GECOM imbroglio: The AFC is dead.
October 21,2017
Two flashes came immediately over me when I heard about Granger’s unilateral appointment of a GECOM Chairman. And no, it was not the judge thing at all. I am sure everybody exclaimed at first glance that Granger really wanted a judge and he chose a judge. The two rushes were the age of Justice Patterson, and secondly, the AFC constituencies, if there were any still left, would now be completely gone. I will start with these two factors first in analysing what Granger did.
I may very well live to be 84 but I wouldn’t want to. I am in my mid sixties and I would not take a hectic job like the GECOM chairmanship. That is one of the more commanding occupations in Guyana in any sphere – public and private. Could someone at 84 manage that? And why would someone at 84 want to be embroiled in such a hectic pace of life?
As a spin off from this situation, the question of a younger candidate comes in. Could not Mr. Granger find his legal pick at a far younger age?
There is a further dimension to this age thing and it will haunt the tenure of Justice Patterson. He and Mr. Granger will have to face a permanent crescendo of runaway perceptions that he will be partisan to Granger and by extension his party. When it comes to elections, this is trouble with a capital T. We have been this way before. Why are we returning to soiled moments in our troubled past?
The second wave that struck my mind is the AFC. Can the AFC as a political party survive Granger’s unilateral choice? The answer is no. Two reasons explain this; the PPP will be active twenty-four hours a day in areas where the AFC is likely to pick up votes (and you will have to be a fool not to think those are Indian constituencies) and the theme will be rigged elections before and now elections to be rigged.
It will be an impassible landscape for the AFC. It will be an insurmountable pathway. No beautiful rhetoric or fiery demagoguery from AFC leaders will convince AFC voters who gave their ballots in 2015 that the Patterson situation is not without malice and conspiracy. And frankly, the AFC doesn’t have leaders to deliver such types of rhetoric or demagoguery.
If the AFC was losing support for its performance and its partner’s (APNU) behaviour in office since 2015, it is my considered opinion that the Patterson imbroglio is the straw that broke the camel’s back.
We come now to the action itself. For the first time since 1992, there is an Election Commission Chairman that did not have the approval of both ruling party and parliamentary opposition. The Carter formula was flawed for one essential reason– politicians were at the helm of the decision-making machinery of GECOM. Politicians are contesting a general election as candidates and they are themselves in control of the decision-making machinery that administers the election. That is weird. It would shock every citizen if they know who took the fake statements of poll into the command centre of GECOM at the last election.
The Carter format was for all intent and purpose, a stop gap method. Ruling politicians are so drunk with power that their idiocy prevents them from understanding that history is dialectically driven – one day a king, the nest day, prisoner. The PPP had twenty-three years to reshape or abolish the Carter blueprint. It never ever thought about it. Why? For the PPP, it was an inconsequential frivolity because the PPP could never lose an election.
Whether it is unconstitutional or legal for the President to arrogate his authority to appoint the head of GECOM is not the issue for the historian, it is the stupidity of those blinded by power. If the PPP in its twenty-three years of domination had sought to clear up the opaqueness of the constitutional requirement of the president to appoint a chairman, and in unambiguous language stipulated that he didn’t have such latitude, we would not be in the dangerously sensitive situation now.
For example, the constitution is pellucid in its grammar – the Chief Justice and Chancellor cannot be confirmed in their respective posts unless there is explicit approval by the leader of the Opposition.
The Carter format was flawed alright but it was more workable that what we have now – the president decides by himself who becomes the chairperson. For those of us who are in our sixties, memories of Prime Minister Forbes Burnham’s covenant with Sir Harold Bollers, come tumbling down.