Administrative Division (From Sea to Shining Sea)

The United Socialist Republics of America (USRA), informally United America, is federal socialist state integrated by the Workers Socialist Republic (WSR) and National Territories. Below them there are several forms of administrative organization.

Workers Socialist Republic (the former US States)
The Workers Socialist Republic are sovereign entities that have political jurisdiction over their territory and share their sovereignty with the national government and are bound together as part of the Revolutionary America. They take part in decision-making process of the National Government and coordinate and assist their actions with it.

The republics must have a republican, democratic, socialist, and revolutionary form of government (article 5 of the National Constitution). The republics have usually settled in the following constitutional schemes:
 * 1) Preamble
 * 2) A Bill of Political and Social Rights, based on the National Constitution with amendments peculiar to the republic. For example Oklahoma as also incorporated the rights of Indians and others minorities.
 * 3) Social and/or public ownership of land, means of production and natural resources.
 * 4) Statement and guarantee of the sovereignty and source of all political power comes from the working people and the powers delegated on the branches of government of the Republic
 * 5) The right of Initiative, referendum, and recall and law process making of the legislative and executive branches. Qualifications, term limits and recall of the legislative, executive and judiciary branches.
 * 6) Relationship and coordination between the Republics and National Government. Also the mandate and ability to make compacts of interest or cooperation between republics
 * 7) An elected legislature that is the supreme ruling body with dual legislative and executive functions. The majority of the republics have an unicameral legislature, however some particularly those with autonomous regional communities, autonomous Indian Communities or communes have second chamber (Council of the Republic or Council of Delegates)
 * 8) An executive either directly elected or named by the legislature. This executive can be unipersonal (Governor or Republic-President) or collective (Council of State, Executive Council or Supreme Executive Council). The Republican council of ministers named by the executive or approved by the legislature. Other non elected republic officers (Comptroller, Attorney General, etc.
 * 9) Legislative process of law making, budget, taxation and revenue. Also the delegation of some of it to local governments and oversight by the republic's legislature. Regulation of emergency powers of the executive.
 * 10) A unified judiciary with its high tribunal being a supreme court (Supreme Court, Supreme Judicial Court, etc.) named by the legislature, appointment by executive with collegial body consent or by mixed system composed of the executive, legislative and judicial branches. The state supreme court is the Republican final court of appeal in all civil, criminal, labor, social and Indian cases, supervises and names all lower courts. The guarantee of right of appeal to National Supreme Court.
 * 11) Organization of republican institutions and services (education health, welfare, civil service, etc)
 * 12) Administrative division, organization and degree of self government. Mechanism of intervention and necessity clauses in local administration
 * 13) Constitutional reform (legislative process, constituent assembly or referendum)

Most republics use preferential voting or proportional representation to determine the outcome of elections. Though, a few particularly underpopulated ones use a system of first-past-the-post voting. The number of deputies of the council and timing of the elections is determined by each republic, resulting in wide difference between when these elections are held in each republic, ranging from as little as five months to eight years between elections.

The republics (WSR) are:
 * 1) Alabama
 * 2) Arizona
 * 3) Arkansas
 * 4) California
 * 5) Colorado
 * 6) Connecticut
 * 7) Dakota (merger of North and South Dakotas. Approved by WSR referendum in each former republic.
 * 8) Delaware
 * 9) Florida
 * 10) Georgia
 * 11) Idaho
 * 12) Illinois
 * 13) Indiana
 * 14) Iowa
 * 15) Kansas
 * 16) Kentucky
 * 17) Louisiana
 * 18) Maine
 * 19) Maryland
 * 20) Massachusetts
 * 21) Michigan
 * 22) Minnesota
 * 23) Mississippi
 * 24) Missouri
 * 25) Montana
 * 26) Nebraska
 * 27) Nevada
 * 28) New Hampshire
 * 29) New Jersey
 * 30) New Mexico
 * 31) New York
 * 32) North Carolina
 * 33) Ohio
 * 34) Oklahoma
 * 35) Oregon
 * 36) Pennsylvania
 * 37) Rhode Island
 * 38) South Carolina
 * 39) Tennessee
 * 40) Texas
 * 41) Utah
 * 42) Vermont
 * 43) Virginia
 * 44) Washington
 * 45) West Virginia
 * 46) Wisconsin
 * 47) Wyoming

The First compact formed is New England (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont), later Cascadia (Idaho, Oregon and Washington), Appalachia (Tennessee, Kentucky, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia and commune of Pittsburgh) and Great Plains (Montana, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, and South Dakota)

Commune
The communes elect deputies to National Workers Congress and enjoy limited autonomy and self-rule and a special status from the republic of which they are part of.
 * 1) Chicago
 * 2) Detroit
 * 3) Georgetown (former Washington DC)
 * 4) Los Angeles
 * 5) Manhattan (New York City)
 * 6) New Orleans
 * 7) Philadelphia
 * 8) Pittsburgh
 * 9) Cleveland
 * 10) St. Louis

Autonomous Regional Community (ARC)
The Autonomous Regional Communities have representation in the Republic's legislature, executive and judiciary. They are also a local government unit. They have self-rule. The ARC have been established in Arkansas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, and South Carolina recognizing previous liberated areas and homesteads of the Black Liberation movement. Also included are Freedmen's towns.

Autonomous Indian Community (AIC)
The Autonomous Indian Communities have representation in the Republic's legislature, executive and judiciary. They are also a local government unit. They enjoy full cultural rights. The AIC have autonomous and elected branches of government (an Indian Territory Legislature or similar, executive and judiciary) and elect deputies to the National Congress.
 * 1) Apache Nation (in New Mexico and Arizona)
 * 2) Blackfoot Confederacy (in Montana, Wyoming and Idaho)
 * 3) Cherokee (in Oklahoma, North Carolina and Tennessee)
 * 4) Chickasaw (in Oklahoma)
 * 5) Choctaw (in Oklahoma)
 * 6) Comanche (in Oklahoma, Texas and New Mexico)
 * 7) Haudenosaunee (officially) /Iroquoia (colloquially) (in New York)
 * 8) Innu-aimun Territories (in Alaska)
 * 9) Lakota Republic (Lakota-Dakota-Nakota people - in S. and N. Dakota and Nebraska)
 * 10) Muscogee (Creek) (in Oklahoma)
 * 11) Navajo Nation (in New Mexico)
 * 12) Ojibwe (in Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota and North Dakota)
 * 13) Pueblo (in New Mexico and Arizona)
 * 14) Seminole (in Oklahoma and Florida)
 * 15) Sequoyah (Cherokee nation in Oklahoma)

Local Indian Region (LIR)
The Local Indian Regions have representation in the Republic's legislature. They are also a local government unit. They enjoy full cultural rights. They have limited self-rule.
 * (several in many states and territories)

National Territories
The National Territories are under direct National administration, until they reach a level of population and economic development that enables them to become a republic. Also unorganized or sparsely populated territories are national territories. Territories have limited self rule at all levels.
 * Alaska