It is this proposal that seems to have most annoyed the unitarists and pseudofederalists.
At the end of the 20th century the idea of a unitarist and centralist state died together with Communist rule, while the option of a confederation too was rejected.
No wonder that the unitarist legal order of the modern state, with its centralized legislative, executive and judicial institutions, evolved in England.
This is a region where integrationists have more support than unitarists and disintegrationists.
But the founders of the Turkish Republic aimed at a unitarist state and sought a cement for this unity.