[center][color=firebrick][u][h2]Labour Front[/h2][/u][h3]The National Assembly[/h3][/color][/center] It had been a momentous few weeks, the first election in Samgola following the devastating civil war had concluded and it was official, the country would be beholden to the corporate bureaucrats and their paid mouthpieces within the National Assembly. Ashur Boro, the sole representative for the Labour Front, sat quietly in his seat at the Assembly as the debates began on the administration's actions in the critical first term of the new government. As the proposals came in and the new government announced their plans, Ashur had symbolically abstained from voting on the Bassong Cabinet as a show of the party's displeasure but had cast his vote in favour of the Coalition's 1993-1994 Samgolan Federal Budget, putting people over politics and preferring that the state be able to run at all as opposed to the alternative. The National War Monuments Bill had been proposed, had undergone several amendments in a Tri-partisan effort and had been swiftly defeated at the vote by the D.A.R. and L.D. parties. Mr Boro himself had stood to join the verbal sparring only when the issue of increased privatization within the health industry had been threatened by the Liberal Democrat's Freedom of Health Act. That debate however had quickly soured when it became evident that only himself and the fascists of the Samgolan Dawn opposed the proposal, perhaps sensing victory, the Bill was in swift order pushed to the vote and when the time had come to cast that vote Mr Boro, standing with his conscience, had voted No but not without a speech: "The Labour Front opposes and will continue to do so the increasing privatization of this nation until the Samgolan people are prey to the predatory private sector. The removal of the current regulations on the private health sector can only lead to a downfall in standards as companies are no longer held to the standard of providing good healthcare. A more viable alternative, this party believes, would be a focus on improving the standards of the national healthcare service as opposed to offloading the responsibilities of this government to care for it's citizens to the private sector." [hider=Actions of the Labour Front] [b]Voting:[/b] - [B]ABSTAIN[/b] on the vote to ratify the Cabinet Proposal of President Samuel Bassong - Vote [b]YES[/b] on the 1993-1994 Budget - Vote [b]NO[/b] on the Freedom of Health Act [/hider]