PaulWallLibertarian42
TNPer
can I have a scantron voting machine to vote with?
I found the debate on the original adoption of the restriction on running for more than one office! It's right here. Voted on nearly seven years ago, under a different constitution, it was added to the legal code in reaction to some sort of legal crisis involving convoluted laws about term limits and succession which have long since been abolished. Color me unconcerned about the repercussions of removing it.Grosseschnauzer:I will not support the removal of that provision. I think you are inviting a disaster that has occurred in the past which promoted it to be adopted in the first place.
As I said, there already exist restrictions on serving concurrently in certain positions. If you wish to familiarize yourself with the existing law on the matter, you can find it in Article 7 of the Constitution.PaulWallLibertarian42:String, I have no issue with you personally I am just using this as an example, youre a court justice yet youre weighing in on proposed legisative matters. That is what I mean. Youre judiciary. Interpret law not engage in helping shape it. Thats like taking Chief Justice Roberts and electing him to to senate. Thats what I meant. And im not using you personally. It is just an convient example to point out. Like I said maybe I just dont understand the structure.
I agree.. and I will vote against if the proposal is left in it's current form.Grosseschnauzer:Fixing the (theoretical) distinction between judicial and general elections made by the Court (a finding with which I do not agree and the history of TNP elections support me on that) is not the problem with this bill. Removing the limit of running for one office is.
Previous iterations of Law here did not make as many distinctions between 'general' and 'judicial' elections. 4.4 of the Legal Code does currently name them as separate and distinct products. The Court made a correct decision based on bad law.Grosseschnauzer:Fixing the (theoretical) distinction between judicial and general elections made by the Court (a finding with which I do not agree and the history of TNP elections support me on that) is not the problem with this bill. Removing the limit of running for one office is.
I would like to motion to stop the vote then.Lord Nwahs:Since there appears to be some displeasure amongst some members regarding the content of the bill as it stands, I would just like to remind everyone that the bill as it stands right now would be put to vote tomorrow. As of now, 3 people are needed to motion to stop the scheduling of such a vote, and postpone the vote to a later timing.
The scheduled vote has been stopped. Voting will commence once at least one-tenth of the members of the RA, including the member who proposed the proposal itself, motion that a vote should be held.
It is not remote, it has happened in the past, and we have enough special elections as it is without inviting even more of them.Crushing Our Enemies:I am the one who proposed the original legislation, and I second this motion. Perhaps once the thread is unlocked, this could be merged with it.
I don't see allowing people to run for multiple offices in the same election cycle as a major problem - the worst case scenario is that they would win both, and have to pick one to take the oath for, prompting a special election for the other. That possibility is so remote that I don't think there is any need to outlaw the entire practice of running for multiple offices. It also provides an elegant solution to the RON problem of extending the election cycle, without adding regulations to make it a separate election cycle every time nominations are reopened - that would be inelegant and unnecessary.
Hate to burst your bubble, but... (all extra bolding is mine)Grosseschnauzer:Fixing the (theoretical) distinction between judicial and general elections made by the Court (a finding with which I do not agree and the history of TNP elections support me on that)
Legal Code: Chapter 3:2. The Attorney General will be elected during Judicial Elections.
Legal Code: Section 4.3:Section 4.3: Overall Election Law
9. In General and Judicial elections, Election Commissioners will be appointed by the Delegate to oversee the nomination and election processes at least one week before the month in which the election begins. If an appointment of Election Commissioners has not been made by that time, the Chief Justice shall promptly make the appointment within 48 hours.
Legal Code: Section 4.4:Section 4.4: General Elections
13. The election cycle for the terms of the Delegate and Vice Delegate, and of the Speaker, will begin on the first day of the months of January, May, and September.
Legal Code: Section 4.5:Section 4.5: Judicial Elections
15. The election cycle for the terms of Justices, and the Attorney General will begin on the first days of the months of March, July, and November.
16. Whenever the position is vacant, the Justices shall select a Chief Justice from among themselves by a majority vote. Justices may remove the Chief Justice by a majority vote.
17. In the event that seven days after the conclusion of a Judicial election, including the conclusion of any required run-off votes, a Chief Justice has not been elected, the Justice that received the highest number of votes in said election, and in the event of a tie for highest number of votes the Justice among those tied with the largest amount of elapsed time since that Justice's most recent admission to the Regional Assembly without an interruption, shall become Chief Justice.
Not sure how it can be "theoretical", given that the law is crystal clear about it. Anyway.Grosseschnauzer:Fixing the (theoretical) distinction between judicial and general elections made by the Court (a finding with which I do not agree and the history of TNP elections support me on that) is not the problem with this bill.
How did you possibly attribute this horrible statement to me?r3naissanc3r:Not sure how it can be "theoretical", given that the law is crystal clear about it. Anyway.Gracius Maximus:Fixing the (theoretical) distinction between judicial and general elections made by the Court (a finding with which I do not agree and the history of TNP elections support me on that) is not the problem with this bill.
I'll support the motion to vote, and I believe that's four.
With all due respect, I haven't seen a compelling reason in favor of allowing running for multiple offices.Crushing Our Enemies:There doesn't need to be a compelling reason to *allow* behavior. Everything is allowed by default, since we are a freedom-loving society.
If something is going to be outlawed, there needs to be a compelling reason. So far, I have not been compelled by any of the reasoning in favor of outlawing running for multiple offices.
I think that that would leave the electoral process open to manipulation and fraud. Akin to vote splitting imo. If, as you say, a *popular* person were to win both elections (and got to choose who gets what post), they would be the controlling factor in who gets the other office. Not very democratic. It would have to at least trigger another election to be seen as fair.PaulWallLibertarian42:The only compelling reason Should be desire, and if someone is interrested they should be allowed to run for multiple offices. Like if two popular candidates are in a race and a less popular person is as well, that unpopular person probably knows they have a snowballs chance in hades of pulling off an upset. So they decide to run for office with weaker candidate pull to hedge thier bets. If by some random act of TNP gods they pull off both..then let them pick the one they most want and then hold a special election for the other one with the remaining candidates or award it to the runner up. Whatever.
Not sure how long it's been in effect, but the provision is there. I would think there was justification for having it.PaulWallLibertarian42:Has the restriction been in place the whole history of TNP? Or was there every history to justify having this provision?