General News of Friday, 20 December 2019

Source: starrfm.com.gh

MPs clash again as Akufo-Addo pushes to swear in Anin Yeboah Tuesday

File photo: Parliament House File photo: Parliament House

The leadership of Parliament has clashed again over the vetting of the Chief Justice-nominee as President Akufo-Addo sets Monday for swearing-in of Justice Anin Yeboah.

Presenting the business statement on the floor of Parliament, Majority leader Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu disclosed the Presidency will have to be impressed upon to shift the swearing-in of the nominee to Tuesday following parliament’s decision to vet him on Monday instead of Saturday.

Speaking on the floor, the majority leader said “the minority leader raised issues about creating space for the scrutiny of the nominee for Chief Justice. I am one person who I’ve always espoused the need for thorough scrutiny of nominees from the president, and the CJ being the 4th citizen, should in my view undergo thorough scrutiny.”

“This is the reason why initially I was insisting that we could free tomorrow for that enterprise so that we could do so thoroughly tomorrow. But the minority leader raised some legitimate concern. We intend to have the appropriations bill tomorrow and he insisted that the minority leader should be part of the consideration for the appropriations bill and I agree with him, he cannot be at two places at the same time. For which reason we have decided to have it on Monday,” he said.

He, however, indicated that “the president wanted to swear him in at a given time when the impression was created that the vetting was gonna happen tomorrow. But now that the vetting is gonna happen on Monday, I will have serious clashes with him. If he has to locate it to Tuesday, so be it. After-all Tuesday is still a working day.”

Minority leader Haruna Iddrisu, however, mentioned the appointments committee will do its best to ready its report on Monday for approval.

He assured “let me assure the Ghanaian public and my colleagues that we will participate in that exercise fully as a house, to prove the background, competences of the president’s nominee and discharge it as the president said expeditiously. On Monday the appointments committee will, as usual, be thorough in proving the background of the president’s nominee to determine his suitability and competence.”

Speaker of Parliament Prof Mike Ocquaye argued the executive cannot stampede parliament into rushing its work.

According to Prof. Ocquaye matters relating to swearing-in on the new CJ lies with the executive and thus the house must not concern itself with it but concentrate on what’s within its remit.