Ús Noardlân

Our Noardlân (Doggish: Ús Noardlân, Québecois French: Notre Noardlân) is a pro-Northern party advocating for greater autonomy for the provinces of Crohall, Bloca, Glavell and Medost, in a region they define as Noardlân.

Founding
Ús Noardlân was found in 1999 as a pressure group for regional interests. It included moderate NPD sympathizers who wanted Doggish interests to be considered, Doggish neo-pagans, Crohaller Québécois, farmers and conservative Sworicks. They supported devolution to Noardlân since they considered that the central government didn't do much to fix infrastructure harmed by NPD militias and that ignored the region due to its sympathies to the NPD. They were originally a small faction of the IDP, being the most critical ones with the leader, Beady.

Registral as a party
In 2018, Self-Reliance! was founded as Ús Noardlân's party. It ran in several local elections, winning the mayorship of some towns, including Nouville Montréal.

National Assembly
In the Early July National Assembly Elections, Self-Reliance! ran for the National Assembly, winning 6 out of 100 seats. S-R also managed to win in Bloca, Crohall and Medost with a plurality. This was seen as a sign of protest from Noardlâners, who were tired of politics barely focusing on them. S-R campaigned on Noardlân devolution and in infrastructure to develop Noardlân. They became one of the most active opposition parties, with the party slowly growing.

Ideology
The ÚSN doesn't have any cohesive ideology other than its regionalism and support for devolution. Some of its members have expressed themselves as being right-wing national conservatives like Aldert Hoekstra, while the leader of the party Bent Jansma has shown himself to be much more libertarian. However, with the formation of the New Right the party's right-wing tendencies have decreased, though the party itself remains open to working with right-wing entities.

The party also remains opposed to left-wing ideology and positions being staunchly opposed to the Socialist Reform Bill and REST Act supporting a full repeal rather than a drastic reformation. It also fiercely opposed left-wing budgets, and continuing on from that has shown a preference towards right-wing governments.