
Audio By Carbonatix
The Minority Chief Whip, Muntaka Mubarak, has described the ad-hoc committee set up to investigate the censure motion against the Finance Minister as a kangaroo committee.
According to him, the committee was unnecessary and the Speaker had acted beyond his authority to unilaterally create, and refer the motion to the ad hoc committee.
Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, had referred the motion of censure to an eight-member ad hoc committee to hear the claims being made by the Minority against Ken Ofori-Atta and to give the Finance minister ample opportunity to defend himself with the help of a counsel.
The committee was to provide a report of their proceedings in 7 working days.
Speaking on JoyNews’ PM Express, Muntaka Mubarak explained that the Standing Orders of Parliament does not create space for the Speaker to create an ad-hoc committee when the suggestion has not been put forward by a member of the House.
“That committee was not necessary, our Standing Orders are very very clear and I encourage you to read 106 of our Standing Orders. It is a member who would say that maybe where we have reached in the debate, can we set up a committee to look at the details and report, not for a Speaker to unilaterally refer the thing to a committee and set up a committee to do that. It is not, it is a member,” he said.
He is convinced that the only reason someone from the Majority side had not moved the motion for the setting up of a committee was simply because they had been outnumbered by the Minority.
“As at the time when the decision was taken, we were 135 and they were 77. So if any member on their side had moved for such a committee to be set up, it would have been defeated because it would have been a decision of the House where we’ll vote.
“And probably, my view, it was the reason that kind of kangaroo method was used. And I continue to call it Kangaroo because in Order 6 where the Standing Order is not explicitly clear then Speaker’s discretion can set in.
“But where it is clear, Speaker has no discretion. Speaker has no authority to do any other thing contrary to what is stated in the Standing Orders and I’ll continue to maintain that,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana’s economy shows recovery signs, but risks persist – S&P maintains stable outlook
5 minutes -
SWAG commemorates its 8th anniversary with a public lecture
7 minutes -
Ibrahim Mahama claims Police Commander failed to stop alleged assault
10 minutes -
Damang lease award to E&P followed due process — Minerals Commission
21 minutes -
Today’s Front pages: Wednesday, April 8, 2026
23 minutes -
Julian Opuni reaffirms Fidelity Bank support for industry-led skills training at DTI Berekuso campus
29 minutes -
CAF President arrives in Dakar to meet Senegalese President, football authorities over AFCON title saga
30 minutes -
Pastor arrested over viral threats against Vice-President
33 minutes -
2026 Success Africa Summit: MTN’s Adwoa Wiafe challenges youth to act with purpose, not just pursue titles
36 minutes -
Nurse laureate launches Cancer Care Africa Foundation to tackle late diagnosis, workforce gaps
2 hours -
Ghana to lose GH¢18.15bn in revenue by 2027 from abolishing Covid levy, E-levy – CPS study
2 hours -
Reintroduce scrapped taxes to close revenue gap – Tax expert
2 hours -
GRA applauds CPS study, urges continuous policy scrutiny
2 hours -
Wear blue or green hat to survive – IBAG president says insurance industry ‘captured by politics’
3 hours -
AGI commends government’s move to resolve the power crisis in Volta and Oti Regions
3 hours