1. The Legislation Act 2025 is amended—
    1. in Part 4 by inserting a new section to state “Any resolution or bill shall have its voting record hidden during the duration of the vote, and the only member allowed to see the voting record shall be the Sponsor.”
    2. in Part 9 by replacing it in its entirety with Schedule 1 of this Act.

 

Schedule 1: New Part 9

PART 9 - CORRECTION SLIPS

  1. Correction slips to correct legislation may be issued by—
    1. The Director of the Digital Services Administration in stages 5, 6 and 7;
    2. The Supreme Court when reviewing legislation in stage 6;
    3. Congress for legislation in stages 5 and 6 via a correction resolution.
      1. The bill sponsor may submit a maximum of one (1) Correction Resolution to correct any minor spelling and/or referencing errors, or any preconceived constitutional error within the bill;
      2. An SHR member must approve the resolution and shall put the resolution to a vote lasting twenty-four (24) hours upon giving it their assent;
      3. The Correction Resolution must receive a simple majority vote from the Congress to pass;
      4. The President must consent to the changes being made before they can be applied to the legislation, if corrected after the President signed it into stage 6;
      5. If the correction resolution passes after having reached stage 6, the President must approve of the correction before it is applied to the legislation, and the Supreme Court shall then have an additional four (4) days to review the legislation in question;
      6. If the correction resolution passes after having reached stage 7F, it may be laid before the Supreme Court for a second review if approved by the President.
         
  2. A correction slip may be issued for the following reasons:
    1. Correcting a spelling/typographical, grammatical or common framework error;
    2. Adjusting where an amendment is applied when an error in referencing occurred due to unapplied amendments;
    3. Anything else as deemed appropriate by the Digital Services Administration on a case-by-case basis;
      1. Congress may overturn correction slips that fall under this subsection via resolution, requiring an affirmative 51% majority vote to be passed, or the Supreme Court may by majority vote declare the correction slip void.
    4. Removing amendments where such amendment:
      1. Does not affect the existing law;
      2. No longer makes sense in the context in which it was written.
         
  3. The Digital Services Administration shall establish a register of correction slips issued under this Part.
    1. The Register must include the following:
      1. The Correction Slip ID (CSID),
      2. The Statute the correction was applied to,
      3. The correction applied,
      4. A reason for the correction,
        1. Reasons for correction slips issued under P9, S2(3) of this Act must clearly explain why the correction slip was issued.
      5. The date the correction was applied.