I think both of you have good ideas.
A minimum debating period is important, since people
may will like a proposal and motion to vote right away before others have a chance to discuss it.
However, requiring a second reading would be cumbersome. Giving the Keeper the option to delay a vote beyond the minimum debating period is good, too. Seven days seems long, but I doubt a delay would extend past 4 or 5 days. The point on a delay would be to address any last minute grievances or to give all the councilors the chance to review the final draft.
Cormac wrote:Old Federalia - You bring up a valid point. What are everyone's thoughts on removing the "after all Councilors have voted" clause and extending the voting time to seven days? I would also be potentially fine with a quorum proposal but I'm not entirely sure how to word that, what threshold to set, etc.
I think removing the clause and leaving voting at five days would be ideal. In an open legislature, even one with mandatory monthly activity, I think the admittance of new councilors during a vote is going to be more common than all the councilors voting before 5 days. However, I'd also favor lowering the voting period from 5 days to 3 or 4, to
encourage participation.
The wording for a quorum would be straight forward. If quorum is not reached, it will fail just as if everyone voted nay, so this isn't a strange idea or manipulative tool.
"For a vote to be valid, a quorum of 1/2 of all councilors must have cast a vote aye, nay or present."