Chair of the Assembly: Difference between revisions

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Revision as of 15:40, 10 October 2022

Chair of the Assembly
Chair of the Assembly of the South Pacific
Incumbent
The Haughtherlands

since 22nd March 2022
Office of the Chair of the Assembly
Assembly of the South Pacific
StyleMr. Chair
TypeChairperson
StatusActive
AbbreviationCoftA
Member ofAssembly of the South Pacific
SeatAssembly of the South Pacific
NominatorDirect election by instant-runoff voting
AppointerDirect election by instant-runoff voting
Term lengthFour months, renewable
Constituting instrumentCharter of the South Pacific
Formation28th May 2016 (in current form)
First holderFarengeto as Chair of the Assembly as an independent position. Todd McCloud (as Chair of the Assembly within the Cabinet of the South Pacific). KISS FANS (as Secretary of the Region)[1]
DeputyDeputy Chair of the Assembly

The Chair of the Assembly is the government position responsible for administering the Assembly. It has existed in its modern form since 2011.

Powers and Responsibilities

According to the Charter, the Chair is responsible for maintaining order and decorum in the Assembly and helping guide Assembly debate into the creation of bills. The Chair of the Assembly brings bills to vote, records votes, and maintains the MATT-DUCK law index, including making records of vote and debate threads. The Chair is responsible for enforcing legislative procedure and law standards, and for determining if bills contradict the Charter or other constitutional laws. If the Chair determines a new bill affects the gameside community, they must ensure the bill is voted on game-side as well as in the Assembly. The Chair may use discretionary powers to correct mistakes in laws such as grammar, formatting, or naming consistencies, if the Assembly does not object to the proposed changes. The Chair of the Assembly may order the Legislator Committee to suspend legislator privileges for disruptive members.

Elections

The Chair of the Assembly is elected every four months. Elections last eight days (a five-day period of campaign and debate followed by a three-day period of voting) and begin eight days before the end of the incumbent Chair's term. There are no set months for elections; if a Chair of the Assembly does not finish their term, the next Chair's term is still a full four months. Candidates must be legislators.

History

The responsibilities of the modern Chair of the Assembly were originally administered by the Secretary of the Region.[2] In the Great Council of late 2005 to early 2006, the role of Chair of the Council (now Assembly) was created to administer votes and laws, but the Secretary (then changed to Minister) of the Region also had this responsibility.[3] To reconcile this contradiction, the Minister of the Region was given the role of Chair of the Assembly,[4][5] which existed in the Charter as a set of responsibilities held by the Minister of the Region (who had no other responsibilities).[6] The Minister of the Region was renamed on November 10th 2010[7] and the first person elected as Chair of the Assembly was Todd McCloud on 15 January 2011.[8]

The Chair of the Assembly was part of the Cabinet until the Great Council of 2016, when it became an independent position.

From 26 May 2016 to 10 December 2017, the Chair of the Assembly was responsible for processing legislator applications, a duty previously performed by the now-abolished Vice Delegate. This resulted in a string of resignations and recalls of Chairs, and significant delays in the processing of laws and legislator applications.[9]. In the October 2017 Chair of the Assembly elections, Glen-Rhodes campaigned for the Re-Open Nominations (RON) option, arguing that the position was no longer viable.[10] RON won this election; possibly the first time RON had ever won in the South Pacific.[11] In the second round of the election, Glen-Rhodes successfully ran for Chair on a campaign that advocated the Assembly to focus fully on reform, with Glen-Rhodes as a placeholder who would resign once the position had been reworked.[12][13] The Chair reforms passed, with application processing responsibilities transferred to the Legislator Committee on 10 December 2017.

Further Reading

See also

References