It has been almost a century since Whiterock Island gained its independence from what was then the Federation of Isle-Sparks. Much has grown, shifted, and changed. And for Whiterock Island, not for the better.
Over the last century, the Circum-Terra Stepping-Path Agreement has revolutionized international borders, making true exit rights a reality for the vast majority of Earth's citizens. Sponsored by the Constellation of Asterion, nearly ninety percent of the Earth's landmass is now within the treaty body's area of open borders.
In the same hundred years, exportation of phosphate mined from Whiterock Island - its only significant natural resource - has left the soil poor and the island in short supply of ready cash. While there have been efforts to make the mining sustainable and marshal the funds from exportation, phosphate is Whiterock's only major export; to slow its mining is only to extend the life of the island, which is heavily reliant on imported food, never to save it.
It was never politically popular on Whiterock Island to attempt to join the Circum-Terra Stepping-Path agreement. The UBI of the island has been significantly higher than many Stepping-Path countries' thanks to the phosphate fund being spread over a small population of only ten thousand. If more people were to move to the island, that fund would be significantly diluted. And so its borders have remained closed to immigration for many years.
However, it is increasingly becoming clear that the writing is on the wall. In the last two decades, the phosphate has dried up. While the island could remain habitable by hard agricultural labour and gardening on land reclaimed from the phosphate mines, the remaining soil outside them is poor, composed mostly of broken coral and silt, and much of the island's natural flora and fauna has been stripped by industrial processes. The old government is tooled for resource extraction, and after a series of bad investments it has had to reduce UBI payments significantly.
If the island were to join the Constellation of Asterion, however, its residents would then begin to be supported by its great economic engine, not the fading ashes of a tiny island now nearly empty of phosphate.
It's quite clear how the populace will vote: in favour of the Stepping-Path, and in favour of the Constellation. But few in the existing government apparatus are thrilled at being made redundant by Asterion officials.
Nonetheless, a vote has been called by the opposition leader, an up-and-comer by the name of Blackfish...