The United States has states, territories, protectorates.
It does, but it won those territories by conquering them, and then not fully integrating them into the Union as states. I'd hardly think the Federation does the same thing ...
And would the Federation compel the return off un-integrated territories? I'm sure after the war the Romulans would love to get their Earth-conquered territories back.
Who's to say that United Earth conquered any territories form the Romulan Star Empire?
Some Federation members may be "Full Members." Others may choose a more limited role, agreeing to the Federations laws to become "Trade Only Members."
But that idea makes no sense. You're either part of the Federation or you're not; Federation law either applies to you or it doesn't. Why become "Trade Members" -- gaining some of the obligations of Membership but not equal representation in the Federation government -- when you can just negotiate a trade treaty but remain independent?
I quess it would have to do with who has the power, hypothetical situation: There's an existing interstellar government, ten species, ten home worlds, hundred colonies (round numbers).The Federation
really wants this union to join the Federation, they have dilithium, technology, trade, and culture. They would be an asset to the Federation in every way. Oh, and they have a sizable fleet in a time when the Federation is facing a problem on it's far frontier. The union generally wants to join the Federation. But only under their terms, they don't want a trade agreement or a mutual defense pact, they will become a Federation Member. The Federation has conditions and so do they.
Sure. But the idea that anyone would want to become an unequal Federation Member -- would want to be subject to Federation law but wouldn't want an equal say in
making that law -- is absurd.
And, yes, being a Federation Member means accepting the rule of Federation law. The Federation is not a mere alliance -- it is an interstellar
state. We know this because the Federation Council was able to pass legislation establishing a Warp 5 speed limit within Federation space and for Federation vessels (TNG: "Forces of Nature"), because it conducts foreign policy with other interstellar states without consulting its Member State governments (
Star Trek VI, "The Way of the Warrior"), because it maintains its own military in the Federation Starfleet (TOS: "Court Martial"), because it has the capacity to declare martial law on its Member States' planets (DS9: "Homefront"), because it possesses its own law enforcement agencies with powers of arrest in both Starfleet (DS9: "Let He Who Is Without Sin...") and an agency called Federation Security (
Star Trek III), because it has a Federation Supreme Court with the power of judicial review (DS9: "Dr. Bashir, I Presume?"), because it declares and wages war (DS9 Dominion War arc), because it has a Charter and Constitution that enumerate the rights of its citizens and which its Member States must obey (TNG: "The Drumhead," DS9: "The Accession"), and because it has an elected President who other Member States see as being "their" President (
Star Trek IV, DS9: "Paradise Lost").
Certainly, the Federation seems to practice federalism. The Federation government doesn't have absolute authority in all areas of society; there are some areas where the Federation seems to practice dual sovereignty and leave the Member States to decide those issues for themselves. But the fact remains that the Federation is not a mere alliance or intergovernmental organization like the United Nations; it is a state in its own right, and as such the idea that one can be a Federation Member without being subject to Federation law is absurd.
Which, again, makes no sense. The territories in the U.S. that have non-voting members of Congress are all trying to change that, because they don't want to be rendered unequal before U.S. law and resent being subject to federal law without having equal say in federal law. No one would willingly choose to subject themselves to Federation law without getting equal say in the government.
A non-voting member would be a specie who have no cultural experiences with representational governments. Being in the Federation brings them security and happiness, they enjoy the social interaction with other species. They're perfectly content to let others take care of the messy business of government.
Sci, they don't vote because they don't want to, and no one's going to make them.
A state that is not in itself some form of democracy? Then the Federation shouldn't allow them to join, period. That would be like the United States allowing a dictatorship to join as a state.
The Federation after all isn't just it's government.
I agree, the Federation is not a government. A government is the organization charged with running a state. The Federation is a
state, not a government (though it has a government), just like the Commonwealth of Australia is a state, not a government (though it has a government).
Well, the United States allows its states to be members of international groups and parties to international compacts, subject to federal regulation. I'm sure the Federation would allow the same of its Member States, provided that sovereignty remain with the Federation.
You're assuming that a potential member is agreeing to surrender their sovereignty upon joining the Federation.
To be specific, I'm assuming -- because the evidence from the canon makes it very clear that this is the case -- that the Federation practices
federalism, sharing some power with the Member State governments while retaining certain powers for its own government.
And I'm assuming that because we've seen far too much evidence that the Federation possesses sovereignty in its own right not to (as I outlined above).
The possibility exists Sci that the Federation is powerless inside the domains of the individual Federation members.
There's really no evidence of that, especially given as how we know that Federation Starfleet officers are authorized to serve as law enforcement in Federation Member States' territories from "Let He Who Is Without Sin...."
The episode Journey To Babel suggests that the Federation's power over it's members is in fact weak.
We can't cite "Journey to Babel" to support much of anything about how the Federation normally works, because Kirk's captains log entries make it very clear that the Federation is on the verge of civil war over the issue of admitting Coridan to the Federation. In other words, it's an extraordinary situation that's far removed from how the Federation normally functions. Citing "Journey to Babel" to support the idea that Federation authority over its Members is a bit like citing
Bleeding Kansas or the
nullification crisis to support the idea that federal authority over U.S. states is weak.
A Federation member, in addition to being a member of the Federation, may also be a member of another interstellar government, or multiple governments, as many as they choose, to the degree they choose. The Federation would have no say in this because of one important fact:
The Federation is it's members.
No.
You can't serve two masters. The State of Ohio cannot simultaneously be the Province of Ohio in Canada, and Vulcan cannot simultaneously be a Member State of the United Federation of Planets and a Member State of the Federated Union of Worlds. The law is the law, and you can't belong to two separate states.
And, no, the Federation is not merely its Members, any more than the United States of America is merely its states or Canada is merely its provinces or the Federal Republic of Germany is merely its
Länder. The Federation is a state in its own right, with its own law and its own, quadrant-wide concerns. The United States of America is not merely Massachusetts, Maine, Vermont, Ohio, Arkansas, etc.; Canada is not merely Ontario, Quebec, British Columbia, etc.; the Federal Republic of Germany is not merely Bavaria, Berlin, Brandenburg, etc.; Australia is not merely New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, etc. And the Federation is more than just United Earth, the Confederacy of Vulcan, the Andorian Empire, the Republic of Bajor, etc.
If a member world is on the boundary between the Federation and a second interstellar state, it may be encouraged to join both governments, the world would be a important diplomatic players between the two states.
No. The Federation may well encourage that Member State to join an interstellar organization -- a multilateral diplomatic platform like the Organization of American States -- under Federation supervision, but it would not allow another state to claim its territory.
I personally think that the Federation will be more of a melting pot of governmental ideas, not simply a analog of a Earth western-style democracy,
I agree. The Federation is likely an amalgamation of Vulcan, Andorian, and Tellarite-style democracy along with Earth democracy.
Years ago I wrote a story of the growth of the interstellar government, Earth, Vulcan and the others formed The United Planets (from Forbidden Planet), after decades of exploring space they came upon The Federation, after a period of conflict and friendship the two large republics merged, the UP didn't join the Fed and the Fed didn't join the UP. Again they merged, forming The United Federation of Planets.
The problem with this idea is that it is explicitly contradicted by TNG's "The Outcast," which establishes that the United Federation of Planets was founded in 2161.
If the Federation admits a single world that's one thing, but the Federation is going to be admitting on occasion large republics, empires, confederacys, merging with them. The Federation has to be offering more than "Come be our willing thralls."
You have a strange definition of "willing thrall" if you define it as being a partner in a democracy that you have an equal say in running.
In the case of the Federation, it would be a neat point to say that a Federation Councillor must be one of two things:
a) Directly elected by the planet they represent.
b) Chosen by the planetary government, and responsible to that government.
I'll agree with "chosen by the planetary government," but I don't agree with the idea of the Councillor being responsible to that government. A Federation Councillor is supposed to be a representative of the people of his Member State, not an ambassador who represents his Member State's government. That'd be like the Governor of the State of Ohio being able to recall United States Senator George Voinovich.
Plus since United Earth is apparently a Parliamentary democracy, it seems that its councillor is more like Andor's than Betazed's.
We don't know, actually; the mechanism by which the Federation Councillor from United Earth is chosen has never been established, although Councillor Matthew Mazibuko is established to be a long-standing member of the Council.
In later books the authors have taken greater pains to refer to parliamentary forms of government, which is a nice change.
Yep. It's nice to see a Federation that isn't homogenized too much.
