The initiative proposed a radical halving of the residency requirement, slashing it from ten years to just five. This move would have fundamentally altered the demographic landscape of Swiss civic life, yet the House refused to budge. Under current law, applicants must possess a C residence permit and prove a decade of integration, a standard the initiative's supporters argued is punitively long. The proposed reform also sought to lower language barriers to a basic A2 level, arguing that 'democracy requires participation, not perfection.' However, opponents surged to the defense of the current system, asserting that Swiss citizenship is a 'reward for successful integration' rather than a starting point. The rejection also buried a counter-proposal from the political left that aimed to ease naturalisation specifically for second-generation immigrantsāa group that currently faces the same hurdles as newcomers unless they belong to the third generation. This refusal to compromise signals a hardening of the parliamentary heart against any dilution of the 'Swiss' brand.