Audio By Carbonatix
Speaker of the 8th Parliament Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin says it was a majority vote that propelled him into his current position.
In his maiden address to the 275 members on Friday, the 63-year-old immediate past Second Deputy Speaker of Parliament declared his legitimacy to the nation’s third-highest office.
He said, “The message in the votes of 136 in favour of Prof Aaron Mike Oquaye, as to 138 for Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, with one spoilt ballot,…propelled me to this high office of Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana.”
He repeated a mantra of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo that “The battle is always the Lord’s, adding “glory be to the Most High God,” which attracted applause from both sides of House.
The immediate past Second Deputy Speaker, MP for Nadowli Kaleo Constituency, Upper West Region, for 28 years used the occasion to caution the Members of Parliament (MPs) to be civil and disciplined in their deeds and utterances in their parliamentary work.
His caution stems from unruly and rowdy behaviour of some members of the House during the election of the Speaker last week, which attracted military presence onto floor of the House.
He tasked the leadership of the house to investigate those incidents to prevent their recurrence and to save and redeem the sunken image of the august House.
Speaker Bagbin noted his almost three decades service to the House on the ticket of the current opposition National Democratic Congress(NDC) but assured the House that he would remain fair, firm, impartial and resolute in the discharge of his duty as Speaker.
He pledged also to respect the dictates of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana, and the will of the people of Ghana.
With a Parliament of 138 members that constitute a majority (NPP side) and 137 representing the NDC Minority, Speaker Bagbin stressed on the need for more “consensus building, cooperation, dialogue and accommodation”, in the transaction of Parliamentary business and to satisfy the aspirations of Ghanaians.
“Let me also say a few words about the office of Speaker as envisioned under our Constitution. While past practice might lead some to think otherwise, the truth of the matter is that, the Speakership is not a partisan political office. Regardless of which party nominated or voted to elect him or her, and regardless of his or her previous political background, the Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana occupies a nonpartisan, impartial office.
He added: “There is no NPP Speaker or NDC Speaker; there is only a Speaker of the Parliament of Ghana.
“Unlike my counterpart in the American House of Representatives, the Ghanaian Speaker is not a Member of the House.
“The Ghanaian Speaker presides over but does not participate in proceedings of the House; and he or she has no vote, not even a casting vote, in matters before the House.
In fact, the Speakership in Ghana is designed to be even more impartial and more apolitical than the Speaker of the House of Commons in Westminster. It is indeed to ensure that the Speaker remains impartial in presiding over the affairs of this House and Parliament that his election is done by secret ballot.
“The independence and impartiality of the Speaker is particularly evident from one line in the Speaker’s Oath. That line is not found in the Presidential Oath, the Oath of Vice-President, the Oath for Ministers of State and Cabinet, or the Oath of a Member of Parliament.
"…. That last phrase, “without fear or favour, affection or ill will”, defines the office of the Speaker as an impartial, nonpartisan office. I assure you I don’t take this Oath lightly at all.
“Speaker Bagbin referred to having harmoniously with Speakers of diverse political backgrounds, including on one occasion supporting the nomination for re-election as Speaker of the 4th Republic, a well-known figure of the New Patriotic Party.”
He however made it clear that the office I now occupy is an impartial, independent, and apolitical office, akin, in that regard, to the position of a Justice or Chief Justice.
He pledged to live by the Oath he swore on the occasion of his new office and said he would respect, obey and abide by the will of the House.
“I am fully committed to being fair and impartial. But I am also fully committed to being firm, he said, adding, “We must work together for the betterment of Ghana and Ghanaians.
Latest Stories
-
Central Regional Health Directorate probes maternal death at Kasoa Mother and Child Hospital
4 minutes -
GNECC launches 2026 Global Action Week for Education, focuses on bridging digital divide
20 minutes -
Stanbic Bank equips Ashanti journalists with financial skills to boost resilience
21 minutes -
Tom Saintfeit steps down as Mali head coach after two years in charge
25 minutes -
China hands over $56.5 million ECOWAS HQ in Nigeria, expanding influence in West Africa
28 minutes -
Ghana’s UN resolution seeks restitution and healing, not development funding – Ablakwa
31 minutes -
EPA urges public to curb noise pollution on International Noise Awareness Day
54 minutes -
Xenophobia: Centre for Global Affairs and Responsible Governance urges AU intervention in South Africa
54 minutes -
Maxwell Lukutor secures major funding for three SHSs, 24-hour market in first term push for South Tongu Constituency
56 minutes -
Ntim Fordjour demands probe into ‘indecent’ scenes at Accra Carnival
1 hour -
El Niño Alert: Why a possible 2027 heat record could signal droughts, floods and flood risks for Ghana
1 hour -
UMB strengthens its leadership with appointment of Emmanuel Sackey as Group Head of Treasury
1 hour -
Court throws out prosecution witness statements in Buffer Stock trial
2 hours -
Police seek public help to track three fugitives after Adabraka jailbreak
2 hours -
Electronic Communications Act not meant to regulate journalists’ conduct – Inusah Fuseini
2 hours