The Rise of Aura Valance
After the first year struggles, Aura Valance, wasted no time in asserting her vision for the future. At just twenty-three, born on Earth and sharpened by years of martial arts discipline, Valance brought an intensity to governance that matched her restless energy. Backed by a ruling coalition of Federalists, Traders, and Militarists holding a slim but reliable 56.83% majority in the House of Representatives, her administration started its second year with a rapid-fire legislative assault.
Her first act was sweeping: the creation of a Federal Reserve Bank to coordinate the allocation of interplanetary funds and redistribute services based on each colony’s contribution. Signed directly through presidential legislation, this foundational move signalled that Valance intended to remake the economic architecture of the Federation from the top down. As part of her agreement backed by a robust Federalist-Trade-Militarist coalition, this was a necessary step to avoid further gridlocks on important resolutions, or at least this was her hope.
The following weeks saw the approval of twin shipyard expansions: one naval and one commercial, granting Cantrell and Agasthenes the capacity to handle far larger construction loads. These moves were essential to Valance’s longer-term vision of military readiness and commercial self-reliance. Without pause, she pushed forward a sweeping infrastructure package: 10,000 units laid in preparation for a full-scale colonization of the Sol System. Despite concerns over cost and logistics, it passed narrowly.
With momentum building, Valance invoked presidential sway to fast-track research into Trans-Newtonian technologies, effectively starting the Aurora Genesis program: an ambitious leap meant to unlock the next generation of physics and resource manipulation.
The first real friction of her second year emerged when her proposal to increase all engines power by 40% was rejected. Critics, especially from the Pacifist bloc, argued the research strained resources already allocated to infrastructure. Refusing to concede defeat, Valance revised the bill overnight, attaching a set of manufacturing improvements aimed at easing implementation. On its second vote, the bill passed with overwhelming support.
Her push into material sciences fared better. Research into a new composite armour alloy passed smoothly, likely due to its straightforward military and civilian value. However, a proposed Science Department ship component, originally framed for civilian exploration, failed spectacularly. Valance, recognising the political winds, returned it the following month with military applicability woven into its function. This time, it passed by a landslide.
Encouraged, she turned to ground forces, proposing upgrades to construction rate technologies. The first attempt was crushed. The House, wary of overextending into too many research fronts at once, balked. But after the resolution was reintroduced with amendments penned by representatives from both the Militarist and Nationalist representatives, it cleared easily. This would become a recurring theme of her second year: failure, rapid revision, and eventual success through compromise.
Even economic reform proved contentious. A proposal to increase wealth generation per million TN workers was initially viewed as too aggressive and was defeated. Yet, when reintroduced with opposition-backed modifications, it passed. Valance had begun to learn that raw willpower was not always enough, and her impatience was already eroding all her political power motion after motion. The same process repeated with her bill to modernise ground force construction equipment, first rejected, then accepted with cross-party adjustments.
Still, not all battles were won. Her attempt to launch a xenoarchaeology equipment initiative, a key step in unlocking alien technologies, met initial resistance from budget-conscious delegates. It took 2 months for a revised version to be passed after the House of Representatives majority reframed the research as a vital matter of national security rather than academic curiosity.
The following quarter tested the President’s patience more than any prior. On July 28th, HSCR000017 was introduced to increase maintenance support capacity per facility to 1,250 tons, a measure intended to raise the ceiling for the number of active commissioned military ships. However, the bill was met with scathing criticism. Opposition members denounced it as reckless militarism that ignored the socioeconomic consequences of overcapacity, while even some moderates raised alarms over its potential to disrupt the labour market. The resolution was crushed: 83 in favour, 422 against.
Undeterred, Valance returned the next week with a revised version, HSCR000017-B, offering concessions to labour unions and addressing employment volatility in outlying sectors. Yet despite these changes, the proposal still fell short. Her frustration was palpable, especially among her own coalition members, some of whom had begun to question the wisdom of pushing expansion faster than the workforce could adjust.
Then, in a striking display of executive resolve, Valance invoked Presidential Sway. On August 30th, she bypassed the deadlocked House and forced HSCR000017-C through, restoring the initiative and cementing her authority. It was a dramatic move, constitutional but controversial, and it sent a clear message: the President would not allow military readiness to be stalled by what she reportedly called “legislative hesitation in the face of galactic inevitability.”
That same day, she faced yet another setback. HSCR000018, which proposed outfitting ground forces with advanced geosurvey equipment for expanded interstellar reconnaissance, was narrowly defeated. The opposition cited budgetary bloat and mission redundancy. But in a surprising turn, it was the opposition themselves who salvaged the proposal. Just days later, on September 1st, a new version, HSCR000018-B, was reintroduced with opposition-led adjustments focused on cost containment and dual-purpose civilian use. The bill passed. It was a strange moment of bipartisanship in an increasingly polarised chamber, and it reflected a growing dynamic: Aura Valance could still win battles, but sometimes she would have to let her opponents carry the torch for her ideas.
There were moments of near-universal agreement too. A bill to expand orbital mining operations passed by a wide margin, reflecting growing concern over resource independence. Valance secured an important victory with the passing of another resolution aimed at further expanding the development of a new generation of advanced composite armour alloys. This resolution, supported by both industrial and military blocs, underscored her continued focus on strengthening fleet durability in anticipation of deeper space deployments.
However, her later proposal to increase the minimum engine size was struck down. Some viewed it as redundant so soon after the engine power upgrades. But, once more, a version emphasising dual-use application for civilian transport and military logistics turned the tide. Ironically, on November 2nd, HSCR000019 passed with overwhelming support, increasing minimum engine power by a further 30%. Unlike the earlier, more controversial engine reform debates, this resolution had been carefully framed as a practical efficiency upgrade rather than an arms race measure.
By the end of the year 0001, Valance had pushed through a final, crucial piece of legislation, an upgrade to missile tracking efficiency. With tensions mounting on the periphery of explored space and whispers of unknown hostilities in the dark, this resolution sailed through the House.
What began as a presidency of pure force was rapidly evolving into one of strategic manoeuvring.
Opposition voices had not been silenced but brought into the fold where necessary. Through each proposal and each revised vote, Aura Valance was not just building a stronger Federation, she was proving she could lead it.