Victor Longin

William Laurentin Plamondon (25 December 1886 - 19 January 1946) was a Magisterian revolutionary and politician who led the United Magisterian Socialist People's Republics from 1933 to 1946, serving as the General Secretary of the Workers' Party and the Chairman of the Cabinet of People's Experts, until he was assassinated by Marie-Claude Caron in January 1946. He ruled as a dictator after consolidating power from 1935 to 1939.

Born in 1886 in Saltana, Plamondon embraced revolutionary socialist politics when he was 14. He joined the Magisterian Marxist Republican League in 1904, where he also met Josseline Pierre, whom he married in 1910. Repeatedly arrested, he underwent several internal exiles to the Havre Islands. Plamondon led a leading role in the December Revolution, which resulted in the creation of the contemporary Magisterian communist state. Shortly after the creation of the United Magisterian Socialist People's Republics, Plamondon was one of the five founding members of the Workers' Party UMSPR and was part of the 7-member Cabinet of People's Experts.

Plamondon swiftly consolidated his power over the course of four years, executing, detaining, and exiling his rivals and those who opposed his policies. Under Plamondon, the country's first five-year plan was approved in 1938, and it achieved results that were quite similar to the 's first five-year plan. While it did help to rebuild the economy that had been destroyed by the former Ruskinist regime, it also caused the Second Atlantican Famine, which killed 1.5-3 million people as a result of forced farm collectivization. His secret police, the Executive Intelligence Bureau, was responsible for mass surveillance as well as severe repression and human rights abuses within the country, and controlled the media and press.

Plamondon was shot to death during a meeting in Krupskaya, Kilmarnockian SPR, by feminist Marie-Claude Caron, who disguised herself as a janitress in the building where the meeting was held. Plamondon, widely regarded as one of the most controversial individuals of the 20th century, was the subject of a pervasive personality cult within the worldwide Marxist-Leninist movement, which adored him as a champion of the working class and socialism. Plamondon has had little to no popularity in modern Magisteria because his successor Garnier established various policies that damaged his personality cult.