
Audio By Carbonatix
A legal practitioner has asked the Majority Leader, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu, to appreciate the unique nature of the current Parliament and exhibit leadership skills that are premised on dialoguing.
Godwin Edudzi Tamakloe says the NPP MPs should be courageous enough to let Ghanaians know they do not have the required number to pass the E-levy into law.
Speaking to Samson Lardy Anyenini on Newsfile, Saturday, Mr. Tamakloe urged the Parliamentary Affairs Minister to effectively engage his side to avoid needless accusations that will keep the E-levy debate in a stalemate.
“I think the Majority Leader must begin to demonstrate leadership. If you don’t have the numbers and are unable to marshal the numbers, be frank with the people of this country,” he advised.
According to Edudzi Tamakloe, the Majority should blame themselves for the ‘forced’ exit of the Speaker on Friday, January 28 after a long delay in the commencement of proceedings.
He says the posturing of the NPP legislators was unfair to the Speaker, the Minority and even themselves as they could not table the E-levy for discussion.
“It was very late in the evening when the issue of e-levy came in and I recall very well the Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu and Muntaka Mubarak raised the issue if you are putting up this bill now, we have to debate and vote on it.”
“They [the Majority] deliberately kept shifting to the point that the Speaker had no other option to threaten that he wants to leave. I think it is pretty obvious that the leadership of the Majority are unable to marshal the numbers required for the purposes of carrying the E-levy through,” he added.
Mr. Tamakloe, who doubles as a member of the National Democratic Congress (NDC)’s legal team, further stated that the Majority Caucus should shoulder greater responsibility in ensuring consensus building in the House.
Meanwhile, the Nhyiaeso MP, Dr Stephen Amoah, is calling on opposers to present data that prove Ghanaians are indeed against the proposed Electronic Transfer Levy aka E-Levy.
According to him, the supposed resistance against the bill is not based on a critical analysis of the needs of the ordinary Ghanaian.
“The NDC, I understand them because they want to come to power. But the so-called experts should provide relevant needed pieces of information out of well-collected research data points so that we can support them,” Dr Amoah said.
Latest Stories
-
Nurse laureate launches Cancer Care Africa Foundation to tackle late diagnosis, workforce gaps
35 minutes -
Ghana to lose GH¢18.15bn in revenue by 2027 from abolishing Covid levy, E-levy – CPS study
49 minutes -
Reintroduce scrapped taxes to close revenue gap – Tax expert
1 hour -
GRA applauds CPS study, urges continuous policy scrutiny
1 hour -
Wear blue or green hat to survive – IBAG president says insurance industry ‘captured by politics’
1 hour -
AGI commends government’s move to resolve the power crisis in Volta and Oti Regions
2 hours -
Broker sector worse hit by state interference – IBAG president reveals
2 hours -
IBAG president alleges political interference driving kickbacks in insurance sector
2 hours -
Trump agrees to two-week ceasefire, Iran says safe passage through Hormuz possible
3 hours -
Dozens killed as Angola flood death toll rises
3 hours -
Russia confirms deaths of 16 Cameroonians fighting in Ukraine war, Yaounde says
3 hours -
Plan to scrap presidential elections puts Zimbabweans at loggerheads
3 hours -
Guinea-Bissau transporters strike over higher fuel prices
3 hours -
Iran ceasefire deal a partial win for Trump – but at a high cost
3 hours -
Oil slides below $100 after Trump announces two-week ceasefire
4 hours