
| The big political challenge : --compromise, confrontation or moving for snap election? |
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| Saturday, 20 October 2012 20:22 |
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THE NEW session of Guyana’s 10th Parliament is scheduled to resume tomorrow, after an unnecessarily long nine-week recess, on a very disappointing note. The disappointment lies in the reality that the prevailing political mood between government and opposition remains largely as it was when the ceremonial opening took place following last November’s general election. It is one of disunity and confrontation when compromise seems quite essential. President Donald Ramotar had appealed for “consensus and compromise” in addressing the opening of the 10th Parliament, following the results of the elections at which the incumbent People’s Progressive Party/Civic retained the presidency and government but with a loss, for the first time, of its parliamentary majority by one seat in the 65-member National Assembly. In the months that followed the November poll, A Partnership for National Unity (largely the new face of the old PNCR), and the Alliance For Change (AFC) were to restructure their anti-government strategy that was forged for the elections campaign. The clearest manifestation of a more defined working alliance came in the election of a Speaker and Deputy Speaker when, contrary to established norms in a parliamentary democracy, APNU and AFC voted to take both positions. It was a surprising display of arrogance that’s currently revealing some disturbing manifestations in the abuse of a one-seat parliamentary majority. For the very first time in the parliamentary history of Guyana, the serving leader of a political party was chosen -- and by a mere one-vote majority -- as Speaker. The prize went to the then AFC chairman, Raphael Trotman, in preference to the former long-term Speaker and respected senior counsel, Ralph Ramkarran (PPP’s candidate). APNU’s Deborah Backer was chosen as Deputy Speaker. That scenario, subsequently supported by feisty rhetoric -- across the parliament chamber -- was to worsen, with warnings and actions from even the Speaker himself. The APNU/AFC coalition opted to dominate all major parliamentary committees, and to push ahead with opposition-initiated motions and draft legislation. ‘Tek all’ politics |
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The big political challenge : --compromise, confrontation or moving for snap election? 

