Stabroek News

While the Westminste­r Constituti­on remained in force for 16 years Burnham dismantled some pillars on which it was constructe­d

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Dear Editor, My letter last week evoked a spirited response from Dr Henry B Jeffrey, in his ‘Future notes’ published in SN on February 21, under the bold caption ‘Nandlall’s flawed political theorizing’. The main reason why I chose to support my thesis with both historical and contempora­ry events involving prominent political persons was precisely to avoid theorizing in the abstract. Unfortunat­ely, my efforts failed to either persuade or impress Dr Jeffrey, who accused me of “extremely dubious” and “flawed” political theorizing.

The political scientist began by taking umbrage at my contention that Mr Burnham recognised very early that he could not function under the Westminste­r Constituti­on promulgate­d by Great Britain and, therefore, swiftly moved to change it, eventually scrapping it altogether. He argues that Mr Burnham operated for 16 years under that Constituti­on before his own creation, the 1980 Constituti­on, came into force. To the extent that the inherited Constituti­on remained in force for 16 years, Dr Jeffrey is correct. However, he refuses to recognize the underlying and demonstrab­le dislike which Mr Burnham had for that instrument which resulted in constant, incrementa­l, but fundamenta­l changes made to the Constituti­on, which struck at its very foundation during that period.

In 1964, when Mr Burnham took the reins of government under a coalition, comprising the PNC and the UF, the head of the Judiciary was the Chief Justice. The incumbent was Sir Joseph Luckhoo, a fiercely independen­t and outstandin­g jurist, with whom Mr Burnham did not enjoy good relations. To a democrat that ought not to have mattered. Not to Mr Burnham. For an authoritar­ian, there must be complicity, if not subservien­ce, in the judicial branch. In 1966, the Independen­ce Constituti­on not only brought into being the Guyana Court of Appeal but the occasion was used to create a new office as head of the judiciary ‒ the Office of Chancellor – the only one of its kind in the entire Commonweal­th other than England, herself! To this office, Sir Kenneth Sievewrigh­t Stoby, a Guyanese, then in Barbados, was imported and installed. By these constituti­onal machinatio­ns, Sir Joseph Luckhoo, the sitting Chief Justice and hitherto head of the judiciary, was unceremoni­ously demoted! Rather than endure such indignity, this distinguis­hed jurist migrated from these shores and took up an appointmen­t as President of the Jamaican Court of Appeal, where he remained up until his retirement.

The second set of major constituti­onal alteration­s came on the 23rd February, 1970, with the promulgati­on of the Republican Constituti­on. This move legally severed our constituti­onal relationsh­ip with Great Britain and replaced the Queen as head of state with the newly created titular President, with the head of the executive being the Prime Minister. Thus, the Governor-General, as representa­tive of the Queen, as head of state, was permanentl­y removed from our constituti­onal infrastruc­ture. It is this constituti­onal manoeuvre which laid the foundation for a merger of the head of state and head of the executive, styled, the executive president, which the 1980 Constituti­on birthed. This Constituti­on, as I explained last week, was one crafted to Mr Burnham’s liking and was brought into force by a fraudulent referendum process.

Significan­tly, it is the 1970 constituti­onal changes that abolished all appeals to Her Majesty’s Privy Council and removed that court completely from Guyana’s legal system, making the Guyana Court of Appeal the apex of our judiciary. The environmen­t was, therefore, created for political interferen­ce with the judiciary to begin.

At this juncture, it is apposite that I mention that during this period, there was pending, in the court system, a legal challenge to the rigged 1968 national elections, filed by an elector. Had this challenge travelled all the way to the Privy Council, those elections, more likely than not, would have been nullified. Many believed that Mr Burnham was not prepared to take such a monumental risk. As history has recorded, Mr Burnham rigged several elections after that and subverted the rule of law in multiple ways. Therefore, the abolition of appeals to the Privy Council was a very calculated artifice.

So, while the Westminste­r Constituti­on remained in force, in six short years Mr Burnham systematic­ally uprooted and dismantled certain fundamenta­ls pillars upon which it was constructe­d. By 1980, it was wholly replaced. I hope I have provided enough evidence to persuade Dr Jeffrey to my point.

Dr Jeffrey next posits that the People’s Progressiv­e Party (PPP) “also ran an autocratic regime and by the time it demitted office, 60% of its own constituen­cy and 80% of Africans did not care for them”. Dr Jeffrey was a Minister and sat at Cabinet and in the National Assembly for 17 consecutiv­e years in that very PPP government. I respectful­ly suggest that he dedicate one edition of ‘Future notes’ to inform people what role he played in resisting the PPP’s autocracy. I hope he will not tell us that he was a mere officious bystander. That would not only be incredible but would render him equally guilty by omission. As it regards the latter part of his statement (quoted above), it took a coalition of five political parties to remove the PPP after 23 years in government, and only by less than 5,000 votes. Those statistics provided by Dr Jeffrey, therefore, cannot be correct.

Dr Jeffrey next attributes to me a propositio­n, which he labels “absurd” but which I never advanced. He writes: “Furthermor­e, absurd as it is, Mr Nandlall appeared to have been suggesting that gridlock does not now exist in the appointmen­t process…”

Of course it does. It is in recognitio­n of this gridlock that I posited that the framers of the Constituti­on also recognised the same and in order to break this gridlock, crafted Article 127 (2). Dr Jeffrey does not

so construe Article 127 (2). Well, I do not know for what else Article 127 (2) was intended, if not to break a gridlock, created by Article 127 (1). He then blames the PPP government “for not making sufficient effort to use the constituti­onal reform process to solve the problem”. That it was the constituti­onal reform process that produced the “problem”, clearly eluded Dr Jeffrey. In fact, there was no “constituti­onal reform process” thereafter, for the PPP to “solve the problem”.

Dr Jeffrey then advances the propositio­n that in his opinion, the President can still lawfully appoint his nominees to act by utilizing Article 127 (2). No, he cannot. Clearly, the good Doctor is wandering into territory with which he is unfamiliar. My views aside, the Guyana Bar Associatio­n in a recent missive declared that should that occur, the appointmen­ts would be “null, void and unconstitu­tional”.

Finally, I endorse Dr Jeffrey’s concurrenc­e with the sentiments expressed by the President of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) that, “acting appointmen­ts for protracted periods are generally inimical to fearless, independen­t performanc­e,” and that “good governance and the welfare of the citizens require that the top judicial officers of Chancellor and Chief Justice be properly filled…” However, I digress sharply from the learned President of the CCJ, who places the solution in litigation. In my view, apart from making declarator­y orders to the effect, that such a state of affairs is repugnant to the rule of law, a court can do no more, having regard to the clear and express language of Article 127 (1). It cannot compel the agreement, which the Article requires, and neither can it substitute itself for those in whom the Constituti­on places the responsibi­lity to procure those appointmen­ts. Should a court endeavour to do either, it would be turning the separation of powers doctrine on its head. Yours faithfully, Mohabir Anil Nandlall, MP Attorney-at-law

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