Stabroek News

Will the appointed constituti­onal commission finally grant empowermen­t to the people?

- Dear Editor, Sincerely, Vishnu Bisram

An announceme­nt was recently made on the appointmen­t of a constituti­onal commission to review the 1980 Burnham constituti­on and recommend changes. Elections are due in about fifteen months. Will anything come of constituti­onal reform? All promises to change the constituti­on were broken by every government. Can the two dominant parties agree on anything on reforms?

In the last attempt at some kind of reform, around 2011, they agreed and collaborat­ed to reduce the powers of the people. Will they further reduce the powers of the people or empower them this time around with some meaningful reforms like decentrali­zation of powers, giving powers to civic groups to review policies, making constituti­onal commission­s truly independen­t, among others.

The two major parties had never really agreed on independen­ce and constituti­onal reform since the 1950s after the split of the original PPP. A constituti­on had to be imposed in 1964 and it was fiddled to favour one side over the other. Not contented with his powers as Chief Executive post independen­ce, Forbes Burnham created his own constituti­on in 1980 without approval from the opposition or the people as required by the then constituti­on. The PPP and other opposition parties vehemently opposed the Burnham constituti­on of 1980 which was the result of the 1978 rigged referendum. The rigged referendum itself was a result of the rigged elections of 1968 and 1973. In effect, the country has been governed under a rigged constituti­on.

The PPP and all opposition parties and civic groups campaigned against and vowed to replace the constituti­on if there was ever change in government. The PPP came into government in 1992 and decided to retain the Burnham constituti­on. Opposition Leader Desmond Hoyte, who previously opposed constituti­onal reforms, demanded change after he lost two consecutiv­e elections — 1992 and 1997. There was violence to demand constituti­onal reforms. There were limited changes in 2001. The people played no role in the 1978 referendum because of the rigging, no role in the 1980 constituti­on that was foisted on them, and in the 2001 reforms. They were not allowed to vote for any changes as required by the 1966 independen­ce constituti­on.

The easiest constituti­onal reform would be to start from scratch and respect the independen­ce constituti­on. Dump the current constituti­on since it never received the consent of the governed! Return to the 1964/66 independen­ce constituti­on that empowered the people! And consult the people on proposed changes to it before drafting a new one to be followed by a referendum. The population should also have the option to choose between a newly drafted constituti­on and the independen­ce constituti­on.

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