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  • Discussion on a future Senate

    I propose moving the debate on the future powers, and roles of the Senate to this thread. It will get too bogged down in the Constitutional Discussion thread.

    Article II. The Senate
    1 All citizens who are not currently a Minister, President, or Judge are Senators
    2 Any Senator may propose a law.
    (a) To propose a law, a senator must post a poll that is clear, unbiased, states the proposed law in its entirety, and gives three options: “yea”, “nay”, and “abstain”.
    (b) The poll’s subject must begin with the text “SENATE BILL:”
    (c) The first post of the poll must clarify the options if clarification is needed and state the expiration date.
    (d) The poll must be open for at least 72 hours.
    (e) To pass, the proposed law must receive more “yea” votes than “nay” votes. It must also meet the quorum.
    (i) The quorum: The total number of votes cast in the poll for passage must be greater than or equal to 25% of the total number of votes cast in the most recent Presidential election.
    (ii) Any “abstain” votes are considered solely for quorum purposes. “Abstain” votes may not be considered “yea” or “nay” votes.
    (iii) The Senate has the power to modify the quorum requirements or to perform a census without amending the Constitution.
    (f) All citizens, not just senators, are allowed to vote in any poll.
    (g) Proposed laws may not violate or change the Constitution. Proposed laws may change any existing laws, Judicial decisions regarding laws, or Executive orders.
    3 Senators may also propose motions, resolutions, orders, and decisions of the Senate. These are proposed in the same way as laws and follow the same rules. These carry the same authority as a law.
    4 The Senate has the power to declare war.
    5 The Senate must approve all alliances
    6 The Senate has the power to authorize drafts of citizens
    7 The Senate has the power to change to a wartime economy
    8 The Senate has the power to change the form of the government.
    9 The Senate has the power to decide how Great Leaders are used
    10 The Senate has the power to determine how money is spent. The Senate is not required to use this power. Should the Senate fail to act on any spending matter, or should a spending matter be vetoed, the President may decide.
    11 The Senate may make its own laws regarding Senate procedure.
    12 The Senate must keep records of all laws, motions, resolutions, and otherwise that are passed, amended, or removed. It may appoint a Clerk to do so.
    13 All powers not specifically given to the other branches are hereby given to the Senate.
    Cluase 13 means the that the places a future senate could go are limitless.

    Much of what the Senate is capible of does would only require a bill so we can discuss this seperatly from the constitutional debate.

    Unortho pointed out that the laws and actions of the senate would have to keepen track of.

    Thud's solution
    Senate Chats

    I think we should have some Senate Chats, in which people could discuss proposals and get stuff done quickly without the slow reaction and debate times of the board.

    Particularly, Senate Chats should be used in a situation that is imminent (as Unortho describes) and does not have time to go through the debate process before the next Turn Chat.

    Of course, a change to the constitution is not necessary to have these

    Supreme Speaker

    The Senate should have a Speaker; in order to organize senate chats, organize senate votes and debates, and appoint my proposed Special Adviors/Committees.

    This post may require an amendment, but perhaps just a bill.
    I proposed:
    Thud, we may be from different parties but we think alike. I second Thud's idea. The Speaker should be elected by a majority of the Senate. I also feel there should be a majority and minority leaders granted some minimal powers.
    I feel there is real potential with the new senate to promote debate and the lives of parties and interest groups.

    Arnelos:
    The purpose of a legislative speaker and of majority/minority leaders in Real-Life legislatures (the model you're both drawing from) is to schedule legislation because a RL legislature can only discuss one thing at a time in full session.

    That problem is irrelevant here because ANY Senator can post a poll that says "SENATE BILL" at any time and multiple bills can be debated on and passed simultaneously in different threads... as such, there is no need for a single person to schedule legislation - making the role of Speaker ceremonial at best (unless you want to give them unecessary powers they probably shouldn't have).
    Ghegis:
    I agree. I was thinking there should be a definition of a 'political faction" as in a set number of members required and once the definition was met that faction would be allowed to select a leader.
    Arnelos:
    The BIG BIG problem with this suggestion is that it assumes that Apolytonians will be willing to group together into distinct factions/parties and that each group will delegate its decision-making voice to a single member of that group... this is far from certain.
    I think there is room and time for discussion on what the nature and structure of the senate will be. Ofcourse it will basicly remain the same old forum but I don't want this dying like the last Senate (if you remember, you know what i'm talking about).

    Should there be semi-ceremonial positions created to promote discussions and parties? What kind of process for electing these positions?
    Duddha: I will return...
    Arnelos: ... and the civilizied world shudders ...
    "I'm the Dude. So that's what you call me. That, or Duder. His Dudeness. Or El Duderino, if, you know, you're not into the whole brevity thing..."
    Free California!

  • #2
    I think you are all thinking the senate will have a huge amout of influence. It was designed to be able to be able to have great influence, but there is nothing that says it must.
    "Yay Apoc!!!!!!!" - bipolarbear
    "At least there were some thoughts went into Apocalypse." - Urban Ranger
    "Apocalype was a great game." - DrSpike
    "In Apoc, I had one soldier who lasted through the entire game... was pretty cool. I like apoc for that reason, the soldiers are a bit more 'personal'." - General Ludd

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    • #3
      I think the process of elections WITHIN parties should be agreed upon by a majority of members within that party. How they or we would want to choose leadership should be up to the parties themselves.

      (I hope I didn't miss the point, at least not too much)

      Semi-ceremonial? Sure why not. It's discussion is it not?
      Former Supreme Military Commander of the Democratic Apolyton States, Term 8
      Former Chairman of Apolyton Labor Party

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      • #4
        I think you are all thinking the senate will have a huge amout of influence. It was designed to be able to be able to have great influence, but there is nothing that says it must.
        I'm not thinking the Senate has more power than it does, I would just like it to promote parties and fun discussions. Otherwise the people will basicly be left out of this future 4 member government. Clause 13 gives the Senate huge possiblities. Like I said, I don't want this to see the same fate as the last Senate.
        Last edited by Duddha; October 16, 2002, 20:56.
        Duddha: I will return...
        Arnelos: ... and the civilizied world shudders ...
        "I'm the Dude. So that's what you call me. That, or Duder. His Dudeness. Or El Duderino, if, you know, you're not into the whole brevity thing..."
        Free California!

        Comment


        • #5
          I think the process of elections WITHIN parties should be agreed upon by a majority of members within that party. How they or we would want to choose leadership should be up to the parties themselves.
          This new Senate gives us the possibility of making party and issue polls like the ones me and Arnelos have done mean something on some level.
          Duddha: I will return...
          Arnelos: ... and the civilizied world shudders ...
          "I'm the Dude. So that's what you call me. That, or Duder. His Dudeness. Or El Duderino, if, you know, you're not into the whole brevity thing..."
          Free California!

          Comment


          • #6
            As for handling party leaderships in a common manner and instituting the party system within the Senate itself, I suggested a workable Real Life model in the other thread.... parliamentary coalitions established by "direct proportional representation" voting... That model COULD be adapted to Apolyonia, but doing that would depend on whether you like the role-playing or the actual Civ3 game more... because doing this is likely to make the role-playing more involved, but at times cause breaks in playing the game to resolve crises in the role-play I'm not sure on whether people want this, but I'll lay out what it would look like below for public comment...

            * Members could group into parties or remain independent (essentially acting as parties unto themselves). In Apolytonia, it's likely there'd be a high number of independents (parties unto themselves) so our "Senate" is more likely to end up acting like the highly unruly Israeli Knesset (with zillions of one-member parties and a few slightly larger parties) than the highly orderly German Reichstag (with 2 huge parties and 3-4 much smaller parties)

            * The Senate could establish a governing coalition of party leaders as negotiated by the various parties which are willing to join together in the governing coalition... that coalition would have to win a vote of confidence (a simple up/down vote on whether a majority considers itself a member or supporter of that coalition) in order to begin work on introducing legislation.

            * The designated leaders of the "governing coalition", could then go about organizing debate and introducing legislation (including, most importantly, the power to introduce the official budget for Senate approval).

            * Those who are not members or supporters of the governing coalition are the members of "the opposition", though the opposition might certainly be fragmented.

            * If any bill officially introduced by the governing coalition's leadership (such as the official budget) loses in a vote of the Senate, then the governing coalition has two options...

            1. Alter the bill in open discussion of the full senate and then submit a new bill which they believe can get majority support.

            -OR-

            2. Offer up the same bill as they originally offered up, but this time it is treated as a "vote of confidence". If the bill fails to pass this second time, the governing coalition "falls" (a result sometimes referred to as a "vote of no confidence") and all parties (both from the original governing coalition and from the opposition) again bargain to work out a deal to establish a NEW governing coalition... of course, each new coalition must be confirmed by a simple majority vote of the Senate before introducing official legislation.

            * Presidential vetoes of things actually passed by the Senate still count as passing the Senate, so introducing them a second time does NOT count as a vote of confidence (only if they actually FAIL in the Senate is their unaltered re-introduction considered a vote of confidence). That said, a presidential veto would obviously necessitate either the matter being dropped OR the bill being altered so that either a majority of the Senate AND the President OR 2/3 of the Senate w/o the President can support it.

            * In the case of the "official budget", an inability to pass this bill would be treated as a need to temporarily stop the game just as a crisis in a turnchat/turnthread would necessitate stopping the game until it can be resolved...

            * Under the following two conditions, the President may create the budget rather than the Senate:

            1. A majority of the Senate votes, as proposed by the governing coalition, to allow the President to either present the budget for majority Senate approval OR to allow the President to create a budget on his own w/o then needing Senate approval on ratifying it.

            2. Two seperate Senate governing coalitions "fall" due to an inability to pass the same turn's budget... if this happens, the President receives the right to simply make the budget on his or her own and move the game forward.

            * Concerning "cabinet" positions within the governing coalition, including a prime minister position, that is an additional level of complexity that may be pushing it too far even if you don't think what's above is pushing it too far. That said, IF you think it's NOT pushing it too far, the various party leaders that form the governing coalition leadership could designate among themselves who is in charge of introducing different areas of legislation (economy, science, etc.). That "cabinet membe" would then have sole ability to introduce legislation in their area, though the "Prime Minister" would likely have veto power over any piece of legislation introduced (since the coalition members choose the Prime Minister-figure so that a check exists on individual cabinet members for introducing legislation willy nilly that may endanger the governing coalition to a vote of confidence). Of course, this means that cabinet members (who are likely also party leaders) can resign in protest to such decisions... which could mean the coalition is likely to fail a vote of confidence... which means a new coalition might have to be formed, etc, etc, etc.

            ----------------------------

            Now, personally, I think this is an excessive level of complexity that I feel is more of a distraction from the game than I'd want. However, since OPD (in particular) provided a rather good argument last week (or was it the week before?) that THE GAME OF CIV3 may be in the bag at this point and it might be more fun to distract ourselves more with role-playing a democracy (even if it gets in the way of playing the actual game of Civ3 at times), I'm willing to suggest this as a possible way of doing that....

            PERSONALLY, I don't really want to do that, but I think I'm hearing several people suggesting that THEY might and I'm trying to provide them some ideas to play with

            I do think it could be a whole lot of fun, it's just that I'm concerned that many people here are more interested in the game of Civ3 than the democracy game and those people might be put off by going to something like the above...
            Last edited by Arnelos; October 16, 2002, 22:27.
            Long-time poster on Apolyton and WePlayCiv
            Consul of Apolyton from the 1st Civ3 Inter-Site Democracy Game (ISDG)
            7th President of Apolyton in the 1st Civ3 Democracy Game

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            • #7
              Those of you who are Europeans probably understand the system in my last post intuitively. So...

              If people from my side of the Atlantic (or other SMD/2-party systems) are confused by my long-winded explanation, PLEASE feel free explain it in a less-confusing manner if you think it would help.

              That said, keep in mind that I'm saying the Israeli Knesset or the Italian Parliament (both highly unruly because of the sheer number of parties) are likely better models to the independent-voter nature of Apolytonia than more orderly and organized bodies like the German Reichstag or other bodies with 5% minimum rules (I hope you understand how a 5% minimum rule would likely be VERY UNPOPULAR for Apolyonia's independent-minded voters - even if it would make things FAR more organized)

              ------------------------------

              All of this said, PLEASE understand that I'm actually not very enamored myself about doing this... I'm just trying to give a workable model to the people who DO want something like this... because if they end up winning and we do something like this, I at least want it to be workable and interesting
              Long-time poster on Apolyton and WePlayCiv
              Consul of Apolyton from the 1st Civ3 Inter-Site Democracy Game (ISDG)
              7th President of Apolyton in the 1st Civ3 Democracy Game

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              • #8
                I am utterly fascinated at where the Senate discussion is going and encourage such discussions. I just want to stress a few things:

                1) If you discover, prior to ratification of the NewCon, that there is a gaping loophole that needs to be closed, please let us know.

                2) When all the dust settles, my hope is that the our Senate becomes a body that allows anyone who is not elected the ability and power to be directly involved in our government ... even some people we'd rather not see involved.

                3) Let's have fun with this, but let's be careful to not make this such an intimidating and procedurally laiden institution that new people couldn't participate in and that it would be inable to act in times of emergency due to red tape.

                --Togas
                Greatest Moments in ISDG chat:"(12/02/2003) <notyoueither> the moon is blue. hell is cold. quote me, but i agree with ET. "
                Member of the Mercenary Team in the Civ 4 Team Democracy Game.
                Former Consul for the Apolyton C3C Intersite Tournament Team.
                Heir to the lost throne of Spain of the Roleplay Team in the PTW Democracy Multiplayer Team Game.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Discussion on a future Senate

                  Originally posted by Duddha
                  I think there is room and time for discussion on what the nature and structure of the senate will be. Ofcourse it will basicly remain the same old forum but I don't want this dying like the last Senate (if you remember, you know what i'm talking about).
                  Mwahahaha.

                  Believe it or not, I did not propose the Senate, nor it's powers. I can't say I am unhappy with the proposals though.
                  (\__/)
                  (='.'=)
                  (")_(") This is Bunny. Copy and paste bunny into your signature to help him gain world domination.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Togas
                    3) Let's have fun with this, but let's be careful to not make this such an intimidating and procedurally laiden institution that new people couldn't participate in and that it would be inable to act in times of emergency due to red tape.
                    As I stated, I personally think what I'm posting above is excessively complex... that stated, however, it seems people are interested in doing that and I want them to do it in a potentially workable and fun manner if they're going to do it at all
                    Long-time poster on Apolyton and WePlayCiv
                    Consul of Apolyton from the 1st Civ3 Inter-Site Democracy Game (ISDG)
                    7th President of Apolyton in the 1st Civ3 Democracy Game

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                    • #11
                      Arnelos has proposed a very good description of a parliamentary system (me being an amercian, I am utterly amazed that form of government works).

                      Few things:
                      As spelled out in the constitution, if the senate does not create a budget then the Prez gets to decide. I don't think this needs to be changed. It keeps the game moving even if there is a political fight going on.

                      Basicly a coalition would form and propose a budget or other bills, while not inhibiting any random person from proposing a bill. I believe a Prime Minister would be necessary inorder to bring order and direction to a coalition. The prime minister would have power to form cabinets for bill creation, advising and investigations.

                      This system is interesting but I worry it might lead to a one man rule.
                      Last edited by Duddha; October 16, 2002, 23:41.
                      Duddha: I will return...
                      Arnelos: ... and the civilizied world shudders ...
                      "I'm the Dude. So that's what you call me. That, or Duder. His Dudeness. Or El Duderino, if, you know, you're not into the whole brevity thing..."
                      Free California!

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I will propose a more American system.

                        1. A Speaker would be elected to facilitate discussion and keep track of polls and bills. The Speaker would effectively run the forum directory. The Speaker would also run elections for Senate positions.

                        2. A majority leader would be elected. All are allowed to run, parties would probably only field one candidate. If no majority candidate was found a run-off would decide. The loser of the run off or the next highest vote reciever in the firt election would become the minority leader.
                        -both leaders would have the power to create and appoint senate bill commitees, advisory commitees, and investigative commitees. The majority leader would have the power to disband committees.
                        -the majority leader would create and propose the budget to the senate for approval.

                        The powers of the majority and minority leaders would not inhibit upon the right of any senator to propose a bill.

                        Senate elections would take place at the same time as executive elections. I'm not sure if someone should be allowed to hold a exuctive position and a senate position at the same time.

                        This system might do well with our majority independant populous.
                        Duddha: I will return...
                        Arnelos: ... and the civilizied world shudders ...
                        "I'm the Dude. So that's what you call me. That, or Duder. His Dudeness. Or El Duderino, if, you know, you're not into the whole brevity thing..."
                        Free California!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Ahh good. More elected people.

                          Exactly what we did not really want.
                          "Yay Apoc!!!!!!!" - bipolarbear
                          "At least there were some thoughts went into Apocalypse." - Urban Ranger
                          "Apocalype was a great game." - DrSpike
                          "In Apoc, I had one soldier who lasted through the entire game... was pretty cool. I like apoc for that reason, the soldiers are a bit more 'personal'." - General Ludd

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Ahh good. More elected people.

                            Exactly what we did not really want.
                            The speaker is the only important one. The senate can keep on going without everything else.

                            1. A speaker is needed to keep track of bills and the workings of the senate.

                            2. A majority leader, or prime minister could spearhead activism, propose bills, and create a budget (which we all know if left to the masses will never be completed on time.)
                            Last edited by Duddha; October 17, 2002, 00:54.
                            Duddha: I will return...
                            Arnelos: ... and the civilizied world shudders ...
                            "I'm the Dude. So that's what you call me. That, or Duder. His Dudeness. Or El Duderino, if, you know, you're not into the whole brevity thing..."
                            Free California!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Duddha
                              2. A majority leader, or prime minister is need to spearhead activism, propose bills, and create a budget (which we all know if left to the masses will never be completed on time.)
                              This is the area where I disagree with Duddha and agree with Apocalypse... a majority leader or prime minster is not NEEDED. The system the Con Con has proposed, with ANYONE able to submit bills, is perfectly workable in this environment...

                              The reason I identify as to why we'd even consider establishing such things is that it be sorta cool to model something of how a real legislative democracy works... this WOULD, in my opinion, cause the role-play democracy elements to take on a heightened focus compared to what they've had in the past, perhaps at the expense of focus on the Civ3 game itself... however, there are those who feel they WANT that.

                              I maintain, however, that Apocalypse is right in that the interests of efficiency and remaining focused on the civ game itself along with a strongly populist mindset would make the absense of a PM/Speaker and a more unorganized Senate system preferable... my point is that efficiency and focus on the game do not seem to be universally considered goal #1
                              Long-time poster on Apolyton and WePlayCiv
                              Consul of Apolyton from the 1st Civ3 Inter-Site Democracy Game (ISDG)
                              7th President of Apolyton in the 1st Civ3 Democracy Game

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