Merry Seraphania 🎄

In my mock government, just seven days after ‪@TulsiPolitics‬ was sworn in as the President-elect of the United States and made history as the first female president, alongside Vice President ‪@MsSantaRose‬who also represented a new era of leadership, the administration announced that long and exhausting Ukraine–Russia peace talks had finally been declared successful after months of global uncertainty, tense negotiations, and behind-the-scenes diplomacy that nearly collapsed multiple times.

The President explained in a national address that while the agreement brought an official end to open warfare, it required Ukraine to make painful territorial concessions by giving up portions of disputed land, a decision described as tragic but necessary to stop further bloodshed, prevent economic collapse, and avoid a wider international conflict that could have drawn multiple superpowers into direct war.

At the same time, TulsiPolitics made it clear that the United States would fully support Ukraine’s accelerated entry into the European Union, arguing that EU membership would provide economic stability, reconstruction funding, and long-term political security, while deliberately ruling out NATO membership on the grounds that expanding NATO further east at this moment could provoke Russia and risk igniting World War III.

Vice President Rose reinforced the administration’s position by stating that peace, even when imperfect and emotionally difficult, was preferable to endless war, and that this strategy balanced moral responsibility with global survival, acknowledging that history would debate the decision but insisting that leadership sometimes meant choosing the least destructive path rather than the most popular one.

The announcement immediately reshaped global alliances, sparked intense debate across Congress and international media, divided public opinion between those who saw the deal as a necessary compromise and those who viewed it as a betrayal of Ukrainian sovereignty, and marked the first major foreign-policy test of a presidency that had already redefined American political history within its first week.

5 days ago | [YT] | 1