His comments follow the approval and maturity of the Public Elections
Amendment Regulations (C.I 126).
“The Electoral Commission is the custodian of their own document and they
are telling us that the Charlotte Osei-led Commission who were charged with that
responsibility could not do that and they have inherited a more or less
contaminated system,” he said on Eyewitness News.
Mr. Mensa Bonsu also attributed the seeming division in the House over new
requirements for the compilation of a new voters’ register to partisanship.
Parliament had
to vote on Tuesday, June 9, 2020, to
allow the Electoral Commission (EC) to use the Ghana Card and Passports as the
only forms of identification for persons registering to vote.
The vote occurred after the Speaker of Parliament, Professor Mike Oquaye,
granted a request from the Minority Leader, Haruna Iddrisu for a division.
The legislators voted in a 102 to 96 decision in favour of the amendment
of the Constitutional Instrument.
The Majority Leader felt the House was unable to reach a consensus on the
new requirements because some members of Parliament had politicized issues
surrounding the amendment of the Constitutional Instrument (C.I) empowering the
EC to organise elections in the country.
“One expects that especially at the level of committee business, there
will be less partisanship. Unfortunately, in this particular matter that was
referred to the Subsidiary Legislation Committee, partisan politics have
already been taken. The Subsidiary Legislation Committee has been polarised and
indeed there was a line drawn on party lines. We have had to contend with it
and deal with the substance.”
The Subsidiary Legislation Committee, which considered the amendment,
could not arrive at a consensus as to whether the exclusion of a driver’s
license and the existing voter ID from the amendment was constitutional.
But according to its report, it recommended by majority decision the
passing of the amendment.
Per the Constitutional Instrument that was first put before Parliament, “a
person who applies for registration as a voter shall provide as evidence of
identification one of the following: a passport, a national identification
card, or one voter registration identification guarantee form as set out in
Form one of the schedule that has been completed and signed by two registered
voters.”
The Bawku Central MP, Mahama Ayariga, had attempted getting the House to
reject the amendment through a motion that was rejected by the Speaker of
Parliament.
The National Identification Authority will also begin issuing the
remaining printed Ghana Cards on June 10.
This has led to concerns from observers and political stakeholders who
claim that a significant number of Ghanaians will be disenfranchised because
the National Identification Authority is yet to complete its registration
exercise.
Minority MPs and the National Democratic Congress (NDC) have also accused
the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP) of conniving with the EC and the NIA to
rig the 2020 elections.
Source: citinewsroom.com
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