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Politics of Monday, 29 November 2021

    

Source: www.ghanaweb.live

Minority details itinerary for next parliamentary sitting

Parliament's next sitting is expected to be heated Parliament's next sitting is expected to be heated

Majority laces boots to challenge rejection of 2022 budget

ACEPA warns of possible government shutdown

Parliament to reconvene on Tuesday November 30, 2021


The Minority caucus has outlined what it expects to happen at the highly anticipated parliamentary sitting tomorrow Tuesday, November 30, 2021.

In a social media post,

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The Minority in a statement have tabled five demands that they would not compromise on in the 2022 budget statement.

They want the e-levy scrapped together with the Agyapa deal struck out of the earlier budget presented.

Additionally, they want government to make budgetary allocations for the phase 2 of the Blekusu Coastal Protection Project and also amend paragraph 829 of the Aker Energy deal relating to GNPC’s acquisition of stakes from Aker Energy and AGM Petroleum.

Lastly, the minority says it will not support the budget statement unless the government reviews the benchmark value for imports.

Meanwhile, the African Centre for Parliamentary Affairs, (ACEPA) is urging both the majority and minority to immediately begin engagements to have the 2022 budget statement approved.

Executive Director of ACEPA, Dr. Rasheed Draman, warns of dire implications of the divided stance on the rejected budget statement.

“So whatever it is, I will like to see at the end of the day both sides taking a step into the middle and making sure that there’s some giving and some taking. The NDC can continue to push forward these demands but there’s a limit.

"If it is not careful and we get into the arena of the government shutting down, people are going to turn around and start blaming the NDC for their plight. So their efforts at holding the government into account can have the opposite effect, of if you like, endearing them to the Ghanaian electorates for us to see them a credible government in waiting.

"So there’s a limit to how much they can push in terms of their demands. They must be ready to give up some of the demands” he said in an interview on Joy News and monitored by GhanaWeb.