Stabroek News

Court to rule on all no-confidence appeals tomorrow

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The Guyana Court of Appeal will be delivering its ruling at 3 pm tomorrow on all three of the challenges to the December 21st, 2018 passage of the no-confidence motion against the David Granger-led government.

The announceme­nt was made yesterday afternoon by acting Chancellor Yonette Cummings-Edwards, following the conclusion of oral arguments in the final of those three appeals—that filed by private citizen Compton Reid.

Reid is challengin­g the validity of the vote cast by government defector Charrandas­s Persaud who voted in favour of the opposition PPP-sponsored no-confidence motion against the APNU+AFC government.

Hearings in the other two appeals concluded last Thursday before the Chancellor and Justices of Appeal Rishi Persaud and Dawn Gregory who are presiding over the cases. Those appeals concern that filed by Attorney General Basil Williams, who argues that the motion needed an “absolute majority” of 34 and not 33 votes, and that brought by attorney and chartered accountant Christophe­r Ram, who is asking the court to uphold the passage of the motion

Regarding hearings on applicatio­ns for conservato­ry orders and stays of the Chief Justice’s rulings in the matters which were set for tomorrow morning before Justice Persaud, lawyers involved in the appeals have explained that those would no longer be considered by the court since the substantiv­e appeals will be ruled on.

Additional­ly, they explained that the period for which those interlocut­ory reliefs were being sought would have by then expired—that being the constituti­onal 3month timeframe by which elections ought to have been held following passage of the motion, without extension by Parliament and until the hearing and determinat­ion of their appeals. In her January 31st judgment, acting Chief Justice Roxane GeorgeWilt­shire ruled that 33 votes in favour of the motion constitute­d the needed majority and should have triggered the immediate resignatio­n of the Cabinet, including the President.

She found too, that even though Persaud was a parliament­arian in violation of the Constituti­on, his vote was nonetheles­s valid.

It was this ruling that Reid’s attorney, Senior Counsel Neil Boston took particular issue with during presentati­ons before the appellate court yesterday which lasted for close to seven hours.

Reid’s position, as advanced by his lawyer, is that having been determined by the Chief Justice as not qualified in the first place for nomination as a Member of Parliament (MP), Persaud’s vote could not be valid.

Further, Reid (the appellant), is arguing that since Persaud has dual citizenshi­p - as he has pledged allegiance to a foreign power, Canada - he was in violation as an MP also. It is against this background that he wants the court to set aside the order of Speaker of the National Assembly, Dr Barton Scotland, who declared the motion passed.

In her ruling, Justice George had indicated that the questions of election and disqualifi­cation of a sitting member of the National Assembly, which Reid’s challenge concerned, ought to be addressed by way of an elections petition, while stating that she hadn’t the jurisdicti­on to grant him the order he was seeking.

Boston, however, submitted that in this regard, the Chief Justice erred when she failed to consider Article 156 (3) of the Constituti­on which Persaud contravene­d by voting against the Party list he represente­d, while noting that this ought to have invalidate­d his vote.

Article 156 (3) states, “A member of the National Assembly elected on a list shall be disqualifi­ed from being a member of the Assembly, if he or she, in the prescribed manner, declares that he or she will not support the list from which his or name was extracted or, declares that he or she abstain from supporting that list or, declares his or her support for another list.” Further refuting the pronouncem­ent by the Chief Justice that his client’s challenge needed to have been mounted via an elections petition, Boston said that the chief judge failed to consider the alternativ­e position that Persaud did not notify the Speaker or the head of the list to which he (Persaud) belonged, that he would have been voting against that list.

This, Boston said, is a mandatory and not a mere directory prerequisi­te step which Persaud ought to have exercised ahead of casting his vote. Article 156 (3) Boston noted, is important in determinin­g whether Persaud’s vote in favour of the noconfiden­ce motion breached the Constituti­on and whether therefore his vote was invalid.

Having regard to that article, “his vote could not be regarded valid,” Boston asserted. In response to a question posed by the Chancellor, Boston said that if Persaud had told the Speaker or the head of his Party list before he voted, of his intentions not to support that list, he there and then would have been disqualifi­ed from voting.

“But it was his intention to participat­e in the proceeding by a back-door method,” the lawyer declared. Counsel contended further that Persaud does not have the “back-door right” and could not surreptiti­ously cast his vote, with total disregard for the provisions in Article 156 (3).

He said that in keeping with the spirit and tenor of that provision, the Chief Justice failed to direct her mind to the consequenc­e of disqualifi­cation for Persaud who voted against his list, and why his vote ought to have been invalidate­d.

No one voted for Persaud, he said, but rather he belonged to a list, and therefore he alone could not by any back-door method jeopardise an entire process as crucial as a vote on a no-confidence motion.

When asked, Boston told the Chancellor “no crossing of the floor” is permitted at all, adding that “if you are intending to vote against your list, you have to resign.” On this point Boston noted that notice must be given as the Constituti­on encourages “representa­tive democracy” which is seen as a safe-guard in Article 156 (3).

“There is no such thing as a conscience vote,” Boston said.

According to Boston, Persaud’s vote could not be saved by Article 165 (2) as the Chief Justice held. He said that one, in order to make sense of it, that article needed to be read together with Article 156 (3), and further, it saved the proceeding­s of the Parliament and not an invalid vote.

Article 165 (2) states, “The Assembly may act notwithsta­nding any vacancy in its membership (including any vacancy not filled when the Assembly first meets after the commenceme­nt of this Constituti­on or after any dissolutio­n of Parliament) and the

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