
Audio By Carbonatix
The Majority Leader in Parliament, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu has advised that core committees of the House must be headed by members of the opposition party.
According to him, the current parliamentary system does not help the house effectively perform its responsibility of checks and balances.
“Parliament is as strong as its committees make it. The structure of our committee’s system is not helping us to grow our parliament. When we have a system where all committees are headed by the members from the ruling party, certainly you will have this dividend, you will really lower the standards of parliament,’ he said.
The Suame MP said the current parliament since 1993 has always been rated very low when it comes to the performance of oversight responsibility but they were determined to change the status quo.
Touching on the way forward, Mr. Bonsu explained that for parliament to be strengthened, the house must take cues from France where opposition members chair core committees.
“In France as I keep saying the finance committee like the public accounts committee is chaired by a member from the party that is not in control of the government. When I asked, I was told that the finance committee is the fulcrum of governance and nothing should be hidden from the opposition party.
“The chairman of the public committee just as the public accounts committee is headed by a member of a party that is not in control of government. We should be learning useful lessons from that,” he added.
Mr. Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu made these comments at the parliamentary core leaders meeting with the National Media Commission on Tuesday.
Meanwhile, Minority leader, Haruna Iddrisu has pointed out that parliament must accept a share of responsibility in the country's unsustainable debt situation because it failed to check the executive arm which has led to a state of excessive borrowing.
“Who ought to have checked government not to borrow or over-borrow? The parliament of Ghana. So, parliament must accept the blame and some responsibility for not keeping the executive in check, the consequences of executive borrowing is now being felt by all of us.
“Act 181 is only parliament that approves the terms and conditions of a loan so if we borrowed and now we have exceeded 100% GDP, how did it happen?” he quizzed.
Latest Stories
-
‘We’ve become quite experienced in negativity’ – Liverpool’s Slot
21 minutes -
Legendary manager Lucescu dies days after resigning
41 minutes -
One dead as train travelling 99mph collides with lorry in France
50 minutes -
Airlines cut flights and hike fares as fuel prices surge
1 hour -
Kane inspires Bayern to first-leg advantage over Real Madrid at Bernabéu
1 hour -
Wireless Festival cancelled after Kanye West blocked from coming to UK
1 hour -
Wa West MP commissions five boreholes for the benefit of his constituents
1 hour -
Havertz’s late strike hands Arsenal narrow first-leg advantage over Sporting
1 hour -
Damang mine award: Minority not against Ghanaian participation; we’re asking for fair process – Konadu
2 hours -
NPA to enforce stricter registration rules for petroleum tankers
2 hours -
Manhyia South MP laments decline in hospitality operations in his constituency
3 hours -
How a simple clean charcoal innovation could benefit Ghana’s climate future
3 hours -
NPA, COMAC launch Safety Week 2026 to promote risk management in petroleum sector
3 hours -
Stakeholder engagement resolves onion trade impasse
3 hours -
Gender Ministry holds staff durbar, welcomes new Chief Director
3 hours