Two questions:
What is the reasoning for the Cabinet having jurisdiction over citizenship and treaties? I remember Laurentus recently making a point on Discord that it makes most sense for the citizenry to decide matters of citizenship themselves, which I find a very convincing argument.
When you say that the open assembly has veto power over Acts of Cabinet, do you mean it in the same sense that under the current Fundamental Laws, the Overhusen has veto power over bills passed by the Underhusen? That is, the open assembly would essentially vote on all legislation passed by the Cabinet?
Sorry, I missed your post until just now.
With treaties, when the Fundamental Laws were put together it was a given that most Citizens would be active and aware of things going on in NationStates, but that is not really true these days. For the last few years, our FA has been handled by a small core of vital people who are familiar with things both inside and outside Wintreath, people who are usually in the Cabinet, and I feel they're best situated to evaluate potential treaties and agreements at this point. Also, I worded it the way I did because as we move into other things there's always the possibility that we'll strike agreements with groups outside of NS, in which case it's more likely the Cabinet will be the best group to evaluate them.
With Citizenship law, starting out I'm not comfortable handing the power to an untested Open Assembly. The current Underhusen is currently checked by the Overhusen, whereas the new Open Assembly would not have a body to check its authorities (part of the cost of streamlining the bureaucracy). I suppose I could make the Cabinet a check on the new open assembly, but as some people have opposed the Cabinet becoming part of the legislature I've currently reserved it for the most important legislative authorities: treaties and Citizenship law. Of course, the OA will be able to veto changes to either with a supermajority vote, and there's always the possibility that the power is returned to them once the OA is up, running, and tested.
Finally got around to this sorry
My thoughts are as follows. I am particularly fond of like having no regional legislature at all even though I once argued in favor of an OA with that said... everything looks reasonable to me outside the OA
@Laurentus
I'm curious what made you change your mind on this.