Waiving of 120 day rule in article 10.3.1 of the 2010 Constitution with respect to BGM12 Policy resolutions.
Preamble
WHEREAS, article 10.3.1 of the 2010 Constitution stipulated that policy resolutions need to be approved in a ratification ballot within 120 days of the BGM; and
WHEREAS, although article 10.3.1 was revoked by the BGM12 ratification vote, it was still the governing article for BGM12 policy resolutions; and
WHEREAS, the party was unable to complete the process within this stipulated time because of extenuating circumstances; and
WHEREAS, unless this resolution be adopted, the ratification ballot is un-constitutional and therefore null and void
Operative
BE IT RESOLVED that the provisions of article 10.3.1 of the 2010 Constitution be waived for the purposes of ratifying policy resolutions introduced at BGM12, and that they therefore be adopted.
Background
The GPC Constitution is our governing law. Unless we conform to its provisions we can hardly defend the rule of law in other situations.
Article 10.3.1 of the 2010 Constitution stipulated that policy resolutions need to be approved in a ratification vote within 120 days of the BGM. The BGM in Sidney ended on August 19th, 2012, and the ratification vote concluded on March 1st, 2013, a period of 193 days.
Now, Article 10.3.1 of the 2010 Constitution was itself subject to resolution G10-C07 re-presented as G12-C01 at BGM12. This resolution rescinded article 10.3.1, but was itself subject to Article 10.1.4.2, which required a motion and subsequent ratification vote at the next BGM, BGM12. Even though article 10.3.1 was to be removed from the Constitution the effect of that removal does not take place until subsequent to the March 2013 validation ballot. Policy resolutions from BGM12 are therefore subject to the 120-day ratification vote.
Code
Proposal Type
Submitter Name
Party Commentary
Preamble
WHEREAS, article 10.3.1 of the 2010 Constitution stipulated that policy resolutions need to be approved in a ratification ballot within 120 days of the BGM; and
WHEREAS, although article 10.3.1 was revoked by the BGM12 ratification vote, it was still the governing article for BGM12 policy resolutions; and
WHEREAS, the party was unable to complete the process within this stipulated time because of extenuating circumstances; and
WHEREAS, unless this resolution be adopted, the ratification ballot is un-constitutional and therefore null and void
Operative
BE IT RESOLVED that the provisions of article 10.3.1 of the 2010 Constitution be waived for the purposes of ratifying policy resolutions introduced at BGM12, and that they therefore be adopted.
Sponsors
Background
The GPC Constitution is our governing law. Unless we conform to its provisions we can hardly defend the rule of law in other situations.
Article 10.3.1 of the 2010 Constitution stipulated that policy resolutions need to be approved in a ratification vote within 120 days of the BGM. The BGM in Sidney ended on August 19th, 2012, and the ratification vote concluded on March 1st, 2013, a period of 193 days.
Now, Article 10.3.1 of the 2010 Constitution was itself subject to resolution G10-C07 re-presented as G12-C01 at BGM12. This resolution rescinded article 10.3.1, but was itself subject to Article 10.1.4.2, which required a motion and subsequent ratification vote at the next BGM, BGM12. Even though article 10.3.1 was to be removed from the Constitution the effect of that removal does not take place until subsequent to the March 2013 validation ballot. Policy resolutions from BGM12 are therefore subject to the 120-day ratification vote.
Party Commentary