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DEMOCRACY: DEMOCRATIC REFORM OF ELECTED PARLIAMENT AND LEGISLATURES
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DEMOCRATIC REFORM OF ELECTED PARLIAMENT AND LEGISLATURES
DEMOCRATIC REFORM OF PARLIAMENT (THE HOUSE OF COMMONS)
There will be five primary duties of the Elected Parliament:
1. Propose legislation for the approval by the Parliament of Personal Representatives.
2. Implement all bills passed into law by the Parliament of Personal Representatives.
3. Supervise and manage the Civil Service.
4. Represent the Parliament of Personal Representatives internationally. However, the Elected Parliament cannot take any independent international action whatsoever such as sign any agreements, treaties, borrow money, loan money, give money away etc. etc. without the approval of the Parliament of Personal Representatives. The Personal Representative will have the full legislative power to rescind, amend, cancel, renegotiate, at their sole discretion refuse to recognize any clauses, of any and all treaties, agreements etc. The signature of the Prime Minister has absolutely no value internationally and does not legally bind this country until the document; treaty etc. has stood for 1 month before the Parliament of Personal Representatives.
5. In conjunction with the Supreme Court preserve the rule of law, protect our democratic institutions including the Parliament of Canada and the Parliament of Personal Representatives and safe guard the constitution.
The Parliament of Canada will serve solely at the will and discretion of the Parliament of Personal Representatives.
When members of Parliament are elected by the voters, they have been hired through the election process to go to the Parliament of Canada and do a job on behalf of their employer - the people of their constituency and collectively the People of Canada for which they will be handsomely rewarded with a salary of $135,000 per year and one of the best pensions plans in the country. Their job description is to act as a liaison between the bureaucracy and the people in their constituency who may be having problems with their unemployment cheques, etc, try to bring development and jobs to the area, participate through committees in the formulation of policy and finally to vote on bills presented to the House of Commons.
At no time do they represent the Will of any one person of their constituency. As already stated 99% of them are not even involved in policy formation and certainly never allowed to represent their own wills on any bill.
Since no bill is law legally or constitutionally until it has stood before the will of 100% of the people and each person of the people can express their will on that bill - this means that each member of Parliament or any Provincial Legislature must also be able to express their own will on any bill been presented to Parliament or any Legislature. The denial of this right to these parliamentarians to freely express their own will on a bill means that the bill is not law. Reform of the Parliament of Canada allowing not only each member to freely express their own will, but also to be actively involved in the formulation of policy for approval by the Parliament of Personal Representatives is a critical element in the reform of our Democracy and its Democratic institutions.
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