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Now Up To The People

This story was posted 8 years ago
1 September 2014
in Law
3 min. read
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By Lloyd Noel

After forty years of political independence, granted to our tri-island state by England in February 1974, we are about to tell the same British Government that we no longer wish to remain in association with that State, and we are going out on our own as a Republican State, with our own local president as Head of State.

To be able to do the above, the government has to put that proposition to the people, by means of Referendum on the Grenada Constitution.

And to have arrived at the stage – to engage the people to cast their votes for or against the proposition – the government had appointed a fifteen-member committee, to consider the pros and cons of the issue and make recommendations for the people’s consideration and voting decision.

And to be able to decide on the way ahead, the recommendations have to be put by government in the referendum now fixed for the month of March 2015, and a two-thirds (2/3) majority of the votes cast have to be obtained for the constitutional reformation required.

The committee has prepared and presented to the government – its recommendations for the Referendum to be put to the people, to obtain the required two-thirds majority, and these total twelve all told.

From the reports coming out of the committee meetings and decisions on the various issues considered – it seems that there was no unanimous decision by the committee members on any of the major issues considered, and in many cases only a bare majority attended meetings and voted.

The two major issues are the breakaway from the Privy Council and the Queen as head of State, and the joining of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) as our final Court of Appeal, in place of the Privy Council Court of Appeal in England.

There is nothing in the twelve issues submitted by the committee dealing with the subject of Head of State in place of the Queen, nor the issue of the terms of office of the Prime Minister under our Republican Status.

But the news coming out of the political corridors is that the President will be for a lifetime, and the PM for a term of ten years from two General Elections, held five years apart.

Of course once we move out of the constitutional restraints – imposed by our current 1974 Independence Order – the government in control can pass anything in parliament as the Law of the Land, and that is it until another Parliament revokes whatever it is.

The problem with the President–for–life provision, is that if the Head of State is an NNP official, and in a General Election another party group wins the control of government – should that party pass an Act in Parliament that the Head of State does not approve of, he may refuse to sign it into law and chaos results. That problem can be avoided – if there is provision in the new constitution to prevent such action by the Head of State down the road.

Whatever it may be we will not know until after the major change has been achieved – and by that time the damage will be beyond repair.

What all the foregoing – as well as other issues not mentioned thus far – are clearly indicating can produce major problems, should the Constitutional Reforms be passed by the people come March next year, is that under our Republican System of government that the Controllers are striving to achieve, we can be subject to all sorts of strange happenings.

Our people have just over six months to think very carefully about what they are being asked to do, by the constitutional reforms those now in control are planning for March, 2015.

It matters not which political party anyone is supporting, the main issue facing us as a people, is what will we be getting, in place of what we are being asked to abolish by the current controllers.

And even more critical, is that once we vote in favour of the changes being proposed by those now in control, we cannot do anything to get back to where we are before the vote.

So our people have to think very deeply about what is being proposed, as opposed to what we now have; and when the changes begin to take all kinds of dramatic effects on our lifestyle, how are we going to cope and change the chaos and confusion that will result.

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Tags: ccjconstitutionpeoplepresidentreferendumreformrepublicvote
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