Audio By Carbonatix
First Deputy Speaker of Parliament, Joseph Osei-Owusu says work in Parliament will not be affected despite a good number of MPs from the Majority side either losing their primaries to represent the New Patriotic Party or voluntarily declining the opportunity to seek re-election.
This was after some 28 incumbent MPs lost their seats to contenders in the just ended NPP Primaries held over the weekend in constituencies that have incumbent MPs.
There are fears those who have lost their seats will be reluctant to partake in parliamentary work, resulting in government business suffering.
But the Deputy Speaker and Member of Parliament for Bekwai disagrees.
According to him, MPs will still turn up to carry out government business despite their situation.
“Generally, once we give the date we sufficiently remind people to come. It is the day-to-day business that we have challenges, when an unexpected challenge is thrown people are generally responsible, generally if it’s about the party or government’s policy position. However, of course if we don’t have the numbers we will defer the decision day,” he said.
Some 28 incumbent NPP MPs lost their bid to contest in the upcoming 2024 elections.
Prominent amongst them include Sarah Adwo Safo, MP for Dome Kwabenya, Sanitation Minister; Freda Prempeh, and the Minister for Public Enterprises; Joseph Cudjoe. Ahead of the primaries, about six seasoned parliamentarians also declined to return to parliament after their current terms end on January 7, 2025.
Latest Stories
-
Ivory Coast or Ghana: who really has the best performing economy?
21 minutes -
2nd Deputy BoG Governor urges businesses to avoid speculation and support Cedi stability
22 minutes -
AMA sympathises with June 3 disaster victims, says steps taken to prevent recurrence
31 minutes -
Ban on plastic materials will be difficult to enforce – EPA
36 minutes -
Wontumi trial: Court sets July 3 for judgment
38 minutes -
“We expect respect for our sovereignty” — Bagbin rejects foreign pressure on African values
46 minutes -
Richard Jakpa calls for urgent irrigation investment in Upper West, warns against youth unemployment
47 minutes -
Two people shot dead amid Kenya protests against US Ebola quarantine centre plan
49 minutes -
Hon. Julius Debrah: Leading with wisdom, respect and dedication to Ghana
51 minutes -
I quit a high-paying engineering job to find my path in business – Pinkberry CEO
58 minutes -
My first attempt to bring Pinkberry to Ghana failed – CEO recounts journey
1 hour -
Mahama right to seek legal advice on Anti-LGBTQ bill – Christian Council
1 hour -
Ice cream 10 cedis? I’d rather buy fufu – Pinkberry CEO on Kumasi store struggle
1 hour -
Residents evicted from Savannah Junction near Tema as private developer enforces court ruling
1 hour -
JoySports partners the Guardian UK for World Cup coverage
2 hours