by Max Barry

Latest Forum Topics

Advertisement

1

DispatchAccountOther

by D v. . 9 reads.

Standards of the Revolutionary Council Act of 1998 [USST Law]

Standards of the Revolutionary Council Act
1st Revolutionary Council of the United Socialist States of Tulov
Date Proposed: May 9th, 1998
Date of Vote: May 12th, 1998
Votes:
Workers' Assembly: 194-0
State Assembly: 58-0
Signed by: Aleksandr Zvezdov
Signed on: May 13th, 1998
Date of Effect: May 14th, 1998
Status: Active

Any member of the Revolutionary Council, in either the Workers' Assembly or the State Assembly, may present a bill before their chamber of the Revolutionary Council, and if passed, shall proceed to the other chamber for vote. If the other chamber makes any changes to the bill, then passes it, the bill must return to the previous chamber for vote once more, repeating indefinitely until both chambers have passed the same unchanged bill. Any bill which fails in either chamber shall be declared dead, and must return to the beginning of the process or be dropped. Any bill which passes both chambers, shall proceed to the Rechyotnik of the United Socialist States of Tulov for vote or veto. A bill must receive a majority vote to pass a chamber, and a super majority from both chambers to override a veto from the Rechyotnik.

No bill may be presented in any language other than Tulovian, and no bill shall be presented which exceeds ten pages in length. Upon presentation of the bill, copies of said bill must be made immediately available to the public in both physical and digital form, and with any changes to the bill, the new bill must also be made immediately available.

All sessions of the Revolutionary Council must be recorded, aired to the nation live, with no alterations or editing, and the recording made permanently available to the public, without alteration. The people, media and civilian, shall have access to the Revolutionary Council at all times, though may not physically disrupt the voting process.

D v

RawReport