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A fully developed version of the Agreement was issued in May 1649 which proposed:
The right to vote for all men over the age of 21 (excepting servants, beggars and Royalists);
No army officer, treasurer or lawyer could be an MP (to prevent conflict of interest);
Annual elections to Parliament with MPs serving one term only;
Equality of all persons before the law;
Trials should be heard before 12 jurymen, freely chosen by their community.
No-one could be punished for refusing to testify against themselves in criminal cases;
The law should proceed in English and cases should not extend longer than six months;
The death penalty to be applied only in cases of murder;
Abolition of imprisonment for debt;
Tithes should be abolished and parishioners have the right to choose their ministers;
Taxation in proportion to real or personal property;
Abolition of military conscription, monopolies and excise taxes.
This is a boiled down version of the Agreement of the People, the manifesto of the Levellers, a group within England's New Model Army (NMA) who advocated radical social reform. The group was extremely popular among the regular soldiers of the NMA, and had to be forcibly suppressed by the NMA ruling body, the Army Council.
There were several Leveller-inspired mutinies, all of which were suppressed. So what-if sometime between 1647 and 1649 the Levellers are able to launch a successful coup. The now Leveller-led NMA forces Parliament to pass an updated version of the Agreement of the People as the first English constitution, and elections are held soon after.