Stabroek News

AFC can give life to constituti­on reform by taking radical action - Ramkarran

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President David Granger’s address to the National Assembly on Thursday completely omitted any reference to the governing coalition’s manifesto promise of constituti­onal reform, and former Speaker of the National Assembly Ralph Ramkarran says the AFC has the power to get this commitment fulfilled by going as far as leaving the government benches.

Writing in his weekly ‘The Conversati­on Tree’ column in the Sunday Stabroek, Ramkarran observed that in his speech on Thursday, Granger did not mention constituti­onal reform. The former Speaker said that since a budgetary provision was made, the Guyanese people were entitled to be told what legislativ­e initiative­s to expect from the Government but the public is constantly being “teased” by the Government.

“A committee was appointed to advise the Government on the process it should follow. The report was never published .... Last year’s budget provided several million dollars for constituti­onal reform but nothing has happened. What the President did not say in his address to the National Assembly, or in previous addresses, is whether his Government will fulfil its promise on constituti­onal reform to the Guyanese people. It still has time to complete the process,” Ramkarran wrote.

Constituti­onal reform was one of the manifesto priorities of the APNU+AFC government during its 2015 elections campaign. While the manifesto promised that within three months of taking office, an APNU+AFC government would appoint a Commission to amend the Constituti­on with the full participat­ion of the people, this has not occurred.

In July last year, over two years after it took office, the government tabled the Constituti­onal Reform Consultati­ve Commission Bill 2017. A bipartisan Constituti­onal Reform Committee was subsequent­ly establishe­d but not much has been done.

Ramkarran, in his column, recalled that constituti­on reform was promised by the APNU+AFC manifesto and Government. He noted that the joint manifesto of APNU+AFC provides for “Priority areas to be addressed” with the first item in this section being “The introducti­on of a Meaningful Constituti­on Reform Programme geared towards improved governance and fair representa­tion.”

The first item in the next section entitled “Programme of Action”, was the “Establishm­ent of a Constituti­onal Reform Committee with a mandate to complete consultati­ons, draft amendments and present same to the National Assembly for approval within nine months,” Ramkarran observed. In outlining other details under the topic of “Constituti­onal Reform” in the manifesto, Ramkarran said that it showed the high importance that the APNU+AFC attached to constituti­onal reform.

However, he observed that not much has happened.

The former Speaker argued that the AFC has the power to ensure the fulfillmen­t of the manifesto promise if it decides to do so, though he pointed out that the party has suffered serious setbacks in its relations with APNU, with the main one being the sidelining of Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo.

“Notwithsta­nding the reduced influence of the AFC, manifested by APNU’s decision not to accede to its demands, whatever they may have been, in relation to the sharing of seats in the local government elections, the AFC still has clout. I made this suggestion once for the AFC to exercise that clout. I make it again. The AFC’s ministers should leave the Government, sit in the back benches, support the Government if they wish, but insist on constituti­onal reform in return for their continuing support,” Ramkarran wrote.

“The AFC has nothing to lose. It is destined to remain an appendage to APNU exercising

little or no independen­t influence. The votes it gained from the PNCR in 2006, the AFC returned to APNU in 2011. And the votes it obtained from the PPP in 2011 trickled back in 2015 and has now all returned. APNU began to undermine the AFC from the day the Government took office in 2015 by reneging on promises to increase the Prime Minister’s powers. It now knows that the AFC is so weakened that it feels it can safely discard it for the local government elections,” he said.

“The only course likely to sustain the AFC as a respected, if not viable political force, is to secure constituti­onal reform for the Guyanese people. In addition, history will recognise this service to the Guyanese people. Its failure to do so will be held to be its failure to the Guyanese people. The Cummingsbu­rg Accord will be recognised as a failure comparable to the failure of the PNC-UF coalition in 1968, which the PNC orchestrat­ed. This would be just as APNU has orchestrat­ed the failure of the APNU+AFC coalition by the miniaturis­ation, then absorption, of the AFC,” he observed.

According to Ramkarran, the AFC’s failure to act will open the way for a new political force to lead the way for constituti­onal reform, “the most important issue facing the Guyanese people today, if political stability is to be salvaged in the era of oil.”

 ??  ?? Ralph Ramkarran
Ralph Ramkarran

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