class citizens, namely refugees and foreigners, were be employed in dangerous factory conditions in New York City and other urban centers, creating large quantities of manufactured goods, and would lead the state into a a large economy, built on the backs of poor laborers and their mass production of goods. New York City regained its position as a capital of finance in the New World, and the republic itself would become a safe haven for those seeking a new life, repeating the pattern of the United States in the 19th century.
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