
Audio By Carbonatix
The Executive Director of the African Center for Parliamentary Affairs (ACEPA), Dr. Rasheed Draman, has expressed doubt that Parliament will effectively sanction absentee Members of Parliament (MPs) unless Speaker Alban Bagbin adopts a more radical approach to enforcing attendance rules.
Speaking on Joy FM’s Newsnight on Wednesday, October 29, Dr. Draman said while the Speaker has the constitutional authority to act against absentee MPs, past efforts have failed because members of the Privileges Committee, who are themselves MPs, often find it difficult to hold their colleagues accountable.
“People have to be heard, and once you violate that rule in the Standing Orders and the Constitution, the matter is referred to the Privileges Committee. But it looks like we’ve reached a point where MPs on that committee cannot look their colleagues in the face and say, ‘You’ve broken the law, so your seat is declared vacant,’” Dr. Draman explained.
He observed that absenteeism in Parliament is not a new issue, noting that every Speaker since the Fifth Parliament has raised concerns about chronic absenteeism without meaningful results.
“This issue has been with us for years. Every Speaker after Speaker has complained about it, yet nothing has really happened,” he lamented.
Dr. Draman proposed that Ghana could consider reforming the composition of the Privileges Committee, allowing it to include eminent citizens outside Parliament who can sit in judgment over breaches by MPs, ensuring impartiality and stronger enforcement.
“Maybe it’s time to look at what happens in other countries, where such committees include respected citizens, not just MPs. If we leave this in the hands of MPs alone, it’s not going to happen unless the Speaker takes a very firm and radical stance,” he said.
His comments follow Speaker Alban Bagbin’s stern warning to MPs earlier this week to attend sittings regularly or risk having their seats declared vacant, in accordance with Article 97(1)(c) of the 1992 Constitution.
Dr. Draman emphasised that for the Speaker’s warning to have real impact, Parliament must demonstrate the political will to enforce its own rules, even when doing so affects sitting members.
Latest Stories
-
FDA warns public against consuming food recovered from floodwaters
28 minutes -
Keta Assembly to open Kedzi Azizadzi floodgates on Friday to ease flooding
31 minutes -
Teachers who accept rural postings to get study leave after two years – Education Minister
31 minutes -
Ghanaian’s death not connected to anti-immigration protests — Leader of Concerned Ghanaians in South Africa
38 minutes -
Conflicting reports on Ghanaian’s death in South Africa disturbing — Jinapor
48 minutes -
Ryanair warns of ‘queue chaos’ from new EU border system
51 minutes -
Akatsi South MCE calls for more support as 13 schools receive dual desks
52 minutes -
Ghana Sports Fund boss courts global support for youth sports development
55 minutes -
China says pilot crashed small plane into skyscraper for ‘personal reasons’
1 hour -
Police intercept 50,000 rounds of ammunition in Upper West, arrest three suspects
1 hour -
Vatican excommunicates hundreds of thousands of splinter sect followers
1 hour -
Access Plus Communications launches ‘Eye Focus App’ to broaden reach of AI-powered vision screening
1 hour -
Asiedu Nketiah urges African leaders to match economic rhetoric with action
1 hour -
24-Hour Economy Authority and Petrochemical Holdings GmbH partner to establish 2 projects in Ghana
1 hour -
Accra Floods: Greater Accra Minister directs MMDCEs to ensure fair distribution of relief items
1 hour