Stabroek News

There has to be a completely new constituti­on

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Dear Editor, Please allow me to respond to Mr Lincoln Lewis’ letter in SN , Sepember 24 in which he argues the presenters at the recent constituti­onal symposium at University of Guyana, Tain, should first understand the 1980 Burnham Constituti­on before trying to critique it or ask for its reform. He cited Article 160 when responding to Mr Terrence Campbell of Reform, Inspire, Sustain and Educate (RISE). Mr Campbell had indicated some clear weaknesses of the electoral system.

I don’t believe Guyana needs mere constituti­onal reform. Instead, I believe there has to be a completely new Constituti­on. This is not because the document does not provide the rights of individual­s as it relates to ethnicity, religion or gender. The Constituti­on is quite clear on these rights.

The problem, however, is these individual rights are trumped by group interests because the Constituti­on presents loopholes for party-based political (or oligarchic) capture of the state, jobs and resource rights. For example, Article 160 is deficient in one important aspect: the primacy of the party list system and the power it presents to the presidenti­al candidate in selecting like-minded people on the list and therefore the members of parliament. I have raised this point on numerous occasions in my Developmen­t Watch columns and in my peer-reviewed academic works. Therefore, I will not repeat these arguments here.

There is no perfect constituti­on or political system. The degree of perfection of these should be viewed on a spectrum. However, it is crucial for Guyanese to create systems that minimize the opportunit­ies for group interests to undermine individual rights as was done under the party paramountc­y of the PNC and elected oligarchy of the PPP. This 1980 Burnham Constituti­on fails in this regard. It delivers too much power to the president and presents enough loopholes for the winning political party to dominate economic and social life.

Through pre-election alliance, which the constituti­on promotes, it allows enough ambiguity for the use of ethnic signalling that accuses independen­t politician­s of selling out their respective kith and kin. Both the PPP and PNC have done it in 2011 and 2015. It was more obvious and centralize­d in the PPP’s actions at Babu Jaan. The PNC’s ethnic mobilizati­ons were more subtle and decentrali­zed. The requiremen­t of pre-election alliance was deliberate­ly inserted to entrench the PPP-PNC ethnic political duopoly by allowing them to accuse others of selling out.

Editor, as a member of the diaspora, I am not trying to impose my views on Guyanese. I know that newspaper columnists (except Stabroek News), politician­s, and the woman/man in the street despise us. However, if I am allowed to make a suggestion, I would encourage RISE and others not to treat constituti­onal reform as a legalistic exercise in tinkering around the edges. The lawyers should only get involved in drafting after the problem solvers – the farmers, engineers, economists, scientists, mathematic­ians, accountant­s, teachers, police officers, soldiers, medical profession­als, and in general the quantitati­vely inclined – have outlined a clear set of core principles that should involve minimizing the power of group interests, rooted in the duopolisti­c party structure, over individual rights.

The tinkered 1980 Burnham Constituti­on can be case study of the fallacy of compositio­n, in which the sum of the individual rights provided under the Constituti­on do not equal the social or aggregate rights. This has had devastatin­g impact on Guyana’s economic developmen­t since 1970.

Sorry if anyone thinks I am lecturing them. I am not.

Yours faithfully, Tarron Khemraj

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