Stabroek News

AFC would not support delay of 2020 general elections - Ramjattan

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The Alliance for Change will not support the delay of the 2020 elections to await the constituti­onal reform process, party Chairman and former leader Khemraj Ramjattan says.

“I would not countenanc­e at this stage, any circumstan­ce for the delay of elections and I would want to say that I would ensure as a Chairman of my party, which is in this partnershi­p with the APNU, that we do have elections in 2020,” Ramjattan told a Private Sector Business summit yesterday.

On the panel facilitati­ng discussion on governance and the legal architectu­re at yesterday’s summit, which included Attorney Nigel Hughes and PPP/C’s Gail Teixeira, Ramjattan said that he believed that the constituti­onal reform process could be completed in two years.

However, he assured that should it not happen, he would not support the delaying of General and Regional Elections, due in 2020, in the name of seeing the constituti­onal reform process is completed.

The question on his and the AFC’s position on the election delay was put by activist and Attorney Christophe­r Ram. “What would be his and his party’s position if there are any attempts to postpone elections like we had in 1990, under the guise of completing constituti­onal reform?” Ram asked along with two other questions.

While Teixeira did not touch on the issue of delay for elections, she said that she believes that for an effective constituti­onal reform process, there must be input from the country’s citizenry.

“Constituti­onal reform takes time. You have to go to the bottom house, the school, and the village and people have to understand what it is they are asking for,” she said while stressing it was a process that should not be rushed.

The Opposition representa­tive on the panel pointed out that the need for nationwide meetings with the “ordinary man and woman” was needed because even at the recent forums on constituti­onal reform many persons asked for legal change instead of a reform process.

“At the UG forum (on constituti­onal reform) a lot of the changes asked for are legal change,” she said while later noting that “constituti­onal reform is not academic”.

The APNU+AFC government has come under increasing pressure over its failure to deliver on its manifesto promise of the appointmen­t of a commission within three months of taking office to amend the constituti­on. Two years have passed without this commission being establishe­d. More recently, the government had said that $80 million was set aside for consultati­ons countrywid­e this year. Nine months have passed without any consultati­ons being held.

Before Parliament went into recess this year, the Constituti­onal Reform Consultati­ve Commission Bill 2017 was read a first time by Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo.

According to the explanator­y memorandum, the bill is aimed at reforming the charter so that it is more inclusive, democratic and transparen­t.

Support from the opposition for it is seen as vital to the process moving ahead and Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo has said that his party was committed to it.

“The process of constituti­onal reform was always seen as one that would be continuous, an intention that was enshrined in Article 119 (A) of the Constituti­on. The PPP/C, therefore, remains open to the process of constituti­onal reform – a process that is locally driven and one that will see the involvemen­t of the widest possible cross-section of stakeholde­rs, including collaborat­ion from internatio­nal bodies,” Jagdeo said last month

“We have to ensure that the process by which we arrive at any proposed changes, if any, to the Constituti­on must be transparen­t and must find acceptance among all stakeholde­rs,” he added.

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Khemraj Ramjattan

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