With the beginning of the elections and constant, highly heated debate, the major factions of the Revolutionary Front have begun to devolve into further factionalization over weeks of disputes about economic, foreign, and internal policy.
On the libertarian left, the Individual Security Front has lost many members to a new and burgeoning Social Radical Party, an anti-statist and pro-decentralization party which could not reconcile with the pro-establishment nature of the councilists in the Front. The loyalists to said Front briefly formed the Individual Security Party before finding common ground with another splitter party we will discuss later.
On the radical far-left, the Collectivist Front, as expected, has utterly shattered beyond repair, blossoming into multiple political factions across the socialist political spectrum.
The closest thing to the former ISF within the Collectivist Front was the Kotsij Clique, led by Dangam Kotsij and his ideological allies. A staunch internationalist councileer from West Muremysct, his inspirational speeches in his home region and actions within the capital city have propelled his viewpoints into relevancy, and only a few short months after the beginning of the election preparation season, he and most of the former ISF pledged to form the International Revolutionary Party, a pro-democracy, moderately pro-establishment, and radically internationalist party which rejects the centralist nature of the other CF splitter parties while still maintaining many aspects of state socialism.
In the direct center of the Kyldigardian political compass lies the centralist faction of the Collectivist Front, lead by Gerom Basclijem and other prominent centralist socialist politicians. The centralists rapidly founded the Worker's Patriotic Party, attracting many moderates from the National Collectivist Party, focusing on building socialism within Kyldigard itself, as well as fostering a "New Kyldigardian Spirit" and cracking down on reactionary thought in the country. While significantly more popular than the other two CF splitter parties, most parties in the Njatsejm would rather form coalitions on either their left or their right rather than work with them, meaning they must rely on their own charisma and political maneuvering to get a majority in the upcoming elections.
To the right of the IRP and WPP, the third and final major CF splitter party is the last to be founded, the People's Unity Party, spearheaded by a group of revisionist politicians who agree with political centralism but disagree on the economic policies a so-called "socialist" country must have. Embracing the ideals of so-called "market socialism", they believe in allowing limited private enterprise on a socialist-oriented market in order to develop the nation's economy in preparation for true economic socialism. They are also noticably less keen on social justice issues, taking a moderate or sometimes even centrist approach to their advancement.
After the PUP's formation and some minor failures in Social Democrat-controlled regions, a small yet significant amount of the SDP's voterbase turned their eyes to the PUP or even the Utopian Party, giving them both more popularity, although whether voters are to continue their path towards these parties is uncertain.