If becoming an
MP means being poor…
By Dr. Michael J.K. Bokor Wednesday, June 1,
2016
Folks, our so-called MP's know no shame
and are persistently annoying us with their
catalogues of miseries and lamentations vis-à-vis
their palpably dismal performance as law makers.
Over the years, they have failed to move our
democracy forward by either not doing what is
required or simply botching it all. Many happenings
in the country challenge the efficacy of existing
laws and underscore the need for new laws to be
enacted to tackle, but our MPs seem not to know what
is at stake. They have either failed to revoke,
modify, or repeal the unproductive laws or to pass
new ones to meet the challenges of our contemporary
Ghanaian cause.
Take the issues from a wide
angle to see what is at stake. The pervasive
instances of malfeasance in public office, the
perceived spate of corruption, and others have
raised interests in the need for appropriate laws so
Ghanaians can easily get information to monitor
happenings in public office. Parliament has failed
so far to pass the requisite law to that effect,
five years after the first hint was given that
something was in the pipeline for the Right to
Information Law. Whatever has caused this lethargy
isn’t really interesting any more. It only portrays
our Parliament as inefficient and a blot on our
democracy. Where is the pride anymore of being an
MP?
What we hear from the MPs themselves
deepens our woes, especially when some of those
making the noise are themselves fingered as
unproductive. Let’s not hide anything. We want to
say here that our MPs have proved to be more
self-interested than anything else, even as their
abysmal performance annoys us. All these years, they
have had whatever the national coffers can give
them, even if they continue to stretch their hands
forth for more. What they haven’t persuaded us that
they are doing to warrant their being supported is
clear.
What has happened so far to the car
loans that some “old” MPs took under Rawlings,
Kufuor, and Mills? Under John Mahama, car loans
never cropped up as contentious. No one talked about
the issue and nothing exists now to show that the
government guaranteed or gave car loans to MPs. But
there are secrets not being told. All we hear from
the MPs is that they work in dire circumstances. At
least, the NPP’s Ursula Owusu and the NDC’s Muntaka
have told us about the plight of the MPs.
Just a few days ago, the NDC's Asawasi MP (Muntaka)
cried out loud that it now takes one about 160,000
Dollars or its equivalent in the Ghanaian currency
to become an MP. The impression being created here
is that the MPs have committed much to earning their
status but gain nothing in return to improve their
lifestyle.
Then, the NPP's Ursula Owusu came
out with her own version of what will combine with
others to portray our MPs as unfit for where they
are. Let's hear her: "… the financial condition of
most Parliamentarians has deteriorated since they
became lawmakers." (See
http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/NewsArchive/MPs-are-better-off-not-being-in-parliament-Ursula-441474).
The questions prompted by Ursula and Muntaka
(not to talk about other MPs thinking like them),
then, are: If being a Parliamentarian means being
indebted, why are they not returning to their chosen
career paths, where they might be making money to
live their lives in comfort? What is it that
Parliament holds for them to magnetize them thereby?
Why are they stuck to Parliament in spite of the
supposed impoverishment being visited upon them? And
why are many others moving heaven and hell to win
the slot to become MPs?
In any case, who says
that being an MP is a ticket to wealth and comfort?
Isn’t there a lot basically wrong here in our kind
of political dispensation?
We recall the
orchestrations by Ursula and other incumbent MPs to
be stamped to contest Election and the resultant
confusion. The NPP is particularly rocked by
confusion because of the manner in which decisions
were made to favour Ursula and Co. If being an MP
equals being poor and wretched, why fall
head-over-heels to be one? Why abandon your
lucrative profession to become a poor MP?
Nothing is more irritating than the stupid claims
made by these MPs. First, the MP's themselves are to
blame for whatever is happening to them, having
already created the impression during the election
campaigns that they would solve problems of their
constituents and constituencies. Having turned
themselves into what they know they are not fit to
do, why shouldn't the people go to them for help?
Second, having come across as people more
focused on their own self-interests than doing what
they are in office to do, who will finance them? In
civilized democracies, politicians worth their sort,
don't dip their hands into their own pockets to
sustain their political stature; they set up
credible contacts to solicit or mobilize funds. Once
the people know what they do with the funds and can
trust them to serve society and not their own
interests, they donate freely to the coffers.
In Ghana, no MP is reaching out to the people
for support as such because none of them is
credit-worthy, creditable, or credible. It all boils
down to the deep-seated weaknesses in our system of
governance. The MPs are not accountable to anybody,
not even their constituents. So, anything goes (and
with the wind too)!!
In the end, depending on
the national coffers and using adroit (oftentimes
criminal) means to make money at the expense of the
system worsens their credibility problems.
Their shoddy performance doesn't warrant their being
funded. There are many problem areas in which
effective laws should have been passed by them long
ago and efforts made to enforce those laws to
improve governance; but they have looked elsewhere.
In civilized democracies, Parliament (as the
representative of the citizens) acts expeditiously
by probing into affairs, grilling and drilling
public officials to account for their stewardship.
It happens in the United States, where public
officials fear being summonsed by Congress.
The same happens in Britain when one has to answer
for one's stewardship, especially when malfeasance
occurs in public service. Recently, the Prime
Minister, David Cameron, had to sweat a lot when
grilled over the Panama Papers expose.
Not
so in Ghana, where Parliament has become a dumping
ground for idle hands seeking to exploit the
loopholes in our system for personal good. That
explains why there is a mad rush by all manner of
people, especially professionals to be there. Can
you see the lawyers, medical doctors, teachers, etc.
falling head-over-heels to become MPs? It’s not
because they know or see the value of law-making as
a means to improve the human condition.
It
is because they think they can uplift themselves and
improve their living standards by capitalizing on
the loopholes in the system. There must be a beacon
somewhere therein to catch their eyes. It’s all
about seeking the means for self-gratification; and
when they succeed, they become a public nuisance
because they do very little or nothing to justify
their being supported by the public purse. In the
end, they become targets for criminals. Poor souls!!
Having monitored the situation all these years
since the beginning of this 4th Republic, I can say
with confidence that our Parliamentarians are the
weakest link in our broken chain of democracy. They
will remain as such until they add value to
themselves through decent performance. Otherwise, no
amount of lamentation will solve any problem for
them.
Here is my word of advice for them: If
they cannot fit in, they should fit out before they
provoke the people to deal with them. We have had
too much of their inanities and cannot accommodate
them anymore.
I shall return… • E-mail:
mjbokor@yahoo.com • Join me on Facebook at:
http://www.facebook.com/mjkbokor to continue the
conversation.
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