Audio By Carbonatix
Members of Parliament (MPs) from the National Democratic Congress (NDC) have welcomed the Supreme Court’s decision to dismiss a petition filed against the Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill.
This follows the ruling of a seven-member panel of the Supreme Court, led by Justice Lovelace Avril Johnson, which unanimously dismissed a petition filed by broadcast journalist and lawyer, Richard Dela Sky.
The petition had challenged the constitutionality of the anti-LGBTQ bill. But the Court ruled that, as the bill has not yet become law, its constitutionality cannot be contested.
Speaking to JoyNews’ Parliamentary correspondent, Kweku Asante, after the ruling, NDC MP for Madina, Francis-Xavier Sosu, stated that the Supreme Court had finally made the right decision.
According to Mr Sosu, the apex court upheld the principles of the law, affirming that Parliament is the legislative arm of government and that its work ends with presidential assent.
“I think the action filed by Richard Sky was quite premature, and I believe what the Supreme Court did today, with all due respect to Mr Sky and his lawyers, was simply upholding the rule of law and the separation of powers, which, until recently, the Supreme Court had not consistently done,” he said.
Mr Sosu noted that, in recent times, the Supreme Court had appeared to interfere in the work of Parliament.
However, he described the Court’s dismissal of the case against the anti-LGBTQ bill as a departure from that trend.
“…Clearly, what the Supreme Court has done today is to distinguish itself or perhaps take a second look at the way it interferes with the work of Parliament. The Court has now determined that the work of Parliament does not end until the President decides to assent or not to assent,” he explained.
The Madina legislator stated that the responsibility now lies with President Akufo-Addo to either sign the bill into law or provide reasons for withholding his assent.
He explained that if the President refuses to assent to the bill, the Constitution outlines the next steps: thus the President must convey his reasons in a memorandum to Parliament, which may then decide whether to amend the provisions of the bill or take other appropriate actions.
“It is up for the President to now either assent or not assent, but whatever be the case, there's a room in the law for the President to let Parliament know the reasons for which he doesn't want to assent and which provisions of the law he has problems with and what proposals he has for parliament,” Mr Sosu said.
He further observed that the current 8th Parliament may not have sufficient time to deliberate on the bill.
“However, we leave it to the President to decide what he will do with this bill,” he said.
Mr Sosu added that if the bill expires with the 8th Parliament, it could be reintroduced in the 9th Parliament.
“If this bill dies with the 8th Parliament, it will not be the only bill to meet that fate. I have introduced or initiated about 20 private bills. Three of them have been passed into law, but only one has received presidential assent. For example, the bill abolishing the death penalty in the Ghana Armed Forces has been passed but remains unsigned by the President.
“The anti-witchcraft bill has also been passed but has not received presidential assent. If these bills are not signed, they will die with this Parliament. However, it is our responsibility, as members re-elected to the House, to prioritise critical bills that have not been assented to and reintroduce them—either through the government or as private members’ initiatives,” Mr Sosu added.
Latest Stories
-
AfCFTA opens 1.4 billion market opportunity for Ghanaian businesses – Trade Ministry official
50 seconds -
dEX Founder Daniel Ampofo to represent Ghana at Cannes Lions 2026
7 minutes -
Norway backs Ghana’s marine conservation drive, pledges support for coastal protection efforts
15 minutes -
Flooded roads disrupt academic activities at KNUST, leave students stranded
19 minutes -
Pope Leo visits Canary Islands to highlight perilous journeys of migrants
35 minutes -
Ryanair investigated over charging parents to sit with children
59 minutes -
South Korea fines Coupang over $400m after massive data breach affecting 30 million customers
1 hour -
2026 World Cup: Semenyo needs to be the difference-maker for Black Stars – Marcel Desailly
1 hour -
US and Iran exchange fresh strikes as fragile ceasefire collapses into renewed conflict
1 hour -
Sinapi Aba mentorship programme equips 300 MSMEs for business growth and job creation
1 hour -
JD Vance says Netanyahu “has gotten some things wrong” as US-Israel tensions surface
1 hour -
Kow Essuman accuses Mahama gov’t of discriminatory treatment over staff salary arrears
1 hour -
Non-tariff barriers add 20% to cost of cross-border trade in West Africa – Elizabeth Ofosu-Adjare
2 hours -
Wontumi seeks plea deal in GH¢30m Exim Bank fraud trial — AG notifies High Court
2 hours -
Mahama gov’t breached law by failing to submit 2024 staffing report – Kow Essuman
2 hours