The Executive Director of the Centre for Democratic Development has faulted a statement from the National House of Chiefs in which they backed a ‘No’ vote in the December 17 Referendum.
Prof. Henry Kwasi Prempeh said the chiefs are “embarrassingly confused, if not misinformed” about the reason for the referendum.
“Point 7(ii) of their Statement (attached) reveals a lack of understanding of what 55(3) seeks to accomplish,” Prof. Prempeh wrote.
In their statement, the House of Chiefs said they “strongly object to the notion that membership of local assemblies should exclusively comprise representatives of political parties, as in parliament."
Prof. Prempeh described this as “a palpably false statement.”
“The proposed amendment to article 55(3) seeks only to remove the current prohibition against political party participation in election to the Assembly and Unit Committees, so that party and nonparty candidates alike can contest such elections,” he clarified.
Meanwhile, the House of Chiefs has responded to some dissenters who say the statement does not represent the view of the House as it did not follow due process.
A statement Saturday described the dissenters as 'dishonest' and 'mischievous.’
Article 55/3 of the Constitution
The clause prevents political parties from participating in District Level Elections.
But ahead of Parliament’s amendment of Article 423/1 to change the position of MMDCE’s from an appointed one to elected one, the referendum is being held to allow/prevent political parties field candidates at that level.
The ‘No’ campaigners argue that the division and polarity at the national level must not be extended to the local government.
However, the government and its party, the New Patriotic Party (NPP) who are leading the campaign for Yes say multi-party democracy must be extended to all nooks of the country.
A Yes voter agrees that all elections at the local government level (Unit Committee members, Assemblymen and MMDCEs) should all see political parties participating and a No voter seeks to prevent same.
However, no matter the result from the referendum, MMDCEs can only be elected if MPs complete the process of amending Article 243/1. The Bill is at the Second Reading in the House.
The referendum needs 40percent of eligible voters turning out to vote and 75percent voting Yes for the amendment to pass.
Latest Stories
-
Yaw Nsarkoh: Bit by bit we will understand China
3 hours -
Looted and returned: Asante royal artefacts on display for public viewing at Manhyia Museum
3 hours -
Suspected killer in Kasoa land dispute shooting not a National Security operative
3 hours -
Ghana appoint four Para Athletics coaches in Preparation for Paris 2024
4 hours -
Kumasi Cheshire Home decries inadequate equipment; seeks public support
4 hours -
UCL: Niclas Fullkrug hands Dortmund first leg advange over PSG
5 hours -
GPL: Accra Lions beat Hearts of Oak to go third
6 hours -
Seek higher grounds as rains intensify – GMet warns
6 hours -
May Day: Sam Ankrah promises to prioritise welfare and well-being of workers if elected president
6 hours -
Bawumia plans door-to-door campaign for 2024 polls
7 hours -
GAF condemns ‘unprovoked’ fatal shooting of soldier in Kasoa land dispute
7 hours -
OSP’s request for money laundering probe against Cecilia Dapaah baseless – AG advises EOCO
7 hours -
Obofour Raphael releases ‘Asem Yi Di Ka’ EP
7 hours -
‘Operation Clean Your Surroundings’: Popular Kenkey joint and public toilets in Takoradi shut down
8 hours -
GFA boss Kurt Okraku graces Dreams FC’s dinner to celebrate CAF Confederation Cup exploits
8 hours