Okay, Harmony. Ugh. A lot of people have a great big hatred of the whole discipline, and it's getting easier to understand them; the removal of Conflict alone...well. Either way, we can definitely expect to see a Monument in it for T3, so here's my little contribution to the discipline. It's very simple, and has the potential to be very, very nasty given time.
Each week, the seven petitions with the largest number of signatures are placed on a running ballot. The petitions do not fade away, but no longer need to collect signatures; unless they are voted upon negatively by the majority of Egypt, they essentially remain on the ballot. These petitions are not laws. They would hold no legal weight, they would carry no code associated with them; they would be, for intents and purposes, a sort of 'generalized rulebook' on mores and issues.
Votes are, for these petitions, an ongoing process. If a petition has fewer than 40% of voters in support of it, it fails at the next 'weekly tick', usually each Sunday. It is discarded, and the petition may no longer qualify for activity on the ballot. Holders may, however, continue to carry it for their own purposes. Petitions with more than 60%, on the other hand, gain the possibility of passing. The top one eligible petition, in order of vote percentage, is implemented as a 'proclamation', visible at every voting booth and ULeadership in Egypt, and the author of the petition passes the test.
Petitions may remain on the ballot for as long as needed; ultimately, it's possible for the ballot to contain a large number of proclamations. Ideas for alleviating saturation might include increasing the 'negative threshold' by a few percentage points, so long as it's never above 49%.