Audio By Carbonatix
The First Deputy Speaker of Parliament, Joseph Osei-Owusu is the latest legislator to support Parliament’s decision to hold the annual post-budget workshop outside Accra despite calls for it to be held in Parliament to minimize the cost.
According to the Bekwai lawmaker, the House doesn’t have the logistics to host the workshop event.
“We’ve tried it [post-budget workshop] once here [Parliament], it wasn’t effective. We have only one hall but during the workshop, there will be multiple presenters doing different things, so the practicality will not be effective.”
He said this during an interview on JoyNews’ PM Express where the host, Evans Mensah, was of the view that Parliament is reluctant to hold the event at the House because they prefer the “comfort of hotels”.
In response, the First Deputy Speaker vehemently denied the notion, emphasizing that the choice of venue is driven by duty rather than a pursuit of comfort.
He said,“No hotel is as comfortable as my home. I’ve traveled around the world and no hotel I have stayed in is as comfortable as my home.”
The First Deputy Speaker, who became an MP in 2009 and has extensive local and international experience, expressed his aversion to travel, even for business or conferences, asserting that it is not a matter of personal preference but a responsibility that comes with the role.
“We don’t do it because of comfort, we don’t do it because we want to, we do it because it is a responsibility.”
His position on the venue of the annual workshop comes after the Buem MP, Kofi Adams asked for this year’s post-budget workshop to be held in Parliament House in Accra.
Read Also: Minority pushes for post budget workshop to be held in Parliament
The NDC MP cited the recent economic hardship and called on the leadership of the House to reconsider and hold the workshop in Parliament to save money.
But the Deputy Majority Leader, Alexander Afenyo Markin, turned down his request.
He believes the request is opportunistic and seeks to put Parliament in a bad light adding that “This is a decision of the committee, it is not about leaders being insensitive.”
Latest Stories
-
Ghana Christian University president jailed 14 days for contempt of court
15 minutes -
World Cup 2026: Black Stars move camp to Rhode Island ahead of first game
28 minutes -
Youth unemployment worsening – Oppong Nkrumah unveils 5-point rescue plan
41 minutes -
Nigeria lawmakers advance state police reform to curb insecurity
53 minutes -
US summer driving season hits as gasoline supplies squeezed tight
1 hour -
Everyone needs to feel loved playing for England – Bellingham
1 hour -
South Korea come from behind to defeat Czech Republic
1 hour -
Denied World Cup entry, Somali referee Artan to officiate UEFA Super Cup
1 hour -
Trump says Iran war deal close as Strait of Hormuz tensions linger
2 hours -
Bawumia credits UK-Ghana Business Council for driving key investments
2 hours -
UK High Commissioner commends Bawumia’s focus on policy-based politics
2 hours -
Bawumia highlights strong UK-Ghana partnership after meeting British High Commissioner
2 hours -
World Cup fever meets power anxiety: Ho residents plead for stable electricity
2 hours -
Nii Lante Vanderpuye ready to contest NDC chairmanship if Asiedu Nketia steps aside
2 hours -
Government to begin paying Free SHS suppliers’ arrears next week
2 hours