Third Amendment

In the 2010 Federal Elections, most competing parties promised Constitutional reform. Prime Minister Yuri Medvedev was the first to bring these issues to Congress in his Five Point Dialogue. All five Congressial parties were invited. He said that he "[believed] it would have a higher success rate than when we should have five separate proposals." Eventually, by the end of January and even before the actual inauguration of Congress, an informal agreement was reached about some Constitutional changes. February 21st, Prime Minister Medvedev proposed three different proposal clusters to the First Chamber:
 * A cluster of proposals concerning the power of the ruling monarch and the Prime Minister;
 * A proposal to abolish undemocratic local regulations;
 * A proposal to alter citizenship regulations.

LOWIA, the Walden Libertarian Party, the ruling monarch King Dimitri and the proposing Progressive Democrats all reacted in favor of the first cluster. In the Second Chamber, all but one Members of the Congress supported the proposal. It was accepted March 10th by a 91.67% majority.

In the First Chamber, there was little response to the second proposal. In the Second, five Members voted in favor, of which three were Progressives. Four Members opposed it, all being from different parties. Given the scattered voting and the uncertainty surrounding the proposal, King Dimitri, Lars Washington and Andy McCandless abstained. The proposal did not pass.

Medvedev's last proposal was replaced by an alternative version written by King Dimitri. The original bill included very little changes. King Dimitri's reform bill, on the other hand, was a more radical rewriting of the original Article 3. In the Second Chamber, all members of the Congress favored the bill. It passed March 6th.

Beside Medvedev's three clusters, a fourth bill was proposed in the First Chamber on February 25th, by King Dimitri I of Lovia. The bill included a rather radical rewriting of the Constitutional Article 1B concerning the monarchy. McCrooke, Ilava and Medvedev all responded in favor of the changes. In the Second Chamber, all Members backed the proposal, with the exception of Alexandru Latin, who opposed the fact that the King retained his Membership by Right to the Congress. The bill was easily passed by March 5th with a 91.67% majority.