Decision Making

How We
Govern

Every decision is made by members — not by leaders. No one person controls anything. Everyone who participates gets a real say.

Types of Decisions

Like a school constitution that says who gets to vote on what. Different decisions need different numbers of people to agree before they pass.

Picking Candidates

Members in your area nominate and rank the people they want to represent them.

Needs: 25% of your area's members to participate

Making Rules

Any active member can suggest a new rule. Everyone discusses it. If enough people agree, it passes.

Needs: 15% of active members to participate

Spending Money

Big expenses need member approval. Small day-to-day spending doesn't.

Needs: 10% of senior members to participate

Hiring Leaders

Members vote for who leads them. Leaders serve for a set time and can be removed.

Needs: 20% of active members to participate

Handling Complaints

A randomly chosen group of members hears the case. The decision is public. Anyone can appeal.

Panel: 7 randomly chosen senior members

The Jury System

Like jury duty — a group of randomly chosen members decides the case, not the party bosses. This stops people from influencing the judges.

How Juries Are Picked

  1. 01 A computer randomly selects members from the eligible pool
  2. 02 Anyone with a conflict of interest is removed
  3. 03 Jurors review the case without knowing who's involved
  4. 04 They discuss the case in a structured way
  5. 05 They vote secretly and their vote is recorded
  6. 06 The decision is made public with full explanation

Why Random Selection?

Like jury duty — if you know who will judge you, you can try to influence them. If the judges are randomly picked, the only thing that matters is the strength of your case. You can't game the system.

Discussion Rules

Like a debate competition where you have to cite your sources. Every argument must be backed by facts. This isn't about shutting people up — it's about making sure conversations are useful.

Back Up Your Claims

If you say "this policy will cost ₹500 crore," you need to show where that number comes from. Opinions are fine — just label them as opinions.

Take Turns

Like a chess game with a timer. Everyone gets equal time to speak. No one can talk over anyone else. The best argument wins, not the loudest voice.

Declare Conflicts

Like a judge stepping aside from a case they're connected to. If you have a personal stake in an issue, you must say so. Honesty prevents hidden agendas.

Your Record Matters

Like a permanent report card. Every contribution you make is tied to your name. Good participation builds your reputation. Trolling destroys it.