Franklin Cudjoe reacts to defeat in Supreme Court
IMANI Ghana led by Franklin Cudjoe and two other Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) had received a bloody nose at the Supreme Court today, while attempting to join a case challenging the Electoral Commission’s eligibility to compile a new voter register as well as exclusion of the current voter identification card.
IMANI together with Conservative Policy Research Centre, Alliance for Social Equity and Public Accountability (ASEPA) and Institute for Liberty and Policy Innovation filed the amicus brief at the court.
The Supreme Court in a seven-panel in an undivided decision threw out the application, on the basis of it lacking legal grounds and the group not being neutral for their position as friends of the court.
Franklin in response to the development had issued a statement that “As you may by now have heard, we proceeded to Court to argue that the issues in the current proceedings related to the EC’s decisions and conduct are not purely legal in nature.”
He in many ways the law is very clear: only Ghanaians can vote, and every effort should be made to ensure that every Ghanaian of sound mind and above 18 years of age be allowed to vote, adding “It is the public administration and public policy questions of how to achieve that which are in mired in dispute.”
Some of the issues are also technological, fiscal and related to information security.
Focusing purely on legal arguments, in our respectful view, would fail to serve justice and the broader public interest.
Consequently, we asked for permission from the Court to present a brief that carefully links analyses about demographics, security logic, civil identification, fiscal prudence and how they all serve to weaken the discretion the EC has in choosing to accept and discard some identity documents.
The Court refused because it said our views are publicly known and that they don’t see what new dimensions we are thus going to add. We of course passionately, if also humbly, disagree. We have carefully perused every material presented to the Court.
They do not address the contrast between authenticating identity and verifying citizenship; the dissipation of up to $170 million of public funds by discarding a perfectly valid means of voter identification; or international standards of civil registration as they apply to constitutional rights enforcement. We made many other novel arguments and propositions.
But as the ancients say, “the proof of the pudding is in the eating”. Feel free to read the full document and judge for yourself if you have already heard these arguments in the court proceedings that have been reported so far.
Final judicial power means just that, final judicial power. So we totally respect the findings of the Court. The Justices have their mandate, which they are discharging. Here, in the public arena, CSOs also have their mandate and we shall discharge them to the best of our conscience and God-given ability.
As research-oriented and activist civil society organisations, our real base is you, the public. And we shall continue to inform, mobilise and galvanise you for the cause of good governance.
When we see and hear porous arguments, like Deputy AG, Godfred Dame’s, totally incoherent views on demographics and the “bloatedness” of the voters’ register, regardless of where he makes them, we shall respond as is our democratic right and constitutional duty as citizens and activists
When we see and hear porous arguments, like Deputy AG, Godfred Dame’s, totally incoherent views on demographics and the “bloatedness” of the voters’ register, regardless of where he makes them, we shall respond as is our democratic right and constitutional duty as citizens and activists.
So, in addition to breaking down our brief into articles to be published widely, we shall also be writing more about the matters presently at the heart of the controversy over Ghana’s electoral system.
That’s just us doing our part for this beloved country. What are you going to do on your part? You can start by reading the brief at https://imaniafrica.org/2020/06/24/read-for-yourself-the-amicus-brief-that-was-not-accepted-by-the-supreme-court/
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