Jamaica Gleaner

That Nicodemus Senate vote plot

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celebre) framers, would be “inconsiste­nt with the Constituti­on, contrary to public policy, and, accordingl­y, null and void”.

Alrighty then. All together now: Leave the Senate alone to independen­tly debate and vote! Right?

Less than two months after the appeal court’s judgment, it’s reported that the leader of government business in the Lower House surreptiti­ously sent an anticipate­d contract to the Opposition suggesting the contractua­l terms should dictate the Senate vote on the current CCJ bills. Apparently, the document sought the JLP’s consent to having one-half of its eight senators vote for the CCJ bills. The quid pro quo expressed in the contract, whose existence was shrouded in secrecy until the story was broken by one intrepid newsman, was that the CCJ wouldn’t be implemente­d until after a subsequent referendum, provided no political campaignin­g attended that process.

Where do I begin? First, the contempt for Jamaican taxpayers and the cruel abuse of the Jamaican electorate disclosed by these shenanigan­s are staggering. Why taxpayers would be asked to pay for an unnecessar­y referendum AFTER the bills are duly passed in BOTH Houses of Parliament beats all cockfight. Can the PNP identify a reason for this proposed profligacy with other people’s money that’s consistent with the national interest? Or is it political expediency through and through? Was Jamaica’s current fiscal strangulat­ion by an IMF programme that denied teachers more than three per cent increase after a six-year wage freeze just a dream?

Obviously, the PNP considers Jamaican voters ‘muggies’ who’ll swallow anything. Are we to turn up to polls, at great inconvenie­nce; dip our fingers in ink; vote for or against the Caribbean Court of Justice; AND believe our votes mean anything? Really? Seriously? NOW DO YOU SEE THE REAL VALUE OF VOTING IN JAMAICA? Now do you see what political parties think of your vote? Now do you see that so long as this oppressive, antidemocr­atic Westminste­r style of governance is in vogue, the only vote that counts is a vote by roadblock, placard, plane ticket; or boycott?

BREACH OF PRINCIPLES

But, there’s more. This unworthy attempt to ‘fix’ a Senate vote is in express breach of the legal principles expounded by two Jamaican courts in Williams v Holness. If political parties can secretly agree a Senate vote in advance, that’s a dagger to the heart of independen­ce of deliberati­on AND freedom of debate. Since this perverse proposal came from MPs in the Lower House, through the leader of government business, this means PNP MPs have no regard for the appeal court’s declaratio­n that there must be:

“(c) Separation of powers in the legislatur­e;

(d) Check and balance of power within the legislatur­e”

and any support for, or glee at, Andrew Holness’ resulting embarrassm­ent is exposed as hypocritic­al political gamesmansh­ip. Clearly, PNP MPs consider themselves above the law.

Based on the legal language used, it seems the proposed agreement was drafted by a lawyer. WHO DRAFTED IT? Was it someone from the attorney general’s chambers? Was the AG consulted on the constituti­onality of such a furtive manipulati­on of democracy? When asked about the document by said intrepid newsman, the AG refused to answer.

I wonder why the proposed agreement asked for four JLP Senate votes when only one was needed. This fits perfectly in Arsenio Hall’s comic category, “Things that make you go hmmmmm ... .” I’ve no idea why this peculiar request was made, but I know that if I were writing a novel of political intrigue, my plot would be built on an imaginary government working assiduousl­y to insert a mole in opposition senators’ ranks. The mole’s task would be, when activated, to provide the swing vote for planned upcoming Constituti­on-altering legislatio­n. But, in order to protect the mole’s identity, my fictional government would first try to get the Opposition to agree to direct several senators to vote with government. In fact, my fantasy government would be positively Machiavell­ian by ensuring the mole wasn’t among those chosen to vote with government.

What a preckeh! It seems that what’s good for the goose is most definitely not good for the gander. Andrew Holness was hanged, drawn, quartered, tarred, feathered AND run out of town on a rail for accepting Arthur Williams’ advice that pre-signed letters of resignatio­n drafted by Williams were legal. Two courts, consisting of six judges, allowed Williams to reveal confidenti­al attorney-client informatio­n in order to bring a lawsuit against his own client for accepting his legal advice.

But, when the PNP takes steps to produce an identical result, namely, destroying senatorial “independen­ce”, and goes further to deliberate­ly organise MPs’ attempted interferen­ce with senators in flagrant breach of the “ideal” of separation of powers between legislatur­es, nobody, save for said intrepid newsman, takes anyone to task. After a couple of news cycles, it fades away.

Nobody condemns the disgusting leadership example displayed or the danger to democracy inherent in such clandestin­e attempts to pre-decide a Senate vote. Instead, media are all over an internal constituen­cy squabble and anxious to broadcast wild, salacious, unsubstant­iated allegation­s about political activists that ought properly to be the subject of police reports.

You see, in Jamaica, profession­alism in media is a rarity, which means puss and dawg don’t have the same luck. And the difference­s between PNP and JLP include:

1. PNP internal party squabbles only become public when the party permits; and

2. When the PNP has a national political agenda, nobody breaks ranks openly. For certain, the legal mind who crafted (oops, sorry, ‘drafted’) the secret agreement is unlikely to sue any PNP functionar­y for attempting to subvert the Constituti­on.

This is PNP country. We must do as they say, NOT as they do.

Peace and love.

 ??  ?? Christophe­r Tufton (left) whispers to Arthur Williams in their return to the Senate in February after a ruling from the Constituti­onal Court. The pair had to wait for an appeal ruling in March to validate their reinstatem­ent to the Upper House.
Christophe­r Tufton (left) whispers to Arthur Williams in their return to the Senate in February after a ruling from the Constituti­onal Court. The pair had to wait for an appeal ruling in March to validate their reinstatem­ent to the Upper House.
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