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Bill: Constitutional Reform Bill
Details
Submitted by[?]: Pnték Prsakij Prta (Phalangists)
Status[?]: passed
Votes: This bill asks for an amendement to the Constitution. It will require two-thirds of the legislature to vote in favor. This bill will not pass any sooner than the deadline.
Voting deadline: January 2863
Description[?]:
We propose that each party be allowed one new proposal per month, we feel that the current six is far too low, and means that within a two year legislative period a party will only have the opportunity to propose twelve legislative changes. However we also propose that we retain the current storage quota of five, meaning that one must use their new proposals, or lose them, rather than being allowed to stockpile them. |
Proposals
Article 1
Proposal[?] to change The number of proposals a party can introduce per year (will be handed out as a monthly quota).
Old value:: 6
Current: 20
Proposed: 12
Debate
These messages have been posted to debate on this bill:
Date | 23:00:05, December 04, 2009 CET | From | Pnték Prsakij Prta (Phalangists) | To | Debating the Constitutional Reform Bill |
Message | As this needs two-thirds support to pass, we would appreciate an indication of support or opposition from the other parties. |
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Voting
Vote | Seats | |||
yes |
Total Seats: 476 | |||
no |
Total Seats: 124 | |||
abstain | Total Seats: 86 |
Random fact: It is the collective responsibility of the players in a nation to ensure all currently binding RP laws are clearly outlined in an OOC reference bill in the "Bills under debate" section of the nation page. Confusion should not be created by displaying only some of the current RP laws or displaying RP laws which are no longer current. |
Random quote: "In Germany they first came for the Communists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist. Then they came for the Jews, and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew. Then they came for the trade unionists and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist. Then they came for the Catholics, and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant. Then they came for me--and by that time no one was left to speak up." - Pastor Martin Niemoller |