GUYANA-AG welcomes court ruling, says government is legal

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Granger

 Attorney General Basil Williams Friday welcomed the Court of Appeal ruling that the motion of no confidence passed in the Guyana National assembly on December 21 last year was invalid, even as supporters of the main opposition People’s progressive Party (PPP) staged demonstrations across sections of the country in their quest for fresh regional and general elections.

“The ruling of the Court today is business as usual for the government,” Williams told reporters as he emerged from the Court of Appeal building after the three-member panel had been split on their ruling by a two to one margin.

Attorney General Basil Williams peaking to reporters outside Court of Appeal (CMC Photo)

Asked whether he would advise President David Granger on setting a date for the election, Williams replied “no, I really can’t get into a discussion….between myself and the President because I don’t want to pre-empt anything”.

Williams dismissed arguments by Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo that the government was illegal, given that it had been 90 days since the motion had been passed in the National Assembly and that legislators had not voted to extend the deadline for when fresh general elections had to be called in keeping with the provisions of the Guyana Constitution when a vote of no confidence is passed.

“What’s the sense in dealing with that,” he told reporters, adding “I am saying that because of the Court’s decision. The Court’s decision now prevails,” he said, adding that the government is legal.

But former attorney general, Anil Nandlall, said while he was disappointed with the ruling, the matter would now go before the Trinidad-based Caribbean Court of Appeal (CCJ), which is the country’s highest court.

“Understandably I am disappointed for we felt that 33 has always constituted a majority in our National Assembly since independence and that belief of ours supported by reality has been turned upside down.

“So whilst we have won on all the issues of law as you would have heard  we have ,lost the maths and I never thought this to be a case of maths, I thought this was a case of law,” he told reporters.

Attorney Anil Nandlall fielding questions following court ruling (CMC Photo)

Nandall said it was always the intention of either party in the appeal to take the matter before the CCJ “and it will go there because this is an important matter.

“Unfortunately one issue, just a singular issue has to be determined now. So this is a case that can e heard within a matter of days,” he added.

In a split decision, the three-member panel of judges said that the motion had to be passed by 34 of the 65 members of the National Assembly in order to have been valid.

Chancellor of the Judiciary, Yonnette Cummings-Edwards and Justice Dawn Gregory ruled that the threshold required for a no-confidence motion was 34 votes, while Justice Rishi Persaud provided a dissenting ruling.

Justice Cummings-Edwards said that the acting Chief Justice, Roxane George-Wiltshire, calculation of allowing the 33 votes to be a majority applied only to a “simple majority” and not an absolute one, while

Justice Gregory said that 34 votes were required after rounding up 32.5 to 33 and adding another vote to acquire an absolute majority.

But in his dissenting ruling, Justice Persaud,said, with the greatest of respect to Grenada-born constitutional expert, Dr. Francis Alexis, who had appeared on behalf of the government, his argument that the no-confidence motion could only have been passed by rounding up 32.5  “does not accord with logic or common sense” unless there is a stated formula.

The judge also disagreed that Article 70 of the Constitution of Guyana guarantees a five-year term, because other provisions provide for a proclamation and unless sooner dissolved.

Jagdeo had on December 21, last year, successfully tabled the motion of no confidence against the three and a half year old coalition government after he had received the support of then government legislator, Charrandas Persaud.

The government later appealed the High Court ruling that the motion was valid and had refused to issue a conservatory order stopping the countdown to the 90 day period during which the fresh regional and general election had to be held following the passage of a motion of no confidence.

Williams told reporters that he was grateful for the results, saying “it was a team effort and a lot of work had been put into it.

“We really stretched the extremities of the law in this area and we are happy with the results. The proper principle was applied to the computation,” he said, adding “we always believed that that was the right computation.

“All we had to do was find the road to satisfy the Court and I think we did that very well,” Williams said, adding he was confident about the whole issue of “absolute majority”.

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