Kim wrote:KipperJohn wrote:It would appear to have come out of a Chief Executive's meeting - it wasn't on the Board's original agenda according to the report.
When it is put on the agenda, and a formal motion put to the Board, presumambly by the ECB, then the minutes will show who supported it and who didn't.
I have no idea if a motion can be carried by a simple majority or not - anybody got any ideas/links to the ICC's constitution, terms of reference, standing orders and so on?
Think its an odd system. 10 full members and 3 votes for associates. Majority wins as long as all 3 Associates and at least half the full members are in that majority.- ie 4 full members and 3 assocs and 6 FMs and 2 assocs are both majorities but neither win. Not 100% on this but pretty sure its right
But isnt issue getting a vote at all? Think all wanted DRS except India last time but it never went to a vote
Thanks for that Kim. Surely if a formal motion is proposed and seconded, then the Chair has no option but to put the motion to a vote? An amendment could be proposed of course, and if seconded, the amendment would be voted on first. If it failed, they would then vote on the original motion.
Anyway that's how it usually works it most civilised organisations!
However, if decisions are 'cut and dried' before they go into their meeting, which they often are in my experience, then they'll all just pay lip service, have a chat and go nowhere. That's a long winded way of saying D/L's probably right.
Somebody might claim the high moral ground, but that's then just for show.
