Verity Stuyveris
Aurelian Veruna
Her
Lex
Dominique Vexx
In the vast, circular expanse of the chamber Ayumi guided her repulsor pod forward with deliberate calm, positioning it once more at the forefront of the orbiting platforms. As she looked at Verity with a smile. The chamber's soft, diffused illumination cast an even glow across the assembly, highlighting the concentric rings of senators from every corner of the Republic. She rose steadily, activating her microphone with a measured touch, her voice carrying clear and composed across the hall. Offering nods first to Chancellor Vexx and then to Senator Stuyveris, she began without flourish or preamble, her tone warm yet resolute, determined to lay out a thorough, point-by-point defense of her proposed amendments.
"Madam Chancellor, Senator Stuyveris, esteemed colleagues I with profound respect for the intent behind Senate Bill 6946 and with an equally profound conviction that our shared goal of a more effective, accountable, and resilient diplomatic framework can only be achieved if we subject every proposed mechanism to the most rigorous examination. The Republic will have earned its place in galactic history not through haste, but through deliberate, principled choices that balance ambition with caution, innovation with stability, and outreach with protection. Today's debate offers us an opportunity to apply that same discipline to our own institutions."
She knew the king haad opposed it and a few others likely did but ehhh Verity was interresting and a little back and forth got things fun. "I support the core aspirations articulated by the Senator from Druckenwell: professionalizing coordination of our diplomatic efforts, relieving the Chancellor of an unsustainable operational load, and ensuring the Senate fulfills its charter-mandated role in overseeing the Republic's external engagements. These are worthy objectives. Yet worthy objectives must be pursued through structures that demonstrably advance them rather than inadvertently hinder them." SHe gave a look as mentally she prepared for it but this wasn't goign to be a filibusterr it was going to be..... okay maybe it sort of was...
"My three amendments are narrow in scope but careful in design; they seek to preserve the bill's strengths while addressing vulnerabilities that could undermine speed, security, fiscal responsibility, and inter-branch trust. I will defend each amendment in turn, exploring not only the language but the practical consequences, the historical patterns that inform my concerns, the fiscal realities that cannot be ignored, the security imperatives that demand consideration, and the constitutional principles that must guide us. I ask your forbearance as I proceed at length; thoroughness here spares us regret later." SHe rubbed her hands together with a look though.
Ayumi paused only briefly to let the chamber settle, then continued with unwavering focus. "Let us begin with my first motion: to strike the establishment of the Ministry of State or, at minimum, to recast it as a purely advisory office embedded within and fully subordinate to the Chancellor's existing staff structure, without separate agency status, independent budget authority, or executive functions beyond advice and coordination. The case rests on a simple but decisive observation: the Republic's diplomatic achievements have flowed from concentrated authority in the Chancellor's office, supported by flexible, non-statutory support structures that adapt quickly to circumstance."
Her eyes roamed over and she was prepared. "This model has permitted decisive engagement when windows of opportunity open briefly when a frontier system signals openness to alignment, when a trade negotiation reaches a delicate tipping point, when an emerging contact must be nurtured before external actors can interfere. Concentration enables speed; speed enables success. A standalone Ministry introduces multiplicity at every decision node. Budget requests must navigate new appropriation channels. Senior appointments face confirmation processes that, even when uncontested, consume weeks or months."
Ayumi was moving a little in her pod. "Operational directives require alignment between Ministry staff and Chancellor aides, creating potential for delay or divergence. Jurisdictional boundaries must be negotiated and renegotiated as situations evolve. Each step, however well-intentioned, adds friction. In diplomacy, friction often translates to lost leverage. Consider the resource implications. A new executive agency demands substantial upfront and recurring investment: secure facilities on Naboo or a comparable, hardened communications infrastructure, personnel recruitment and vetting for hundreds of positions across diplomatic, analytical, protocol, security, and administrative roles, ongoing training programs, travel budgets, and protocol support for high-level engagements."
Ayumi was looking at more of it while she checked over some areas of the chamber. There was a chance she could start reading Lady Velvet on the floor as a filabuster and it would need to be done for this bill. "Conservative estimates place initial capitalization in the high hundreds of millions of credits, with annual operating costs quickly reaching several billion. Those credits would necessarily be reallocated from priorities that directly advance our era's mission frontier infrastructure development, support for exploration initiatives, humanitarian assistance to vulnerable systems, enhanced security for critical trade arteries. Every administrative layer funded is a layer of outward-facing work deferred."
Ayumi allowed the chamber a moment to absorb the argument before pressing forward. "Security ramifications compound the concern. Expansion inherently enlarges the circle of individuals with access to sensitive material. Confirmation processes for senior roles require disclosure of career details that can reveal patterns adversaries might exploit. Internal dynamics competition for influence, differing interpretations of directives can produce uneven information flows or delayed reporting. The existing Diplomatic Service already grapples with classification management; adding another reporting hierarchy increases complexity without guaranteeing improved discipline."
She was checking on more of it though with her attention on the senator. She wasn't upset or trying to sink it if anything she wanted it to succeed. "The counter-argument that a dedicated Minister creates a single, trusted bridge between branches is well-taken, but trust arises from consistent practice and transparent mechanisms, not from statutory titles. A designated lead advisor within the Chancellor's office could perform the same liaison function delivering regular briefings, appearing before committees, channeling field requirements without the structural permanence or cost of an independent entity. The Charter emphasizes visibility and answerability; it does not prescribe bureaucratic form."
Herr eyes flicked over towards the chancellor with a nod of her head. "We are free to choose the form that best preserves agility while enhancing oversight through targeted reporting, mandatory audits, and strengthened post-action review. Overburdening of the Chancellor's office is a legitimate issue the bill identifies. My approach addresses it by formalizing advisory capacity within the existing chain rather than creating a parallel chain. Delegation within unity remains more efficient than delegation across divided structures."
Ayumi moved around in her pod mostly to keep her legs circulating and be able to get aa look at the others around her. "I shall elaborate further on risks of confirmation delays in polarized climates, potential for factional influence over appointments, challenges of maintaining coherent policy across separate offices, or long-term cultural drift toward bureaucratic caution but the essential conclusion holds: the proposed Ministry pursues transparency by adding layers that threaten operational tempo, resource allocation, and institutional cohesion. My amendment achieves the same transparency goals through leaner, more focused means. This is refinement born of prudence."
She drew a measured breath and shifted to the next pillar of her argument. "I now turn to my second amendment: requiring joint approval by the Chancellor and the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee chair for any compulsion subpoena, document demand, or compelled appearance that pertains to classified material from ongoing diplomatic activities, while confining real-time Committee authority to post-action review, annual performance audits, statutory interpretation, funding decisions, and code-of-conduct enforcement. The concern has been raised that this introduces an effective executive veto, diminishing the Senate's charter authority. I share the instinct to guard that authority jealously."
Her eyes flicked around but she didn't take many of the others in. if they were bored or annoyed before... she was going to keep on going. "Yet the safeguard is deliberately narrow: it applies only to live compulsion touching active, classified operations. In all other domains review of completed missions, analysis of classification patterns, enforcement of conduct standards, appropriation oversight, legislative jurisdiction the Committee's power remains complete and unimpaired. The necessity arises from the nature of diplomatic work itself. Negotiations, intelligence collection, quiet mediations, and crisis-response engagements frequently depend on confidentiality for their viability."
She finished her smaall circuit of her pod as she was speaking. "Premature exposure can collapse delicate balances, endanger personnel, embolden opponents, or foreclose future opportunities. The record of Republic diplomacy contains numerous instances where ill-timed inquiries disrupted active efforts, prolonging conflicts or forfeiting advantages. Timing matters; real-time compulsion risks sacrificing long-term gains for short-term visibility. Cooperative trust between branches defines the High Republic approach. The executive classifies responsibly to protect integrity; the Senate restrains where immediate disclosure would cause harm."
She took a small breath for a moment. "Joint approval mandates dialogue: disagreement escalates to full Senate deliberation or existing mediation pathways. No unilateral block endures indefinitely." Ayumi gestured lightly, her voice steady and measured. "Fears of classification abuse are reasonable, but the amendment does not insulate classification decisions from scrutiny. The Committee retains authority to investigate over-classification trends, compel post-mission declassification reviews, receive protected whistleblower testimony, pursue charter-violation allegations, and if warranted initiate no-confidence or other accountability measures."
Herr hand was rraising up as she brought her fingers for a moment. "Annual audits can require detailed reporting on classification volume, duration, and justification, providing systemic transparency without compromising live operations. Resource demands also favor restraint: unrestricted real-time compulsion would require substantial Committee expansion additional legal, analytical, and secure-handling staff diverting credits from diplomacy itself. Security weighs heavily: adversaries monitor Senate proceedings; unrestricted access offers real-time intelligence on Republic positions and vulnerabilities."
She could debate more of it with a nod of her head. "Practical experience supports timed oversight: secure field reporting already occurs; post-action review delivers full accountability without disruption. This calibration protects both branches' legitimate roles while preserving the effectiveness our diplomats require. The alternative unfettered live compulsion would transform every sensitive engagement into a potential public spectacle, where partisan divisions or even well-meaning but poorly timed inquiries could paralyze foreign policy precisely when decisiveness is most needed. We cannot afford that in an era of persistent frontier instability, rising external threats, and the constant demand for rapid, coordinated outreach."
Ayumi waas checking on more of it though as she paused forr a brief moment and took a sip of water forr hydration. "My amendment does not diminish oversight; it times it intelligently full scrutiny after the fact, targeted safeguards during. It is the reasoned middle ground between executive autonomy and legislative supremacy." She continued without pause, turning to the final amendment with the same careful precision. "Finally, my emergency acting-appointment clause grants the Chancellor unilateral authority to name acting diplomats to key positions for limited terms not to exceed six standard months during formally declared crises, with full Senate confirmation required thereafter unless the crisis is extended by Senate resolution."
SShe was getting towards the end with a small look though to herself. "Clarification is necessary: emergency declarations follow existing Republic protocols and are subject to Senate review and potential revocation; they are not unilateral fiat. The six-month limit ensures temporality: no acting appointee could serve indefinitely without facing confirmation. If the crisis persists, the Senate must actively extend the emergency status a deliberate check that prevents abuse. This mechanism mirrors successful precedents: rapid envoy deployments in hyperspace emergencies, acting sector commands during pirate surges, temporary diplomatic liaisons in border stabilization efforts. In each case, immediacy saved lives and preserved Republic influence."
Ayumi was nearing her home strretch but she would have to drive it home at least for a moment as she was thinking about it. "Future Chancellors need this tool guardrails intact via Senate review. Objections potential abuse are met by temporality, revocation power, and no-confidence recourse. This is not deference; it is realism in an uncertain galaxy. The Republic thrives when its branches cooperate in trust rather than entangle one another in procedures that could slow the very outreach and coexistence we champion. Chancellor Vexx has rightly highlighted the need to preserve executive prerogative while welcoming dialogue; Senator Stuyveris has rightly called for greater structure and accountability."
Ayumi checked on many of the faces and she was prepared for a few things... most eye rolls. "Let us meet in the middle strengthening our diplomatic capacity without burdening it with layers that history warns can calcify into inefficiency. I yield the remainder of my time for consideration of these motions and invite thoughtful debate from my colleagues." With that, she lowered her head in a graceful nod and allowed her pod to ease back into its orbit, the flowing white organza of her robes settling around her as she returned to listening position, ready for the next voice in the debate. SHe finished she was done and well her pod was able to go back towards its place as she stood there awaiting.