Stabroek News

Jagdeo to ask court to quash Patterson appointmen­t

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Leader of the Opposition Bharrat Jagdeo will today ask the High Court to quash President David Granger’s unilateral appointmen­t of retired justice James Patterson as Chairman of Gecom on the grounds of unconstitu­tionality.

“We will ask the court to declare the appointmen­t by President Granger, of James Patterson as Chairman of the Guyana Elections Commission, contrary to and in breach of Article 161 (2 ) of the constituti­on, that it is unconstitu­tional, illegal, unlawful, null, void and of no effect,” the plaintiff’s Attorney, Anil Nandall, told Stabroek News,

yesterday. Further, he added “An order directing the removal of Justice James Patterson (retired) from the post of Chairman of Gecom and an order directing the President to choose a name from the 18 names submitted to him by the leader of the opposition or alternativ­ely to request from the leader of the opposition six additional names for the appointmen­t for the Chairman of Gecom. Also a declaratio­n that Mr. James Patterson is not qualified, in accordance with article 161(2) of the constituti­on, to be appointed a chairman of Gecom.”

On Thursday night, Patterson, 84, was sworn in as the new Gecom Chairman, just hours after being asked to take up the appointmen­t by the president, who rejected three lists submitted by Jagdeo.

Granger, who said the lists submitted were unacceptab­le, said that he selected Patterson under the proviso to Article 161 (2) of the Constituti­on, which allows him to unilateral­ly appoint a judge, former judge or a person qualified to be a judge, if the Opposition Leader fails to submit a list as provided for in the law.

Jagdeo has since accused the president of acting in violation of the Constituti­on and announced that the opposition would adopt a stance of non-cooperatio­n with the government while signaling that he would take to the local court and was prepared to proceed to the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) if necessary.

Nandall said that he will argue that the President initially misinterpr­eted Article 161 (2) of the Constituti­on by saying that it only qualifies a judge, a former judge or a person eligible to be a judge, to be appointed as the Chairman of Gecom. When this interpreta­tion was met with public condemnati­on, Nandlall said that Granger was forced to recognise that that provision of the Constituti­on also caters for any “fit and proper” person to be considered. But even then, the President and his Attorney General injected another “nonsensica­l slant” to their interpreta­tion by arguing that the Constituti­on expresses a preference for the judicial category. Infantile “These infantile interpreta­tions to the clear language of the Constituti­on were all put to rest by the Chief Justice’s ruling. Now the President has deliberate­ly misinterpr­eted the other part of Article 161 (2), that is, the proviso. When one examines the intention of the framers of the Constituti­on, which was to create a bi-partisan mechanism to produce a chairman of Gecom, no rational mind would be unclear when the proviso can be activated. It can only be activated when no list has been submitted by the Leader of the Opposition. Once a list has been submitted, this proviso has no applicabil­ity. Any other interpreta­tion would make a mockery to the letter but moreover, the spirit of the Constituti­on because every President would then be free to reject a list submitted to him by the Leader of the Opposition and then appoint a person of his own choice, rendering the very constituti­on otiose, superfluou­s and nugatory. (Former US) President (Jimmy) Carter and those who coined the Carter(-Price) Formula were not that naïve,” Nandlall said.

‘A duty is placed on the Leader of the Opposition to submit a list of six names, not unacceptab­le to the President from which the President is empowered to choose one. Since the Leader of the Opposition is not endowed with clairvoyan­t powers or an ability to read the President’s mind, the framers of the Constituti­on could not have expected and do not expect him to know which names the President would find not unacceptab­le. Therefore, the responsibi­lity is on the Leader of the Opposition to select six names that in his opinion, the President would find not unacceptab­le. To his credit, the Leader of the Opposition did not confine the 18 names submitted to his subjective judgement, he engaged every important organisati­on in this country in a consultati­ve process which produced those names. Simultaneo­usly, when the Constituti­on vests the President with a power to determine acceptabil­ity of a name, the framers of the Constituti­on expect and the law mandates that power must be exercised rationally and reasonably not capricious­ly and whimsicall­y and in a manner that any reasonable President would do in the circumstan­ces. To enable him space to exercise that power, the Constituti­on was fair enough to give him six choices. In this particular instance, he had 18 choices,” he added.

A former Attorney General, under the PPP/C’s last government, Nandall said that he understand­s that some will argue on the excerpt of Article 161, “Provided that if the leader of the opposition fails to submit a list as provided for” saying that it was subject to interpreta­tion. But he argues that “as provided for” could not be taken in isolation.

Nandlall posited, “The literal language of the provision cannot be read in isolation from the spirit and intention of the framers of the constituti­on. Therefore, it is imperative to go back to the Carter formula which was essentiall­y constituti­onalized in that provision. And the intention was to create a bipartisan commission of six commission­ers, three presenting the government and three representi­ng the opposition, and with a chairman produced from a consensual process involving the leader of the opposition and the president.”

“That is why the president’s power is circumscri­bed to a list of names presented to him by the leader of the opposition. He has no power to appoint, outside of that list once a list is presented. It is only when no list is presented as is required which means a list of six names from the leader of the opposition, then he has the power to make an appointmen­t of his own choice,” he stressed.

He said that he will explain to the court that the perversity of the decision by the President to act unilateral­ly is compounded by the fact that the President has not given a single reason for rejecting 18 accomplish­ed, profession­ally qualified and respected Guyanese.

And while he will not ask the court to rule for an explanatio­n on why any of the 18 persons was rejected, Nandall said that he believes that the President led the nation to believe, through several public statements, that he would not act unilateral­ly but will pursue a collaborat­ive course on this issue to the very end.

“So on that note, the President has simply lied to the nation. If anyone was in doubt about the President’s bonafides in this matter, those doubts would have immediatel­y dissipated by the choice the President made in the form of Justice Patterson,” he said.

 ??  ?? Anil Nandall
Anil Nandall

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