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The quagmire of electing
of a Deputy Speaker of parliament when the National
Assembly convenes next week may have been exacerbated
now that both opposition parties have expressed disinterest
in assuming the position.
According to the constitution chapter IV section 32
(3), "When the National Assembly first meets
after any general election and before it proceeds
to the dispatch of any other business except the election
of the Speaker the Assembly shall elect a member of
the Assembly who is not a member of the Cabinet or
a Parliamentary Secretary to be Deputy Speaker of
the Assembly."
Parliament is scheduled to convene for the first time
since the January 25 general elections on March 10
when Prime Minister Hon. Dr. Denzil Douglas says he
is confident that a Speaker and Deputy Speaker of
the House will be duly nominated and elected.
The quasi-controversy arose after the Nevis Reformation
Party candidate Hon. Patrice Nisbett was appointed
Attorney General and Minister of Justice and Legal
Affairs to join the Labour administration. Nisbett
had held the position during the last parliamentary
term. The Prime Minister also appointed 2 non-elected
persons as Ministers- Hon. Nigel Carty and Hon. Richard
Skerritt- to his Cabinet. The Opposition side was
left with 4 elected members and one appointed senator.
Speaking on behalf of the Concerned Citizens Movement,
MP Hon. Mark Brantley told The Observer that neither
he nor party leader MP Hon. Vance Amory was interested
in the position. Brantley will be returning to parliament
as Opposition Leader and as such is disqualified from
holding the position of Deputy Speaker.
PAM MP Hon. Eugene Hamilton had told The Observer
he was skeptical that the government side would seek
to nominate a PAM parliamentarian or senator.
""I would be very surprised if that's what
the government would want to do; to use its direct
opponent as Deputy Speaker. Any such nomination would
be seen as something that could prevent the Opposition
from fully participating at all times in parliamentary
debates."
Hamilton later said PM Douglas could avail himself
of another option- rescind the ministerial appointment
of a member of his Cabinet. He also declared that
none of the PAM MPs or senator had any intention of
holding the position of Deputy Speaker.
"With the government side ram packed with some
9 ministers, 2 of whom weren't elected, it is quite
natural and frankly more sensible for us to adhere
to our duty as the Opposition to appoint our Senator
and that is all we intend to do."
The PAM MP said with Dr. Douglas' experience at the
helm of government, he should have considered the
composition of the National Assembly before determining
his Cabinet.
"The supposedly 'experienced' Prime Minister
appointed a Cabinet without considering that the Constitution
dictates that he has an obligation to also appoint
a Deputy Speaker. Our interest is to duly appoint
our Senator and we leave the Government side to fix
the matter relating to the Deputy Speaker," Hamilton
said.
On Tuesday Dr. Douglas said contrary to "outside
chatter" he is certain that when parliament meets
next week, a Speaker and Deputy Speaker of the House
would be elected.
"I expect a certain level of maturity in the
conduct of our affairs of government in our parliament.
Although there has been quite a bit of chatter outside
I believe that when the time comes the parliament
will not only elect a Speaker but also will be able
to elect a Deputy Speaker."
He said an Opposition parliamentarian holding the
Deputy Speaker position was not a new phenomenon.
"You will recall that back in 2005 and 2009 the
Deputy Speaker did come from the opposite benches.
This is not the first time that we have a situation
where the where all of the members on the government
benches are all members of a Cabinet and thus none
was available, none was qualified to hold the position
of Deputy Speaker and so the Deputy Speaker position
was in fact filled from the opposite side," Dr.
Douglas cited.
The PM also addressed the issue of the Opposition
parliamentarians' apparent disinterest, chastising
any attempt to politicize the issue. He called for
"maturity" to prevail on March 10.
"I hope people are able to look at the work parliament
has to do with some measure of maturity and stop playing
childish politics and get on with the business of
conducting the affairs of the country from parliament
because some people seem to think that it is some
kind of game to go to parliament on the 10th and don't
have a Deputy Speaker. I just thought I would make
that very, very clear because it seems as though people
are chattering about this particular matter. It is
not a matter for the Labour party; it is not a matter
for the PAM, NRP or CCM. It is a matter for all members
of the House to become engaged in an exercise that
would put forward not only a Speaker but a Deputy
Speaker in order to conduct the affairs of the National
Assembly as we have been elected, identified and appointed
to do by the relevant authority, given the relevant
instruments from the constitution."
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