Dr. Sam Ankrah, a candidate for president in 2024, has joined the discussion over the necessity for Ghana to amend some of its constitution.
“Today, I join proponents of a Constitutional Review to repeat my long-held belief that 30 years of our 4th Republican Constitution has failed Ghana’s people and must be reviewed”
He asserts that the 1992 constitution of Ghana is out-of-date and unfit for purpose and that Ghana’s dysfunctional state institutions are to blame for the country’s slow socioeconomic development.
“The Constitution must require governmental agency mergers, closures, and staff reassignments to minimize costs. “Jobs for the Boys” agencies waste state resources by duplicating roles. Thus, institutions are often confused or at odds over who does what” he said.
Speaking to the media on July 1 to commemorate Ghana’s Republic Day, Dr. Sam Ankrah argued that the problems facing the nation are a result of the President’s powers, which are granted under the 1992 constitution.
According to him “the struggle for independence to the present, we thank all our former leaders. I also want to urge on young Ghanaians to board the train to change the trajectory and bring paradigm shift” he stressed.
“We celebrate sixty-three years as a republic from a crown kilometres away today. We’re still debating if the black man is capable of managing his own affairs was a good idea for us and our children”
He mentioned that, after Ghanaians gambled with three more republics to turn fortunes around while repeating the same mistakes that sink people’s decade after decade, Ghanaians still suffer from Fourth Republic disparities and inefficiency and are still economically and politically dependent on colonial masters”
Emphasizing that “although many well-meaning Ghanaians have urged for a revision of this constitution in the best interest of Ghanaians, both political leaders who have taken turns remained resolute. The Fourth Republican Constitution was rushed to get us out of military control and into a multi-party democracy dominated by two major political parties” he noted.
Dr. Sam Ankrah said, “In general elections, the constitution requires a 50%+1 majority, indicating that when no party hits that mark, the contest becomes a party contest. This restricts the people to the two-party state of the Fourth Republic, with its complacency and entitlement in governance. This law must be changed to eliminate the run-off and require alliances with fringe parties. This would first and foremost help resolve the people’s anger against the two dominant parties and allow for new and revolutionary government ideas”
Dr. Ankrah said that the President’s excessive appointment powers ought to be reconsidered in a reformed Constitution. Constitutional nominees must be bipartisan and transcend political ideologies. Even though these choices have generally been made independently, history demonstrates that they frequently align with the President’s political beliefs.
In order to jointly designate someone they are confident in for the President’s appointment, he has proposed a committee with equal membership and authority, drawn from the two largest parties in Parliament and endorsed by the National House of Chiefs.
Bipartisan nominations are necessary to foster political and public confidence in non-constitutional institutions like the Inspector-General of Police, the National Development Planning Commission, and the Attorney-General (de-coupled from Minister of Justice).
Again, the constitution must limit Ministers of State. Productivity and efficiency depend on maximizing outputs with minimal resources. If the highest office cannot do this and ensure that it is reproduced in all public sectors, our search for fiscal prudence is doomed.
Institutional Efficiencies
Dr. Sam Ankrah said, the constitution must provide power separation stressing that Parliamentarians appointed by the nation’s Chief Executive, which institutionalize cronyism between the Legislature and the Executive they supervise. Under this setup, the Legislature serves the Executive rather than its constituents.
According to the Presidential hopeful, some proponents doubt the function of a Vice President.
He believes “the Office of the Veep is essential to national peace and stability adding that, “we must sustain this investment. After President Mills’ untimely death, President Mahama took over by dark. In addition to the peace, the caretaker President has no need to change his predecessor’s programs and projects” he said.
Reward System Equity
Additionally, “a constitution that solely addresses the method of determining compensation for Article 71 office holders and purposefully ignores all other public officials’ salaries cannot be the people’s Constitution”
“That bias of the 4th Republican Constitution has actively operationalized two classes of pay: a juicy one for Article 71 office holders (including the President and Vice, Ministers, Parliamentarians, Council of State, etc.) and another for workers on the pitiful Single Spine Salary Structure, which is limited to whatever Government says it can afford to pay, under the guise of the “ability-to-pay” principle, which does not apply to the top brass”
“Some receive unjustified ex-gratia or retire on their wages. All public officials should retire on their salaries for the same reason as the top brass. Can the masters of such a system ever feel the agony of the poor, let alone commit to swiftly alleviating it?” Dr. Sam Ankrah questioned.
Upper Chamber
Dr. Sam Ankrah noted that a revised constitution must exclude the Council of State. An Upper Chamber of Representatives can advise. This body he said should include Traditional Paramountcies and Professional Bodies. There is the need to review several other Fourth Republican Constitution provisions:
A Constitution that prohibits a former president from being punished for nearly a decade mocks the laws he swore to uphold.
Source:Ghanatodayonline.com/Kaakyire Kwasi Afari