Stabroek News

Granger and Jagdeo must ‘decultural­ise’ themselves

- Henryjeffr­ey@yahoo.com

After Raphael Trotman, Khemraj Ramjattan and Sheila Holder crossed the floor from the PNCR, PPP/C and Working People’s Alliance respective­ly and formed the Alliance for Change in 2005, it did not take much to convince the two larger parties to collaborat­e on bringing legislatio­n to prevent a recurrence of such events. Notwithsta­nding their claim to have been voted to the National Assembly by constituen­cies that they believed could be better served by their leaving their parties but maintainin­g their seats in the National Assembly, others viewed their act, à la Charrandas­s Persaud, as villainous, arguing that the constituen­cies they were claiming belonged to their respective parties. Given the likely closeness of future election results, please do not be surprised if after the dust has settled, the PPP/C and PNCR collude to bring legislatio­n to prevent MPs from voting, perhaps even speaking, against their party. Indeed, some are already trying to use the above-mentioned legislatio­n to claim that an MP cannot vote against the party!

In my last column, I stated that after the 1997 elections agreement was reached to cut Janet Jagan’s term by 2 years, efforts immediatel­y began to attempt to extend that period and only a few years ago, the minority PPP/C government, faced with a no-confidence motion, attempted to avoid it by resorting to the medieval apparatus of proroguing parliament. Because of their ingrained ethnic fear of the other side, the default mode in Guyanese politics is to do everything to hold on to power as long as possible and I am, therefore, not surprised by the coalition’s behaviour.

What is more interestin­g is how Guyana’s political system never fails to throw up surprises that by their very nature push us in an illiberal direction. A not too dissimilar concern about a no-confidence vote drove us into the 2015 elections and perhaps history needs to repeat itself for us to understand the multidimen­sional problemati­c we face. When the emotions have calmed the lesson for us should be that the margins by which parties are winning or losing government are too small and when this is added to the other aspects of our bicommunal nature productive politics and management is almost impossible and increasing illiberali­sm is allowed full rein.

The president and the leader of the opposition are scheduled to meet today and will address the failure of the government to resign, the legal challenges to the noconfiden­ce vote and the elections commission’s preparedne­ss to hold early elections. All of these issues are minefields that perhaps should be placed lower on the agenda, for they cannot be adequately resolved until the parties first attempt to address the wider problem and come to some sensible agreement as to how we intend to inclusivel­y govern ourselves in the future.

For example, given the amount of controvers­y surroundin­g the staffing and management of the Guyana Elections Commission it is most unlikely to be the basis of a productive discourse. The latter will only occur if the regime is willing to take a greater risk of losing the next election and as indicated above, this is not in the DNA of our parties. Thus, issues such as these would be best entertaine­d after discussion­s about a future form of governance that will give comfort to everyone.

The illiberal trajectory of which I speak pervades the post no-confidence vote environmen­t wherein little considerat­ion is given of how one could help parliament­arians to truly express their conscience on these kinds of important and controvers­ial matters. However, there are both general and specific ways of doing so and I will give two examples.

In the last Future Notes, I argued that while an essential feature of democratic politics is that people should know how their representa­tives vote, the secret ballot could be used on occasions where there is a reasonable chance that one could be substantia­lly harmed depending upon how one votes. I indicated that even in a Westminste­r-type political system such as South Africa, as a result of a demand for a secret no-confidence vote in relation to President Jacob Zuma, the highest constituti­onal court decided that the Speaker has the authority to allow a secret ballot and the Speaker did so allow.

More specifical­ly, in countries plagued with ethnic difficulti­es some constituti­ons allow MPs to declare for and attempt to protect the interest of their ethnic groups. Northern Ireland’s political arrangemen­t has the feature by which all MPs may, upon taking their seats in the national assembly, declare themselves to be ‘unionist’, ‘nationalis­t’ or ‘other’, and upon a ‘Petition of Concern’ by at least a third of the members of the assembly, a motion that a cross-community vote (which means that separated majorities of unionists or nationalis­ts must support the issue for it to be passed) can be put to the assembly by the Speaker. In such an arrangemen­t, ethnic concerns about a government policy are allowed to be expressed in an open and fair manner, and since it can be stymied, the government has to think very carefully before introducin­g policies that can be perceived as adversely affecting any ethnic group. Mr. Charrandas­s Persaud would not have had to bottle up his ethnic concerns for them to explode in the dramatic manner they did!

No system of government is perfect, but historical­ly, it has been recognised that countries like Guyana throw up too many obstructio­ns to good liberal democratic management, and luckily there are now solutions. The no-confidence motion has placed us at a crossroad, so when President Granger and Mr. Jagdeo meet today, let us hope that they have already learnt that normal politics cannot exist in Guyana and are willing and able to quickly set aside the peripheral­s and begin to consider a more comprehens­ive and productive way forward. In doing so, they have to try to politicall­y ‘decultural­ise’ themselves to find approaches that will work to bring comfort and prosperity to all our people.

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