‘When Parliament stands, democracy stands’ — Minority defends Constitutional order
In a strongly worded closing statement, Mr Annoh-Dompreh framed the DACF controversy as a broader defence of Ghana’s constitutional democracy.
“The District Assemblies Common Fund is not merely another budget line,” he declared. “It is the constitutional heartbeat of decentralised development.”
He argued that substituting Parliament’s data-driven allocation formula with executive directives undermines the separation of powers and weakens democratic accountability.
“When Parliament’s authority over public finance is diluted, the tremor is felt across every district,” he said.
The Minority Chief Whip insisted that the Caucus is not opposed to government development priorities but to procedural illegality.
“We are not adversaries of development. We are custodians of constitutional governance,” he stated.
He concluded with a warning that silence in the face of executive overreach would amount to betrayal of the Constitution, district assemblies and citizens awaiting stalled projects.
“When Parliament stands, democracy stands,” he said firmly. “And we intend to stand.”
Source: Classfmonline.com/Cecil Mensah
Trending News

Godwin Kudzo Tameklo celebrates birthday
08:48
NHIA CEO pays an unannounced visit to La District office
14:03
Mahama announces Cabinet approval of National Agribusiness Policy to drive value addition and industrial growth
23:14
Ghana–ECOWAS talks end with renewed push for women and youth political inclusion
08:17
Mahama extends Ramadan greetings to Muslim community
08:15
COCOBOD requires GHS30 billion lifeline to remain solvent- Majority Caucus
14:34
First Lady condemns baby theft at Mamprobi polyclinic; commends swift police-led recovery
22:53
Margins Group appoints Charles Mevaa as CEO of Intelligent Card Production Systems
11:29
HealthTech Ghana donates $132,000 dialysis equipment to Ghana Medical Trust Fund
08:38
Improved police operations set to deter robbery — Richard Kumadoe
13:55


