The British Commonwealth (Fascist Coup Britain)

The British Commonwealth is an international organisation formed by the British Government in exile following the fall of the British Isles. The Organisation was formed with the aim of maintaining the unity of the British Empire following the power vacuum caused by the fall of Britain.

History
The Commonwealth was established in 1937 by the Treaty of Halifax in which the signatories reaffirmed their loyalty to the British Royal Family and pledged to defend other member states of the Commonwealth against attack and pledged to maintain the stability of one another.

As soon as the organisation was founded it was plunged into the Colonial Wars in which the Commonwealth thought to maintain its control over the signatory states and the former territories of the British Empire. Whilst the Commonwealth faced some defeats, most notably in Egypt and East Africa, it was victorious in Nigeria, Malaya and Iraq, where Commonwealth control was firmly established.

Alongside the Colonial Wars the Commonwealth also played a key role in the Second World War where the Commonwealth deployed a significant number of resources to the defeat of the Axis powers.

Following the end of the Second World War and the Colonial Wars the Commonwealth has remained a largely stable organisation, bar some interventions in member states when anti-Commonwealth forces have attempted to seize power. Such interventions have always proved deeply controversial and have brought significant condemnation upon the organisation whenever such an intervention has been carried out.

Membership
The Commonwealth consists of the bulk of the former British Empire and contains multiple member states:
 * Australia
 * Canada
 * Falklands Protectorate
 * Federation of Malaya
 * Federation of Rhodesia and Nyasaland
 * Federation of South Arabia
 * Indian Federation
 * Indian Ocean Protectorate
 * Iraq
 * Mediterranean Protectorate
 * New Zealand
 * Nigeria
 * Pacific Islands Protectorate
 * South Africa
 * West Africa Protectorate
 * West Indies Federation

Organisation
The Commonwealth is nominally under the leadership of Queen Elizabeth II, the ruling monarch in most members of the Commonwealth, however she serves as a constitutional monarch and most power lies in the hands of the two chambers of the Commonwealth Secretariat; the Privy Council, which consists of the Heads of Government of all members of the Commonwealth, and the Commonwealth Parliament, in which each member is given a certain amount of seats and the right to decide how those seats are allocated for each Parliament's 5 year term, with most choosing to elect their members either directly or indirectly.

The Privy Council elects the Commonwealth Secretary General, one of the two leaders of the Commonwealth, with the Incumbent being John Key, former Prime Minister of New Zealand who was elected in May 2017. Whilst the Commonwealth Parliament elects the Commonwealth President from amongst its membership at the beginning of each Parliamentary term, the Incumbent being Will Addington, former Leader of the United Federal Party of Rhodesia and Nyasaland and leader of the opposition of Rhodesia and Nyasaland from 2005 to 2010, who was also elected in May 2017.