D
espite the bailouts
and incentives made by Bass
and Plankton, the Usonian
economy continued to
deteriorate during the Great Hut Rut. Strangely, no one
showed much interest in buying new huts. Instead of
spending
their stimulus fi sh, some islanders elected to
save them.
With spending stagnant, the cart companies
teetered on the edge of extinction.
Hut Depot
was devastated. Unemployment got worse. Public
dissatisfaction intensifi ed.
The next election proved to be pivotal.
Barry Ocuda,
a candidate for Senator-in-Chief,
accused the Bass
faction of inadequacy in the face of a national
emergency. He pilloried the Bass
moves as trifl ing half
measures. Campaigning on a theme of
transformation,
Ocuda promised much greater
government efforts to
turn the island’s economy around.
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