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FM
Former Member

Politics: The political culture and the will of the people

Posted By Staff Writer On December 3, 2013 @ 5:10 am In Guyana Review | No Comments

The significance of the outcome of the November 2011 general elections – at least as far as the electorate was concerned – reposed in what we  describe as the “one seat majority,” that is to say the single-seat numerical advantage which the parliamentary opposition holds over the executive in the National Assembly.

The public line of reasoning was that we had, for the first time as a nation, arrived at a place where the political party in office  no longer held independent sway in the matter of the creation of legislation and, by extension, in the governance of our country.  That, apart from the manner in which elections had previously been conducted, was much of the reason why our democratic credentials had continually been questioned. The ‘one seat majority,’ many Guyanese reasoned, could settle some critical issues relating to the practice of democracy in Guyana.

The people had every right to hope even though that hope was, in so many instances, laced with skepticism. They had, over time, endured the sobering lessons taught by an unchanging political culture and if they were hopeful they were also apprehensive. about whether that historic general elections outcome would bring historic change.

 House Speaker Raphael Trotman

House Speaker Raphael Trotman

 Leader of the Opposition David Granger

Leader of the Opposition David Granger

We had begun to get some pretty clear answers to that question long before the second anniversary of the nation’s 10th Parliament. It had begun with a fierce political confrontation over which side of the House would hold the Speakership of the National Assembly and, up to the time of writing had reached a juncture of yet another of our unending political ‘bloodfeuds’ over a piece of legislation          on money-laundering. Since December 2011, the National Assembly has stumbled its way through one faceoff after another, sending unmistakable signals to the populace that the fault lines that have deformed our politics for decades are still far from healed.

The PPP/C might probably deny that it saw the loss of its majority in the House as a political disaster, a loss its ability to fashion and pass laws without parliamentary ‘hindrance;’ and yet, that is precisely the case. By the same token, the political opposition can hardly honestly deny that much of the significance of the one seat majority reposes in the purpose it serves as a bargaining chip, a tool with which to wring concessions out of the executive as it sees fit, or else to frustrate the government when the political circumstances so dictate. That is the realm in which our politics have always belonged.

So that the din about ‘snap elections’ really had nothing to do with “the will of  the people.” The people had already spoken a little while earlier. The problem was that what they had said had not been pleasing to the People’s Progressive Party/CIVIC administration.  “Snap elections” was really a matter of putting words in their mouths. Talk about snap elections bore a curious  resemblance to a rejection by the government of the mandate that it had been handed by the people in November 2011 to rule, in the manner that the people had seen fit.

By the same token the political opposition came to terms with the fact that while the people had again said ‘no’ to its application to govern, it had, for the first time, placed in its hands the ability to meaninfully influence the legislative process and, if it so choose, to cramp the government’s style – so the speak – as far as running of the affairs of the country is concerned. It was the closest that its advocacy had brought  it to its goal of “shared governance.”

The ensuing state of affairs in the National Assembly – termed gridlock in some quarters – is really an exercise in gamesmanship of the most public sort and in a manner which, while sometimes seeming to have little to do with “the business of the people,” but really has to do with the business of power.

The 10th Parliament in session

The 10th Parliament in session

What the November 2011 ‘one seat majority’ did was to supplant the routineness of the governance culture that had obtained since independence with a potentially more meaningful one…one that facilitates a more genuinely broad-based participation in the process of making decisions for our country. That, however,  would only work if our Parlia-ment genuinely embrace the will of the people. On the basis of the prevailing evidence our political leaders are still light years away from beginning to clean the Aegan Stables of prejudice, narrowness and a preoccupation with power. They are not ready to embrace the will of the people.

 

 


Article printed from Stabroek News: http://www.stabroeknews.com

URL to article: http://www.stabroeknews.com/20...culture-will-people/

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Is Granger saying that their combine 1 stinking Seat gives them the right to starve the Guyanese People, to hold the progress and development to ransom. Well, he is misguided and a fool to think so. The Guyanese People want to see things get done and if the opposition will continue to work for the DESTRUCTION of Guyana, the Guyanese people will have their say. Snap or no Snap!!!!

Nehru
Originally Posted by Nehru:

Is Granger saying that their combine 1 stinking Seat gives them the right to starve the Guyanese People, to hold the progress and development to ransom. Well, he is misguided and a fool to think so. The Guyanese People want to see things get done and if the opposition will continue to work for the DESTRUCTION of Guyana, the Guyanese people will have their say. Snap or no Snap!!!!

Let us have the snap elections.  Ramu is a coward, he battie biting.  Ease the pressure, more back ball.  I hear all them black woman in Cuba hiding from him.

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by KishanB:

Danald core competence.

And you don't have such competence???

I a bed room, anything possible.  On the street, common decency dictates.  But I presume Danald was dragged up.

FM
Originally Posted by KishanB:
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by KishanB:

Danald core competence.

And you don't have such competence???

I a bed room, anything possible.  On the street, common decency dictates.  But I presume Danald was dragged up.

Are you dissing Guyanese Tradition and Culture????

Nehru

My elders always told me, be a ***** with your wife, try anything in the bedroom.

 

 

 

On the road, behave like a man with children.

 

But I presume, Deo got a short fuse and suffering the man so he got to bring his house business into the streets.

 

I prapa sorry fuh am!  All that stress from Ramjattan and Granger and no release fuh am in the big house that out of desperation, he jump on any battie!

FM

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