Mr Joseph Osei-Owusu, First Deputy Speaker

The Majority Chief Whip in Parliament has dismissed claims that the First Deputy Speaker acted beyond his mandate in his decision to refuse to admit a motion filed by the Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu to reverse the approval of the 2022 budget and economic policy of government.

Mr Frank Annoh-Dompreh, in a tweet yesterday, explained that it the prerogative of the First Deputy Speaker, Mr Joseph Osei-Owusu, who is acting as a Speaker in the absence of Alban Bagbin, to refuse or admit a motion in the House.

He said there is nothing wrong with Mr Osei-Owusu’s decision to refuse to admit the Minority’s motion.

“The First Deputy Speaker acts on authority of the Speaker, and his decision to admit or refuse is essentially on the authority of the Rt. Hon. Speaker. Recognising the delegation of this authority accordingly means the two can therefore not be one and the same.

“Rather, to be clear, the Deputy Speaker has not exercised any power reserved solely for the Rt. Hon. Speaker in his capacity as a 1st Deputy Speaker, and therefore has not erred in his conduct as the Minority are trying hard to establish,” he reiterated.

The First Deputy Speaker has, for the second time, refused the Minority’s motion to rescind the approval of the budget.

Mr Frank Annoh-Dompreh, Majority Chief Whip

The Bekwai MP, on December 1, overruled a motion filed by Minority leader Haruna Iddrisu to reverse the approval of the budget announced on November 30, in the absence of the Minority side.

In his recent ruling, a letter signed by Cyril K.O. Nsiah, Clerk to Parliament, said, “The Hon. First Deputy Speaker, pursuant to Order 13(2) of the Standing Orders of Parliament, has directed that I inform you that your motion is not admitted.”

In response, the Minority explained that Mr Joseph Osei-Owusu indicated that “a Deputy Speaker is not a Speaker” in his defence for the approval of the budget and overruling a motion to reverse the approval of the 2022 budget.

Therefore, as the MP for Bekwai, he, Mr Osei-Owusu, cannot assume the role of the Speaker to refuse its motion.

“In any case, it is most curious that the Standing Order you seek refuge in merely gives you the authority to act in the absence of the Right Honourable Speaker. It is not lost on us that this is the very privilege you recently denounced in your bizarre ruling of 1st December 2021 when you stated categorically that you are not a Speaker, you are MP for Bekwai,” Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu stated.

Despite the Minority’s defence, Mr Annoh-Dompreh insisted that the First Deputy Speaker did not err, and the request for the Deputy Speaker to provide reasons for the refusal of the application is “unfounded.”

“More so since no instance of procedure binds him to give reasons for refusing an application for a review of his ruling,” he added.

According to the Majority Chief Whip, this is a ploy orchestrated by the Minority side to extend the debate on the fiscal policy statement for next year until the return of Speaker Alban Bagbin.

Mr Annoh-Dompreh is, however, assured that the Minority has no reference to the House’s Standing Orders in its claim of unconstitutionality on the part of the First Deputy Speaker.

“If the Minority wish to further their allegations of a biased ruling, they will soon come to realize that they have no evidence that can be recognized according to our Orders to establish their claims.”

First Deputy Speaker Misquoted

However, the First Deputy Speaker appeared to have been misquoted in the minority leader’s response.

This is because in the said ruling, Mr Osei-Owusu indicated that “a Deputy Speaker is not The Speaker” as against the minority leader’s claim that he said “a Deputy Speaker is not a Speaker”.