Budget: Happenings in Parliament do not enhance anybody’s political fortunes – UG Prof

A professor at the University of Ghana, Ransford Gyampo has dismissed assertions that events in Parliament over the 2022 budget statement presented to the House by Finance Minister Ken Ofori Atta, enhance the political fortunes of any party or individual.

He said he disagrees with that notion.

Speaking on the Key Points on TV3/3FM Saturday December 4, with host Dzifa Bampoh, he said “The Minority should not frustrate governance because if governance is frustrated it affects all of us and at the end of the day, because of some of rancour, acrimony and tension, budgets do not go through you and I will suffer one way or the other.

“But the Majority must also know that they have a country a country to govern. The president has a mandate of to govern and so the responsibility is more on them to reach out. The Minority have nothing much to lose.

“In fact, theirs is to be able to do some of these gymnastic and theatrics just to make you frustrated, to expose you that you are incompetent person in terms of dialogue so that they will feel that will enhance political fortunes, even though I disagree that that necessarily enhances political fortune, but we all have much to lose.

“But the government of the day has a lot to lose if its budget doesn’t go through. We need genuine dialogue, genuine tolerance, genuine consultation and the kind of behind the scenes talking that is frank, honest and candid, not what they are doing here. It doesn’t help the course of democracy, it throws into the very politics that there is tension.”

The approval of the 2022 budget has been characterized by sharp division, rancor and acrimony in the House.

During deliberations on the floor of the House on Wednesday December 1, a Former Deputy Attorney General Dr Dominic Ayine asked persons quoting the constitution to support the approval of the 2022 budget to read the constitution as a whole to be able to arrive at a meaningful conclusion.

He said those arguing for the approval of the budget cannot pick and choose aspects of the constitution to support their points.

Otherwise, he said, they would be wrong.

Contributing to a discussion on the budget the Bolgatanga East MP said “We think the decision that was taken yesterday gross undermining of the Constitution of the Republic of Ghana.”

The Minority in Parliament were seeking to overturn the approval of the budget by the House on Tuesday November 30, without them.

Minority Leader, Haruna Iddrisu in moving a motion to overturn the approval said 137 lawmakers of the Majority could not have taken a decision.

He said they don’t consider Deputy Speaker Joseph Osei Wusu (Joewise) who deliberated over proceedings yesterday, as Member of Parliament at the time he was sitting in as speaker hence, that leaves the number present at 137.

It is recalled that immediately after the approval of the budget on Tuesday, Haruna Iddrisu said that the Majority did not have the numbers to enable them approve the 2022 budget statement.

He said at a press conference in Parliament that as of the time the Majority were taking the decision to approve the budget, they were 137 and not 138.

“The precedent they are setting will haunt them in the future. At the time that they were taking the decision the house was not 137.”

They further rejected the assurance by the Finance Ken Ofori-Atta that their concerns in the 2022 budget would be addressed at the committee level.

Haruna Iddrisu said that they wanted their concerns captured in the original budget statement, not to be discussed at the committees’ sittings.

“If you are acknowledging and admitting that there were concessions, let it reflect in the statement” and not a meeting at the committee level.

He further stated that the Minority will oppose to the E-levy proposal in its current any day and anytime.

“We don’t support the E-levy in its current. Our point is to revise it to take care of the ordinary people.”

The Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta had assured them that all the issues they raised against the 2022 Budget, would be addressed at the committee level.

The Minority had raised issues including the request that the budget for Parliament should be raised from GHS510m to GHs1.7bn, issues about the e-levy and others.

Mr Ofori Atta said in Parliament on Tuesday November 30 that their concerns would be considered.

His comments came just before Parliament approved the 2022budget statement on Tuesday November 30.

The First Deputy Speaker who sat in for the Speaker said on Tuesday, Joseph Osei Owusu said that “The House has adopted the Financial statement and approved the budget statement for the ensuing year ending 31st December 2021.”

“This house has approved the budget and economic statement,” he stressed.

The Majority Leader in Parliament, Osei Kyei Mensah Bonsu had asked him to set aside the purported rejection of the 2022 budget statement.

Mr Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu said on the floor of the House on Tuesday November 30 that the rejection of the budget “did not meet the test established under Article 104,” because Parliament did not have the required numbers to be present in the chamber for purposes of taking decisions.

The minority boycotted the sitting.

Source: 3news.com|

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