(JollofNews) – Mr. President, with a deep sense of humility and patriotism, I write to you on a subject of high importance to our country, which is the nomination of National Assembly Members as required of you under Section 88(b). This is your next big move!
Let me say at the outset that the issue of the nominated members is extremely critical simply because Section 93(1) of the Constitution says that the Speaker and Deputy Speaker shall be elected from among those nominated members. Hence the persons that the president shall nominate must be viewed from the context of the role and contribution of the Speaker and Deputy Speaker. This is even more important given that the Speaker is the third highest office holder in the country and a potential president. Thus we do not need any kind of person as Speaker.
In light of the foregoing, the issue of nominated members must therefore be carefully considered in order to use it as a means to strengthen our democratization process. The role and position of the Speaker is a very significant position in a constitutional democracy like ours. As the leading accountability institution in the country, the parliament must be clearly independent from any influence.
The independence of the parliament rests very much on the independence of the Speaker. The ability or the power of a parliament to check the Executive rests squarely on the Speaker. The trust and confidence that parliamentarians would have in the Speaker depends on the kind of person holding that office. The respect, trust and confidence that Gambian citizens will have in the parliament rests very much on the kind of person as the Speaker. The quality of discussions in the parliament lies squarely in the effective leadership provided by the Speaker. Hence the Speaker has a huge role and position.
Hence Mr. Barrow, you must consider all these issues in identifying these nominated members so that we can have a Speaker and a Deputy Speaker who will play an effective role to enable the success of the Gambia. A very good Speaker will help to guide our transformation from dictatorship to democracy. A very good person as Speaker shall ensure that the critical reforms that your administration envisages are done.
A very good Speaker will bring about unity within the parliament between the different parties and ensure that the parliament as a whole is effective, efficient and responsive to the needs of Gambians. Hence the parliament is indeed indispensable and instrumental to your presidency and the peace and stability of the Gambia.
One can draw lessons from around the world to realize the power and influence of a speaker. Everyone knows that in the United States, the second most powerful person is Paul Ryan, the Speaker of the House of Representatives in the US Congress. His power and influence in policy and lawmaking and holding the Executive to account can be felt not only in America but also around the world. Similarly the power and influence of John Bercow, the Speaker of the House of Commons in the British Parliament is all too clear for all to see.
Just few weeks ago, he stood up to say that Pres. Trump would not address the British Parliament when he visits the UK later this year at the invitation of the Queen. Yet no one can over-rule him. Not the Queen, nor the Prime Minister. These speakers are persons who have integrity, deep understanding of the issues and command a huge amount of respect and power.
This is the kind of Speaker we need especially at this critical time. It is because of such kinds of strong individuals as speakers that have made the US Congress or the UK Parliament one of the most powerful institutions in the world. This is precisely the reason why democracy is durable, effective and responsive in the US and UK and many other countries. This is what the Gambia also needs. I wish that you would consider this issue deeply and pursue it in such a way as to build your own legacy in truly creating a modern democratic Gambia.
Do not follow the Yaya Jammeh pattern of identifying clueless persons such as Fatoumatta Jahumpa Ceesay as speakers who possess no iota of values, knowledge or patriotism. Do not pick speakers who will only serve sectional interests such as Abdoulie Bojang against the supreme national interests of the Gambia. Therefore do not nominate politicians or persons affiliated with political parties whose only role would be to make our parliament a partisan, rubberstamp and biased institution.
Therefore I advise that your nominated members should be Gambians who are not affiliated to any political party, but professionals in their own fields who are well-educated, respectable and credible individuals. Do not use the position of nominated members as a means to reward your supporters and allies.
Choose independent persons of integrity and knowledge. This is important to ensure that the Speaker and Deputy Speaker provide the necessary unbiased leadership to the parliament and the Gambia. Given that the parliament is composed of multiple parties, having a non-partisan person of integrity as speaker will ensure more decent and thorough debates that will generate fairness and justice to issues. It will also mean no one will be able to control the speaker.
Mr. Barrow, you must understand that you need a parliament that is genuine and devoid of partisan bickering and politicization of issues and therefore cause delay or derailment to your agenda. To avoid that, a speaker without any party affiliation will be better able to guide discussions towards national interests and your objectives. But if you nominate politicians or partisan-affiliated persons, there is every tendency for that person to be biased against other parties in parliament. If that happens, the other NAMs could lose trust and respect for the speaker, which means the parliament will only become a Bantaba for insults and infighting.
Such a parliament does not help you as president in anyway. Rather such a parliament will derail and delay your government. In fact it will be such a parliament that will further fuel tribal politics in the country.
In order to therefore choose your nominated members, I suggest that you should find a way to identify these persons. There are a number ways to do that. You can bring the issue to the Cabinet to discuss in order to identify excellent Gambians of integrity and knowledge. Or, you can also consult with the parties in order to identify the best persons possible.
Alternatively, you can engage with various sectors of the society in order to obtain suggestions. For example, you can contact the civil society through TANGO for suggestions. You can also contact the business community through GCCI, or you can engage the Christian and Islamic councils, or the academia through UTG as well as the media fraternity through GPU, among others. At the end of the day, it is all about identifying credible and knowledgeable Gambians with the integrity and patriotism to help the country transition to a full-blown democracy under your leadership. This is about your legacy for which history will judge you, kindly or harshly. The ball is in your court.
Therefore identify credible Gambians who will remain faithful to the Gambia and ensure the parliament delivers the best for the country. We need this more than ever before given that we are coming out of a tyranny with lot of contentious issues to address. Hence we need a very levelheaded, well-informed and non-partisan citizen as Speaker to help steer the nation towards democracy and good governance.
Remember, you have already filled your Cabinet with lot of politicians. The parliament is filled with only politicians. Now that you have this opportunity, I think common sense and patriotism require that you identify other Gambians outside of partisan politics but with integrity to serve the country better.
God Bless The Gambia.
Very brilliant suggestions, Madi. Keep up the good literary work.
Madi means well, in a “perfect” world. The Gambia is far, very far from perfect. This administration is going to face a monumental opposition at every step and vicious scrutiny with every decision it makes. Barrow still has the remnant of the last administration hiding in the shadows, who consistently and continuously sabotage his government efforts. The President needs a path of least resistance to get some of his mandate given to him by Gambians through that National Assembly. He needs an advocate, a powerful insider to help push his agenda. He needs his own MAN or WOMAN as Speaker. Who gives a stranger the key to his safe with all his valuables inside? I say it is in Mr Barrow interest and that of Gambia by proxy if he chose the most loyal, capable, mature, experienced, person who has demonstrated that he or she love Gambia as the next Speaker.
God Bless The Gambia
Dr. Isatou Sarr i seconded your view points regarding the selections of the Speaker for the house of National Assembly. The President cannot nominate someone who will sabotage and delay his government development agendas by the attention seekers.
I had initially thought slightly like Madi in suggesting “defeated” Hero Halifa Sallah for Speaker – for there I saw a unifying magnanimity. But you are right Dr: there will be those determined to sabotage Barrow’s efforts and he will need “a powerful insider to help push his agenda”. So he might go for a strong supporter of his party – and who can blame him? In UK the Speaker is “neutral” – although the majority party in Parliament can force him to resign or remove him. Neither can the Speaker in anyway sabotage the will of the majority party – the VOTE always wins … and the Speaker is NOT in-charge of government business, the Leader of the House (a government appointee) is. In USA, the Speaker is the President’s man … as long as they are from the same party, as with Ryan and Trump.
Halifa is a Nam he cannot be Speaker.
bro how is the election of the speaker and the deputy speaker conducted
it is not necessary about having a new speaker the current speaker is a very good,hardworking,loyal,and experience sombody so he will maintain his position and work towards the development of this country
Who is the current Speaker? And what are his concrete achievements? If you could elaborate on this.
the current speaker Abdoulie bojang
the current speaker abdoulie bojamg will remain there
OK thanks for the appointment announcement! And all the best for his new old role. Maybe Allah guide him better this time. For Second chance is not easy to come by in a lifetime.
Kinteh, there is no “appointment announcement”! BUT, he will work very well with Barrow’s Government (as he has shown). He also has the added advantage that he can win over the 5 Foni MPs into the UDP fold. The UDP may still want want one of their own into the Speaker’s Chair – because it is the 3rd Office of State, after the VP and the President. For UNITY purposes it would indeed be a good idea to leave the current Speaker in post – if it is not given to Halifa who may be brilliant but difficult.
Lunango, I am very open for any choice especially as you mentioned someone to bridge the politico-ethnic divide. However an APRC ex-speaker would be a wrong choice irrespective of where he comes from. He would barely have the trust to carry out his role effectively. And Unity in the sense of appeasing the Foni’s, is for me a no go. It could serve as a dangerous precedent. They must accept the democratic verdict of the people, just as the other part of the country accept the choice they made at the recent NAM polls.
I think the concern from Bax is an intelligent one; regarding rubber stamping /
However you want to make this election “pretty”
The truth is Gambia has replaced a one party state with another.
I am also surprised at the extent of wins udp garnered. I was betting at 20 MPs. However at the end of the campaign I saw a hardened udp core voters closing ranks whereas the other parties in the coalition concentrate too much on Darboe and NOT on their respective candidates. For me it was then clear that especially ppp was making a mistake. The country was not voting for Darboe or Barrow perse. They were voting for a party they have come to identify with thanks to Jammeh’s brutality. What I also hear was that many rural voters preferred a parliament with distinctive belonging to a national party. Hence the dismal performance of independent candidates. Voters wanted to avoid a hung parliament. In that I am in tune with them. The positive thing about it, is that UDP is now in the spotlight. They are well advised to get to work quickly and deliver. By delivering I mean create the environment for private sector innovations and investments.