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Assembly Procedure Act (August 2018)
Proposed by: @Cormac
Section 1. Administration
(1) The Assembly will be administered according to all provisions mandated for the Assembly by Mandate 12 and according to the below procedures.
Section 2. Legislative Procedures
Proposal and discussion procedures
(1) Before a proposal may be brought to vote by the Speaker in the Assembly, a minimum four day discussion period shall be required for general proposals, and a minimum five day discussion period shall be required for confidential proposals. The Assembly Speaker is not required to open a vote if they determine the proposal has not had sufficient discussion, but they may not delay opening a vote for more than eight days from when the motion to vote on the proposal was seconded.
(2) In order for a proposal to be brought to vote, the proposal must be motioned to vote by the initial author of the proposal, with another citizen also seconding the motion. If the initial author is no longer a citizen or the author has not posted in their proposal thread for more than fourteen days, and they have not posted a leave of absence, any citizen may motion the proposal to vote. If a proposal is edited after a motion to vote is made then that motion shall be invalid. No changes to a proposal shall be accepted once the relevant vote has commenced.
(3) Only the initial author of a proposal may withdraw the motion to vote, unless they are no longer a citizen, in which case the Speaker shall withdraw the relevant motion. The motion to vote may re-motioned by the initial author at any time and such motion shall require a second before being brought to vote. If any motion to vote is not seconded within seven days that motion shall be invalid.
(4) The Assembly Speaker may determine for discussions to take place privately. The Assembly Speaker may accordingly move discussions to and from the Assembly's private forum under their discretion. However, discussion of treaties or discussions on the removal of those holding appointed or elected positions will begin as private and only viewable to Citizens. Non-citizens may comment during public discussions.
Motioning procedures during votes
(5) Once voting has begun, only the initial author of a proposal or the Speaker may withdraw the motion to vote. A motion may only be withdrawn before the end of the last day of voting and once a motion is withdrawn, voting shall cease immediately. The Assembly Speaker may only withdraw a proposal at vote without the approval of the initial author, if the initial author has ceased to be citizen, or if the vote may be in contravention of the mandate or the Regional Security Act and has been referred by the Assembly Speaker to the Court of Lazarus for a ruiling on the vote.
(6) If the vote on the relevant proposal has been withdrawn by the Speaker, and is not subject to proceedings or a ruling of the Court of Lazarus, any citizen may table a motion to overturn the decision of the Speaker:
a. After a minimum discussion period of three days, with the vote required to be held after seven days.
b. The vote will last for 5 days and if 50%+1 of the Assembly vote for the motion to overturn the decision of the Speaker, the relevant proposal will be put back to vote.
Voting procedures
(7) In the event that there are multiple competing proposals regarding the same matter in the judgment of the Assembly Speaker, the Assembly Speaker will bring them to vote one at a time, in the order they were motioned to vote. If such a proposal is enacted, the subsequent competing proposals will not be brought to vote.
(8) Votes shall take place for three days, or up to five days in the case of elections or appointments. Voters may only cast their votes by voting in self-closing polls in each voting thread, and any embellished text shall be stripped. Only elections may use text votes, on the discretion of the Assembly Speaker, in accordance with the number of candidates. The initial author of a proposal may request a private poll vote. Private poll votes shall be conducted with votes not being displayed publicly, in which case they will only become visible when the vote has ended. Citizens eligible to vote may vote using the following poll options:
a. "Aye", "Mmph" or "For",
b. "Nay" or "Against",
c. "Abstain" or "Present".
Archival procedures
(9) Private votes inclusive of appointment votes and general election votes, may be archived for public view by the Speaker or Forum Administration once the vote has passed or failed in the Assembly.
(10) Private Discussions and proposals may be archived for public view by the Speaker or Forum Administration if 28 days has passed with no activity in the thread or no on-going effort to move it to vote, and the Executive Council, Prime Minister of Lazarus or the Council of Lazarene Security does not oppose its release. The Executive Council, Prime Minister or the Council of Lazarene Security may object to release prior to or within one week of the thread being archived.
Certification procedures
(11) The Assembly Speaker may delay the certification of a vote for up to 30 days to resolve irregularities with a vote, or to revoke votes in line with a ruiling of a Criminal Review of the Court of Lazarus or a vote of the Council on Lazarene Security. Citizens revoked from citizenship during a vote shall not have their votes counted.
Section 3. Deputies to the Assembly Speaker
(1) The Assembly Speaker may appoint deputies to assist in presiding over the Assembly according to its procedural rules. Appointment of a deputy will be subject to confirmation by 50%+1 vote of the Assembly if the deputy-designate has previously been removed from office by the Assembly.
(2) Deputies to the Assembly Speaker will serve until resignation, removal from office by the Assembly or the Assembly Speaker, or automatic removal from office as defined by Mandate 12.
(3) Any powers or responsibilities assigned to the Assembly Speaker by these procedures, Mandate 12, or any other law, unless explicitly directed otherwise, may be delegated by the Assembly Speaker to their deputy or deputies, and rescinded by the Assembly Speaker. Deputies will not have the power to appoint or remove other deputies.
Section 4. Legislative Formatting
(1) Unless otherwise noted, legislation brought to vote in the Assembly will be formatted as follows:
Code:[quote] [CENTER][size=large]Example Title[/SIZE] [SIZE=18px]Proposed by:[/SIZE][/CENTER] [LEFT][b]Additional credit to:[/b] This is an example of an additional credit section. It should not exceed 5 people. Credit sections are optional. [b]Preamble[/b] This is an example of a preamble. It should not exceed 50 words. Preambles are optional. [b]Section 1. Example Section Title[/b] (1) This is an example of a subsection. (2) This is an example of another subsection. a. This is an example of a subparagraph. b. This is an example of another subparagraph.[/LEFT] [/quote]
Example Title
Proposed by:
Additional credit to:
This is an example of an additional credit section. It should not exceed 5 people. Credit sections are optional.
Preamble
This is an example of a preamble. It should not exceed 50 words. Preambles are optional.
Section 1. Example Section Title
(1) This is an example of a subsection.
(2) This is an example of another subsection.
a. This is an example of a subparagraph.
b. This is an example of another subparagraph.
Section 4. Legislative Formatting
(1) The code block is only presented as an aid and the quote below it will be considered the official formatting.
(2) The forum name of the author will be provided in the "Proposed by:" section of a proposal. In the event that the author's forum name changes, the Assembly Speaker may amend a law to reflect the author's new forum name.
(3) Following the enactment of a proposal, the Assembly Speaker will append the month and year of enactment to the proposal's title.
(4) Unless otherwise noted, all amendments brought to vote in the Assembly will be formatted as legislation, and the amendments therein will be marked up so as to clearly delineate the changes being made.
(5) The Assembly Speaker may refuse a legislative amendment proposal being brought to vote in the Assembly, if the proposal does not clearly delineate the changes being made to the existing legislation.
(6) The Assembly Speaker may edit passed legislation to correct spelling and grammar errors, with further legislative formatting requirements in the Discretionary Powers Act (December 2021).
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