Whereas I believe that it is unrealistic to expect an Underhusen to be flawless. The best we can hope for is that mistakes are eventually realised, and then fixed as soon as possible, but you have convinced me that it is a bad idea to change anything other than spelling and grammatical errors.
Laurentus hits it on the head right here.
You're expecting the Underhusen to be flawless, infallible. I argue that we're not that, and we shouldn't expect to be such. When we bring laws to a vote that have errors that weren't noticed earlier, they need to be fixed, otherwise some of those errors can come back to haunt us.
I'll use EVERY law that we've had to re-update and fix errors due to vagueness in wording, and laws that cleaned up the language because the structure was off.
How much do you think having to re-update and re-fix every single law that was missed would have gotten to be avoided if we allowed people to suggest modifications to fix those errors during voting?
The voting process should be when we close off suggesting new passages or altering passages, as the time for discussing actual changes to the law itself are long since passed.
However, the time for fixing errors in wording, typos, sentence structure, and other grammatical errors should have no end. If someone sees an error in that form, it should be allowed to be fixed at any time WITHOUT having to fail an entire bill just because of one error, and without having to waste time introducing yet ANOTHER bill to fix an error.
Hell, we went through 3 different bills so far just for the Speaker Pro Tempore requirement. One to set it up, one to add a single word, and then one to change that word into a time limit.
Do we really need to continue doing that when there are more precious bills out there that haven't even gotten one run through compared to, say, a procedural rules amendment that has gone through 5 different cycles?
And that's all I'm really suggesting (the others I was never completely sold on, but grammatical/typos are essentially the main issue). If we can clean up a bill and keep them free of errors, even during voting, then I don't see why we shouldn't allow it.