Whatever happens on Sunday 7th December 2008, there is going to be change in Ghana. Whether the change will be real or not will depend on the perceptions of Ghanaians as to where we should be heading as a country and which party can get us there.
Parliamentary elections
Let me start by talking about the Parliamentary elections, the one that I consider to be the most important if we are to continue with a deepening of our multiparty democratic dispensation.
Parliament is expected to be the highest authority in the land in making the laws of the country and with respect to approving budgets that are set by government. In the Parliamentary system in the UK, parliament is not only the highest lawmaking authority but part of parliament acts as the executive. In the US, the House of Representatives and the Senate are required to make law and the executive president has the role of governing the country. In the Ghanaian system we have a hybrid system where members of parliament are allowed to be part of the executive.
The difficulty for us to date is that since 1992, the Presidents party has always had the largest majority in parliament. To a large extent this makes parliament more of a rubber stamping authority than a lawmaking authority and challenges the objectivity and independence of our parliament. Two ways of making parliament more independent and more relevant would be to a) transform parliament into a solely lawmaking authority with no executive responsibility and b) vote tactically so that he who wins the presidency will not have the majority in parliament.
So we need to strengthen parliament by getting parliamentarians who have no wish to govern, but who are more interested in representing the voice of their constituents in making good laws for country and helping to ensure that there is law and order in our country and that there are sufficient institutions including civil society institutions that support this our new found democracy.
My challenge to Ghanaians therefore is to be conscious of who they vote for to represent them in parliament – they must not only vote with their consciences to elect a better balanced parliament that will deliver for the people and provide the scrutiny necessary to curb the excesses of a powerful executive presidency. Sadly during both the Rawlings and Kufour periods parliament has not been able to rise to the challenge and there is a real need to strengthen parliament to make it more representative of the people it represents.
My hope is that at this election parliament is more evenly balanced and the numbers of third party representatives would be higher – my party of choice however should be given an opportunity by the Ghanaian people for the tireless and serious way in which they have worked on this election.
An evenly balanced parliament will represent real change in Ghanaian politics.
Presidential elections
Though there are many candidates in the presidential elections – there are really only three choices that are available to the Ghanaian people.
- A negative passive choice
- A do nothing neutral choice and
- A positive active choice
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