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May 03, 2024 Features / Columnists, The GHK Lall Column
Kaieteur News – There must be some places that Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo must avoid going near. However deeply his sense of right and wrong is offended, he knows enough not to venture into critical public pronouncements of the judiciary over what he interprets to be overreach. Dr. Jagdeo knows all too well about the separation of the powers doctrine that stands between the executive and the judiciary. Dr. Jagdeo knows that Article 122A (1) of the Constitution of Guyana mandates: “All courts and all persons presiding over the courts shall exercise their functions independently of the control and direction of any other person or authority; and shall be free and independent from political, executive and any other form of direction and control.”
VP Jagdeo used a difficult word a few days ago to describe some of what came out of Justice Sandil Kissoon’s last decision in the matter involving the Guyana Teachers’ Union and the Government of Guyana. In normal circumstances, the use of “presumptuous” provokes anger. In the context of a judicial ruling, the employment of “presumptuous” is preposterous. It is rancorous, offensive, and overstepping into a protected realm. Jagdeo knows this. The judiciary is prohibited territory for anyone from president to vice president to all other Guyanese; yet that is where Jagdeo ventures irresponsibly. He knows what is called for under the umbrella of respect for the judiciary and its hallowed independence. I think that Dr. Jagdeo went too far, he should withdraw the comment. I return to the aforementioned Article 122A(1), which said, inter alia, “All courts and all presiding over the courts shall exercise their functions independently of the control of any other person or authority; …from political, executive, and any other form of direction and control.”
There is absolutely no question here that former president Jagdeo has ruptured that commanding constitutional restraint when he was so bold and reckless to declare Justice Kissoon to be “presumptuous.” The president is the leader of the national executive, but his powers and those of his secondary servants and affiliates do not extend, should never intrude, into the independent judicial arena. Secondary servants, affiliates of the president number Dr. Jagdeo, among others. In many instances, he has risen to the level of primus inter pares, and with that elevation or self-anointment comes the obligation for him to comport himself in every manner in a constitutionally honourable way. An ignoramus may be excused for his imbecility, but Dr. Jagdeo is not an imbecile. When the union and government are locked in the throes of collective bargaining disagreements, and the president decides to meet with teachers, how should that be interpreted? The record of the government, present and past, has been to circumvent collective bargaining processes to subvert its flow and outcomes. It is my view that the advisers of President Ali should have cautioned him about both the optics of such moves and the purposes for which they were intended.
In layman’s language and commonsense perception, what else, save for issues that could normally fall within the boundaries of collective bargaining, could have been on the agenda, at its top? I believe that the president’s meeting was untimely and improper, given the conditions prevailing. There have been too many of these side door overtures and self-serving leadership schemes, which have not benefited Guyanese workers, be they teachers, others. “Presumptuous” is derogatory, dampens judicial independence, introduces a dangerous chill into the universe of free judicial thinking. What Jagdeo did with “presumptuous” has its close cousin. It involved the same Justice Kissoon, and followed in the aftermath of his parent company guarantee ruling that went against Exxon. Within minutes, VP Jagdeo was touting what must be “predictable’ and about those decisions that could ‘spook investors.’ Taking “predictable” from before and what is “presumptuous” earlier this week, the alarming is seen. It is that Vice President Jagdeo, (a former president, I remind again) has arrogated unto himself the power, authority, and unfettered freedom to speak for his PPP Government. It is to dictate to Guyana’s judiciary what it can say and what it cannot. How it can decide, and how it must not. Regarding the latter, I refer my fellows to his post parent company guarantee adjudication outburst.
To take matters higher, and ensnaring Guyana’s judiciary again, it was CEO John Hess of Hess Corporation, a partner in the Exxon-led Guyana consortium, who interpreted what he heard in a conversation with Guyana’s President Ali as the equivalent of a virtual ‘guarantee’ of a judicial ruling. I combine the three: judicial decisions must be “predictable” and Justice Kissoon is “presumptuous” and sandwiched between the two, what was tantamount to a ‘guarantee’ from the political executive about a favourable judicial decision to come, and I conclude as follows:
This must stop immediately. Presumptuous is obnoxious. Presumptuous is sulfurous. Guyanese must reject.
(The views expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of this newspaper.)
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