Executive Order 14465 in the jurisdiction of Madison County is de-facto rescinded.

On 8 February 2026, the order was formally rescinded de jure in Brookhaven by mayor Voldex Bloke Jr. of the New Voldex Party. For some reason, the Corporatist Party pre-approved the rescission before the party simultaneously announced an investigation into Bloke Jr. and Julian Jefferson, the mayor of New Blockers City, who had made a similar ban one day earlier.

Following this, the rest of Madison County implemented bans on the order, either formally or unofficially. Several city mayors expressed support for the prohibition and made familiar bans within their towns.



Background

The 2026 Anti-Corporatist protests and riots intensified in Brookhaven before the executive order was signed. Voldex Bloke Jr. wanted to make the riots small by sending riot control and the Brookhaven Police Department to assassinate the rioters, at least injure them, or peacefully control them with words. Unfortunately, riot control was weakened due to the fact they have to make sure that they are communicating with the correct age group or adjacent age group, as communication between adjacent age groups along with their assigned age group is the only one permitted by the executive order (to get an age group, all a robloxian needed to do was to submit to an age check that will scan their face and determine their age).

Meanwhile, some Brookhavers found methods to bypass the order and was noticed by the Brookhaven City Hall. Following this, Voldex Bloke Jr. wanted to make every citizen as easy to chat as them, so he signed a mayoral executive order to rescind it.

Status

Settlement Status
Brookhaven Revoked
Brookhaven Side Town Revoked
Havenford Revoked
Herryton De-facto (8-21 February)

Revoked

Phemford City De-facto
Riverside Town De-facto (8-12 February)

Revoked

Greenoaks De-facto
Howell De-facto