If we have a house of 100 members (80 GCs plus 20 TCs) and decisions are taken on simple majority, it means that at least any 51 members out of the above 100 members will have to approve it. However, in order to qualify as simple majority, at least 4 (or 6) of the votes must come (included in the 51 votes needed) from the 20 TCs (20% or 30% of the TC members,) and at least 16 (or 24) of the votes must come from (included in the 51votes needed) from the 80 GCs.
For example we can have the following combination for simple majority to qualify.
I take a special case example that needs 30% minimum from each side.
Case 1:
6 TCs plus 45 GCs equals 51 /100. (Qualifies)
Case 2:
20 TCs plus 31 GCs equals 51 /100. (Qualifies)
Case 3:
5 TCs plus 46 GCs equals 51 /100 (it doesn’t qualify)
Case 4:
1 TC plus 80 GCs equals 81 /100 (it doesn’t qualify)
The above proposal is for the parliament.
For president, I propose the following:
- Like in the USA to have a president and a vice president voted together. The president and the vice president should come from a different community.
- For the combination (president - vice president) to win the elections they should win the 50%+1 vote of all Cypriot votes combined, but this should include a minimum of 20% of votes from each community.
- To be guaranteed that at least 1 every 5 presidents should be a Turkish Cypriot.
- To have presidential elections every 4 years
- Personally I would agree if the 1st or 2nd president is required to be a TC so TCs will not feel that they will wait too long to have a TC president.
Beyond that I propose to leave the system as simple and efficient as possible. Without a ton of parliaments, senates, presidents, prime ministers etc.
This would be what they have in Bosnia, and this is how that is described by Guardian:
Bosnia currently has one of the most complicated and wasteful systems of government ever devised. It is split into two ethnic halves, a Bosnian Serb republic and a federation of Muslims and Croats, both with their parliaments and governments. There is then a national parliament, presidency, prime minister and government. Over the past 10 years, the ethnic entities have enjoyed strong powers, with central authority weak, albeit strengthened in recent years largely as a result of Lord Ashdown's initiatives.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/yugo/article/ ... 14,00.html