Politics of Friday, 8 November 2024
Source: www.ghanaweb.com
The Speaker of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, adjourned the sitting indefinitely for the second time in less than a month after Members of Parliament from the ruling New Patriotic Party (NPP) failed to attend the session on Thursday, November 7, 2024.
The meeting was adjourned for the first time on Tuesday, October 22, 2024, after the NPP MPs boycotted sittings, citing an application they have filed at the Supreme Court challenging Bagbin's declaration of four seats in the House as vacant.
The failure of the NPP MPs to show up on the floor on Thursday, a sitting they requested, has sparked criticisms from a faction of the public, forcing a response from them.
The justification given by the ruling government legislators, however, appears to be inconsistent and is even generating more backlash from the public.
Here are the reasons NPP MPs have given for not showing up on Thursday:
Alexander Kwamina Afenyo-Markin:
The leader of the NPP caucus of Parliament, Alexander Kwamina Afenyo-Markin, at a press briefing of his caucus, right after the Speaker adjourned the sitting, said that his side chose not to attend the sitting of Parliament because they did not want to engage in chaos.
He accused Bagbin of betraying an agreement made prior to the sitting, where the Speaker had assured that the National Democratic Congress (NDC) MPs would be recognized as the Minority Caucus and instructed to sit on the minority side of the House.
He claimed that the Speaker had assured certain stakeholders, including the Peace Council of Ghana, that his earlier declaration of four seats in Parliament as vacant no longer stood after the Supreme Court's order; stating that the NPP MPs chose not to appear in the House because they did not want to participate in what they perceived as lawlessness.
He said that the Speaker by his actions was encouraging and supervising the chaos being caused by the NDC MPs in the House, adding that Bagbin was “setting the country on fire.”
Kennedy Agyapong:
Right after Afenyo-Markin’s remarks, the Member of Parliament for Assin Central and former NPP presidential candidate hopeful Kennedy Agyapong, leading a group of NPP MPs, said that they did not show up on the floor because they were having a caucus meeting.
According to Ken Agyapong, the NPP MPs did not deliberately boycott proceedings of the House on Thursday.
He indicated that the meeting ran longer than they expected and went past the time scheduled for Thursday’s sitting.
He added that the Speaker of Parliament, who he said was a friend and his former lawyer, would not have adjourned the House if he knew that the NPP caucus was having a meeting.
“It wasn’t a deliberate boycott. Our caucus meeting simply ran long. I think the Speaker wasn’t aware,” he said.
He indicated that the leadership of the NPP caucus should have informed the Speaker of their meeting to avoid what transpired on Thursday.
Andy Kwame Appiah-Kubi:
The NPP MP for Asante Akim North, Andy Kwame Appiah-Kubi, has, however, stated that there was no caucus meeting.
Appiah-Kubi, who was on the floor of the House during Thursday's sitting, said that he was not aware of any caucus meeting.
He said that he was on the floor because the Speaker recalled the House for proceedings; adding that he continues to be a parliamentarian and would not force his other colleagues to attend sittings of the House.
Asked about the meeting of his caucus, Appiah-Kubi said, “I’m not aware. I’m not aware of anybody being here or not being here. I’m not aware.”
Asante Akim North MP, Andy Appiah Kubi, says he’s not aware of any caucus meeting.#GhanaPolls2024#ElectionBureau#CitiVerify pic.twitter.com/NSCchdRsO5
— CITI FM 97.3 (@Citi973) November 7, 2024