Wednesday, June 29, 2016
By RASHAD ROLLE
Tribune Staff Reporter
rrolle@tribunemedia.net
CONSTITUTIONAL Commission Chairman Sean McWeeney thinks the framers of the country’s supreme law would have avoided making it so difficult to amend the document if they foresaw how challenging it would be to pursue constitutional change.
The work of another Constitutional Commission appears to have come and gone, performing exhaustive research along the way without any sign that its work will produce practical results.
The commission’s 248-page report, released in 2013, came several years after another well-researched report by the Adderley-Tynes commission was released to the public.
“The commission is waiting for some indication as to what the powers that be, the government and opposition, would wish to see happen,” Mr McWeeney told The Tribune on Monday. “Do they want to see it put on ice now or move to a new agenda? There’s not much time left in the current cycle. The odds are low that another referendum will be held before the next general election.”
Most provisions of the Constitution are either entrenched or specially entrenched, meaning that in addition to requiring a referendum, they respectively require two-thirds and three-quarters of each House of Parliament to pass the bills that would amend the law.
Reforming the requirements for constitutional change was among the commission’s recommendations in 2013, although Mr McWeeney believes there is no chance Bahamians would have voted in favour of it.
“It’s a major hindrance,” he said. “If the framers could’ve seen just how high that puts the bar, they would’ve avoided it.”
With the June 7 referendum failure, some fear that other important changes will not see the light of day.
Popular reforms that would have mandated greater transparency and accountability in government were among those that the commission recommended, for instance.
They included a constitutional requirement that laws be created for the “establishment, regulation and funding of political parties.”
The group also recommended the creation of a “mechanism for members of Parliament to be accountable to their constituents for the performance of their duties” and to be overseen by an agency like the Integrity Commission.
Although the Christie administration never indicated that it supported such recommendations, the failure of the June 7 referendum likely means these issues and the pursuit of them will be placed on the backburner, although ordinary legislation could bring much of them into fruition.
“One of the more substantial changes would’ve involved the devolution of the attorney general’s power through the Department of Public Prosecutions,” Mr McWeeney said. “Though it’s substantial, it doesn’t require a referendum. It didn’t appear to me that there was much interest from either the government or opposition for it. It’s not that they disagreed with it. I just don’t think they saw it as being something particularly pressing.”
Mr McWeeney said he doesn’t feel his time as chairman of the commission was wasted, noting that its recommendations were substantive enough to serve as a blueprint for constitutional change for generations to come.
“There’s temptation to feel like time was wasted,” he said. “I don’t feel that way. It’s a learning experience for the country and reminder that the people are the bosses.”
Comments
Well_mudda_take_sic says...
You just don't get it Sean! That important document you call "a major hindrance" is our (the people's) Constitution. Its most important purpose is to protect us (the Bahamian people) from corrupt political elitists and tyrants like yourself. In your twisted mind Bahamians are just too dumb to know what's good for them beyond voting for the corrupt PLP governments you have enjoyed great "favours" from over many years. Therefore you believe it is for you and your equally corrupt select group of elitist political friends and business cronies to decide what's best for the Bahamian people and to hell with the Constitution that protects them! What a SOB smuck you are and thankfully the vast majority of Bahamians now know it!!! Why should we trust anything that you put your elitist pen and warped mind to!
Posted 29 June 2016, 12:59 p.m. Suggest removal
Reality_Check says...
I think you meant "schmuck", but we get the idea and you're absolutely right about him!
Posted 29 June 2016, 3:38 p.m. Suggest removal
licks2 says...
What a statement. . .that's the idea man. . .put it high where people like you cannot tamper with it to benefit ya friends and families. . .etc.! Good job framers. . .thanks!
Posted 29 June 2016, 1:19 p.m. Suggest removal
Required says...
Stop fooling people into thinking Bahamian "Founding Fathers" had anything to do with drafting the Constitution. They merely went to London to say "Yes Boss" to what a bunch of Colonial Office Brits handed them. Who seriously believes that a bi-partisan group of Bahamian politicians could agree on anything, let alone a Constitution, in 9 (nine) days. Yes, that's how long the "Constitutional Conference" took.
Posted 30 June 2016, 4:40 a.m. Suggest removal
Reality_Check says...
And you and Macweenie should stop trying to taint our Constitution wth racism for the purpose of seeking to have us believe it should be amended or thrown out altogether so you crooked elitist tyrannical smug bastards could go about stripping all of us Bahamians of our God given rights!
Posted 30 June 2016, 6:06 a.m. Suggest removal
Well_mudda_take_sic says...
Ahhhhh, yes. Halfie Macsweenie has always been so good at playing the race card to manipulate us poor black Bahamians who he truly believes weren't fortunate enough like him to have a white man father. The old racism tactics of yesterday that worked so well with generations before us make you and MacSweenie look like the smug fools that you are!
Posted 30 June 2016, 6:17 a.m. Suggest removal
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