Assembly of the South Pacific: Difference between revisions

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The Assembly elects a [[Chair of the Assembly]] for a term lasting four months. The Chair is responsible for maintaining order and decorum in the Assembly, guiding debate into bills, bringing bills to vote, and recording changes to law.
The Assembly elects a [[Chair of the Assembly]] for a term lasting four months. The Chair is responsible for maintaining order and decorum in the Assembly, guiding debate into bills, bringing bills to vote, and recording changes to law.
===The Deputy Chair of the Assembly===
{{See also|Deputy Chair of the Assembly}}
The Deputy Chair of the Assembly is the second-highest ranking official within the [[Assembly of the South Pacific]]. The Deputy Chair of the Assembly executes the functions that will assist in the day-to-day running of the Assembly, they are also responsible for helping the [[Chair of the Assembly]] with their tasks as the chair. In certain circumstances, the Deputy Chair of the Assembly may issue tasks and execute the functions of the [[Chair of the Assembly]] if the [[Chair of the Assembly|Chair]] is absent or away. If the [[Chair of the Assembly]] resigns of leaves their position as [[Chair of the Assembly]], the Deputy Chair will assume the acting role of [[Chair of the Assembly]] until an election can be held.


==History==
==History==

Revision as of 17:34, 28 May 2022

Assembly of the South Pacific
Logo
Type
Type
History
FoundedJanuary 19, 2006; 18 years ago (2006-01-19)
Preceded byGeneral Assembly of the South Pacific
Leadership
The Haughtherlands
since 22nd March 2022
BlockBuster2K43
since 26th May 2022
Website
https://tspforums.xyz/forum-27.html
Constitution
Charter of the South Pacific
Footnotes
The Assembly Gazette

The Assembly of the South Pacific is the supreme legislative authority in the South Pacific. It has existed in some form since 2003. Members of the Assembly vote on the laws and representative officials of the South Pacific.

Role

The Assembly of the South Pacific is made up of Legislators. Legislators may propose and vote on bills concerning the governance of the South Pacific, though they cannot vote on bills that would affect only the on-site community. Legislators vote in the Cabinet, Delegate, and Chair elections and legislator status is required to run for these positions. The Assembly also votes on appointments made by the Cabinet, such as nominations for the Legislator Committee and the High Court. The Assembly may recall officials for dereliction of duty, abuse of authority, or violations of the law.

Any legislator can propose a bill to the Assembly. There is a debate period of three days for bills on general laws and five days on constitutional laws; after this, bills may be moved to a vote if there is a motion and a second from separate legislators.

The Chair of the Assembly

The Assembly elects a Chair of the Assembly for a term lasting four months. The Chair is responsible for maintaining order and decorum in the Assembly, guiding debate into bills, bringing bills to vote, and recording changes to law.

The Deputy Chair of the Assembly

The Deputy Chair of the Assembly is the second-highest ranking official within the Assembly of the South Pacific. The Deputy Chair of the Assembly executes the functions that will assist in the day-to-day running of the Assembly, they are also responsible for helping the Chair of the Assembly with their tasks as the chair. In certain circumstances, the Deputy Chair of the Assembly may issue tasks and execute the functions of the Chair of the Assembly if the Chair is absent or away. If the Chair of the Assembly resigns of leaves their position as Chair of the Assembly, the Deputy Chair will assume the acting role of Chair of the Assembly until an election can be held.

History

The legislative body known as the Assembly was founded in late June or early July 2003, when it was known as the General Assembly of the South Pacific.[1] The name was changed to Council of the South Pacific in July. In the Great Council of January 2006, the name of the Council was changed to the Assembly.[2]

Until the Great Council of 2016, members of the Assembly were known as Citizens rather than Legislators.[3] Currently, legislators refers to members of the Assembly while citizens refers to all members of the South Pacific.

Membership

Legislators are admitted to the Assembly by the Legislator Committee. They may lose legislator status if their nation leaves the South Pacific or if they do not meet the voting requirements (a legislator must vote in at least half of the votes in a month where a minimum of two votes are held).

The roster of legislators is publicly viewable here.

Further Reading

References