The image of the bewildered expressions on the faces of the coalition administration’s members of the National Assembly immediately after one of their number had voted with the other side of the House on the Friday December 21, 2018 no confidence motion, without doubt, warrants a place in the gallery of visual images of historic moments in Guyana’s contemporary political history. The trek to an eventual determination that the events in the House that Friday evening meant that Guyana would have to go to the polls again, ahead of the end of the incumbent administration’s term in office, however, took a good deal longer. More significantly, the intervening period has been strewn with political drama. Once the shock of the outcome of the vote in the House had receded, the government sought to focus its energies on a protracted legal battle to have the decision overturned. It begun in the same National Assembly where the earlier vote had been taken, worked its way through the local courts and eventually landed in the lap of the Caribbean Court of Justice.
The CCJ’s decision was that the APNU/AFC administration was indeed the victim of a truncated term of office and that new elections would have to be held. Two other related events are worth mentioning – the removal and replacement of a sitting Chairman of the Elections Commission and the Chief Justice’s ruling which determined that Members of Parliament enjoying dual citizenship should not sit in the National Assembly. That meant the replacement of three Ministers of Government – Minister of State, Joseph Harmon; Minister of Foreign Affairs, Carl Greenidge; and Minister of Business, Dominic Gaskin – from the government’s benches in Parliament.
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