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PJ’s Constitution caution
PATTERSON...the recommendation for the election of the president is absolutely unacceptable, must be vehemently resisted (Photo: Naphtali Junior)
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BY ALICIA DUNKLEY-WILLIS Senior staff reporter dunkleywillisa@jamaicaobserver.com  
June 6, 2024

PJ’s Constitution caution

Former PM serves warning about several recommendations of the CRC

FORMER Prime Minister PJ Patterson has voiced reservations about several proposals contained in the report of the Constitutional Reform Committee (CRC) now before the House of Representatives despite objections from the Opposition People National Party (PNP).

On Wednesday Jamaica’s longest-serving prime minister — in a forum dubbed ‘A Reasoning With The Most Hon PJ Patterson about the Jamaican Constitution’ put on by the Faculty of Law of The University of the West Indies, Mona — first took aim at the proposed method of appointment of the president of the Jamaican republic.

The CRC has recommended that the selection of the prospective president be done through a two-stage process of nomination and confirmation.

According to the CRC, the nomination is to be done by the prime minister, after consultation with the Opposition leader, with a view to arriving at consensus.

It further said confirmation is to be done by the Parliament, in a joint sitting of both Houses, where members of each house votes separately by secret ballot with the vote to confirm the nominee an affirmative vote by two-thirds majority of each House.

But Patterson charged that the proposal for a two-tiered system of the election of a president, “quite frankly fills [me] with great alarm”.

“It is absolutely unacceptable, must be vehemently resisted, and would totally destroy the purpose and the intent and legitimacy of a head of State because what it is saying is, nominated by the prime minister after consultation with the leader of the Opposition, and if you can’t get two-thirds, it speaks about taking into account political realities in our democratic system of government. It also provides a solution through the application of the majority rule to a problem where gridlock exists,” Patterson told the forum.

“You cannot afford gridlock in this. There are several things that can be done. In Barbados it is done by the prime minister and the leader of the Opposition. If you put that position in, you would not only get two-thirds, you will get unanimity. If you don’t put that in, and the first nomination fails to get the two-thirds, you must treat it like a papal consistory, that is to say, lock them up and don’t let them out until you have got a nomination then you can let the smoke out of the chimney, we have elected a new head of State,” said Patterson to a smattering of applause.

In the meantime, Patterson said he also has reservations about the proposals in the report for the extension of membership in the Senate.

“Let me say very clearly, I am not opposed to a careful consideration as to whether you should get representatives in the Senate other than those which come from the political parties. I am saying, that the categories would have to be specifically defined,” he said.

Patterson added, “They would have to provide for the people within that category to do that selection and not vest it in the head of State, because if you vest it in the head of State, you are having then interference by the head of State in the legislative process and that you cannot afford. I am saying if you are going that route; consider very carefully whether the representatives of the Diaspora should not have some role or some voice”.

In stating that he was “not proposing it as a settled matter”, the internationally respected politician and attorney-at-law said the inclusion of members of the Diaspora has to be given further consideration.

“If you are going for putting in the Church, the private sector, the unions, the NGOs [non-governmental organisations], there is a very important group called the Diaspora so you would have to look at whether or not you are going to include them and if so, how; because the oath of allegiance those citizens are required to take, make it inconsistent for them to be servicing simultaneously in the Jamaican Parliament,” Patterson argued.

“Please also note that there are several Jamaicans who have lived, particularly in the United States for years, have children and grandchildren, who to this day operate on green cards because they refuse to take an oath of allegiance which will in any way seem to renounce their Jamaican citizenry. So, this matter really needs very careful further consideration,” Patterson said.

Turning to the proposal to extend the life of the Parliament under special circumstances for up to two years, the former prime minister was blunt.

“I am not for that, if you can have a general election in the middle of a global pandemic, I don’t see any reason why there should be an exemption that could permit the life of the legislature and a denial of the people of the right to choose for two years in those circumstances. I would also have hoped that having abandoned the proposals to include impeachment procedures against parliamentarians, the CRC would have proposed the entrenchment of the Integrity Commission. Where do we go from here?”

In the meantime as far as calls for the report be laid on the table of the House for public ventilation, Patterson said, “I would strongly suggest…that the report should first of all be debated in Parliament, in both Houses. That it should be referred to a joint select committee to permit submissions and then I think there has to be what I call, meaningful Vale Royal Talks, what I call a come to Jamaica moment. I believe the reformed constitution must seek to capture popular will, symbolise national values, and inspire us to become a great people where our destiny beckons,” said Patterson.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness, in April last year, named the members of the CRC, which is co-chaired by Minister of Legal and Constitutional Affairs Marlene Malahoo Forte and Ambassador Rocky Meade.

The body, among other things, was required to assess how the passage of time has impacted the recommendations of the 1995 Joint Select Committee on the Constitutional and Electoral Reform Report with the work being done in three phases.

The recommendations for the first phase were recently submitted to and approved by the Cabinet before being tabled in the Lower House.

But Opposition Leader Mark Golding has charged that the recommendations will, among other things, allow the Government of the day to use its majority in Parliament to install a president without the consensus of the Opposition.

Golding has also warned that the Opposition will not accept the first phase if it does not include ditching the Privy Council for the Caribbean Court of Justice as the country’s final court of appeal.

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