Audio By Carbonatix
The National Democratic Congress (NDC) says it is ready for a bye-election following the ruling of the Supreme Court directing Parliament to expunge the records of James Gyakye Quayson, Member of Parliament (MP) for Assin North.
A statement issued by Mr Fifi Kwetey, the General Secretary of the NDC, copied to the Ghana News Agency said: “…..after consultations with Mr Gyakye Quayson, the leadership of the NDC wishes to state unequivocally that we are ready for the bye-election that is now the result of this decision.”
It noted that the full weight of the Party, including the Minority Caucus in Parliament, would be put behind Mr Gyakye Quayson so as to ensure an even more resounding victory for him in the upcoming bye-election.
It said the NDC had become aware of the Supreme Court’s decision invalidating the nomination, election, and subsequent swearing-in of Mr James Gyakye-Quayson, the MP for Assin North as unconstitutional.
It said the court did not give any reasons but said these would be available on or before 7th June.
“In the light of many previous decisions that we are aware of, including decisions in the case of JH Mensah, Baba Jamal and Peter Amewu that state that the Supreme Court does not have jurisdiction when it comes to Parliamentary Election and that the High Court is where such a matter should be taken, it seems strange to us that the Supreme Court gave this decision,” the statement said.
“Moreover, there is no doubt that Mr James Gyakye-Quayson did not owe allegiance to any other country whether at the time of his nomination, election, or swearing-in.
We also look forward to seeing the reasons that the Court will provide.”
Background
The Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that the Electoral Commission (EC) acted unconstitutionally in allowing Mr Quayson to contest the 2020 parliamentary elections without proof of him renouncing his Canadian Citizenship.
This follows the case filed by a resident of the Constituency Michael Ankomah Nimfah.
Mr Nimfah had asked the court to rule that upon a true and proper interpretation of Article 94(2)(a) of the Constitution, 1992 of Ghana, at the time Mr Quayson filed his nomination form in October 2020 to contest the 2020 Parliamentary election for the Assin North Constituency, he was not qualified to contest as Member of Parliament.
This is because the Constitution does not allow a person with dual nationality to hold certain public offices, including a Member of Parliament.
Latest Stories
-
ActionAid Ghana welcomes the sentencing of 48 year-old man for defiling a minor
10 minutes -
Government to offer tax incentives for factories outside Accra
13 minutes -
Belarus manufacturers to visit Ghana next week – Mahama
15 minutes -
Study reveals strong public support for democratic governance
17 minutes -
Veep urges collaboration to unlock economic potential of culture, creative industry
20 minutes -
MPs demand flood-resilient national planning to address Ghana’s perennial flooding
23 minutes -
Stakeholders call for stronger health investment
26 minutes -
Ghanaian citizen invokes RTI Act to request financial and operational records of GRA and NLA
29 minutes -
KGL’s “big payments” are the price of state-backed monopoly, not heroism
2 hours -
Oil rises more than $1 as escalation in US-Iran strikes unnerve traders
2 hours -
Success is built on discipline, not talent – Ace Ankomah on becoming Mfantsipim’s Best Student, from weakest class
2 hours -
The Ga question we prefer not to ask
3 hours -
Korle Klottey’s revenue surges to GH¢40 million as municipality positions itself as an investment hub
3 hours -
EPAC calls for greater investment in packaging to boost local brands
4 hours -
Unpacking the Future of AI: The Promise of Embodied Intelligence
4 hours