This bill has gone for over a day without any debate; I cannot stand for it. I was going to ask whether this bill had mild constitutional implications as opposed to merely statutory, seeing as the sponsorship requirement for amendments is in play. However, when thinking about legislation introduced only in the Underhusen (and not amended by the Overhusen at all, per sections I.7-8), I failed to account for the roles of private citizens in the matter. It does bring to light a question of whether Overhusen members are even allowed to propose amendments (resting on the question as to whether the role of a Peer sponsoring an amendment bill in the Citizens' Platform is as a Peer or as a normal Citizen), and whether they are even allowed to count for double in that regard.
e: post 888! My argument is that allowing OH sponsorships to count for double emphasizes the fact that they are an OH member, implying that their (and by extension the OH's) role in amending legislation is greater, which I'm not sure is allowed.
I see no reason why OH members wouldn't be allowed to suggest amendments to previous legislation. By becoming a member of the OH they don't surrender their right to make suggestions to the region at large, or have I missed something in the FL?
The relevant section is here:
8. The Overhusen shall vote to pass or veto the legislation upon passage by the Underhusen. The Overhusen shall not amend legislation in any way.
I've added emphasis, but the FL pretty much states that the OH isn't allowed to amend legislation WHEN IT REACHES THEM after being passed by the UH. There's no mention of them not being allowed to suggest amendments outside of their voting thread, only that they cannot themselves use their veto powers to directly alter the text of an Act at vote.
As such, this bill shouldn't be unconstitutional.
Beyond that, your point about giving OH members higher sponsorship counts is, I think, valid. I included that point primarily to emphasise the fact that OH members are involved in legislation ANYWAY and so would, one assumes, have a greater understanding of our laws than the average citizen. Thus, the increased sponsorship count reflects the fact that they should know what they're about when supporting an amendment - after all, they passed the original law, but couldn't revise it at that point in time.
If people have an issue with that, we can make it so that the OH is simply included in the Alterations Petition section, but have no extra standing in terms of sponsorship.
E: tidied up my explanation a lil bit.