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The Proposed Electoral Commission |
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By Dr. O. Kipenji The Electoral
Commission (EC) is very important and should be appointed by Parliament.
EC members should be women and men of high integrity irrespective of
their past political affiliation. The members should have security of
tenure of office; and security of tenure is great IF the vetting and
nominating process is fair and rigorous. Members of the
commission [may be 9] should be nominated by both the legislature [in
our federal model, the two houses] and the executive. The houses should
nominate 6 members - 3 each while the political parties should also
nominate 3. Such a mechanism would give members tenure (or
constitutionally fixed term) and would help to insulate the EC from
political maneuvers and interference. We have to be extremely careful
with tenure because if the process is not right, it may end up
guaranteeing mediocre and partisan members long reign. If that were to
happen, it would be disastrous. Let me equate this to tenure in Western
Universities: many otherwise promising scholars become less productive/industrious/
accountable once they secure tenure, and the universities can't do
anything about it. In fact, many forget why they even occupy university
offices, but at least the procedure in the academia is very rigorous -
many actually fail to get tenure and leave to try their luck elsewhere
where some eventually get it. What should be the
procedure for political representation? The idea of proportional
representation sounds great and achievable. It is proposed that a clause
restricting any one political party to be represented on the EC by more
than 4 members is put in place. This avoids domination by one political
party, and ensures that at least 3 members are women. This would ensure
some independents and other stakeholders to the EC are nominated. One
question remains though: What role - if any – should civil society
play in the nomination process of EC members? The Chairman should
preferably be a lawyer with the standing to be appointed a judge of the
high court of proven ability and integrity. The president should
exercise the power to nominate a chairperson who shall be vetted and
confirmed by the legislatures under their oversight powers. The
legislatures shall nominate two vice chairpersons, one of whom shall be
a woman. The chairperson and vice chairperson shall not be members of
the same political party. The Electoral
Commission should be appointed on contract for a number of years that
would not necessarily coincide with the general elections. Members
should be nominated on a rolling basis with different tenure durations.
3 members shall be nominated and appointed every two years. Such a
process would preserve institutional continuity. The EC should have
autonomous powers and should not be attached to the Office of the
President; the parent ministry shall be the ministry of justice. The
mainstream body should thus be professional with departments that serve
voter updates, voter education and the day to day running of the
commission. The EC should be a
permanent agency - updating voters' databases on a regular basis. It may
be necessary to have a chief electoral person who shall head the
professional team at the EC. With a little investment, the EC could
establish a database where additions based on attainment of majority age
and deletion following death could be maintained. Such a database
would be shared/linked to the office of the registrar of births and
deaths (if it does not exist yet, must be created). Is this necessary?
Yes, every new born shall be registered and entered into the database.
That way someone born in 2001 would become eligible to vote in 2019.
Moreover, with careful planning and little effort, the receipt
registration number could sufficiently serve as the unique
identification number of the person concerned. For anyone to vote, the
query should match exactly: date of birth, name, receipt number, parents
name. Likewise any deaths will be automatically entered into such a
database and deleted from the central voters register. The day of elections
should be fixed in much the same way like the one in the USA where
nobody can take advantage of the opinion polls, then choose to call a
snap election just because they want to stay in power. Therefore, it is
suggested that the lections take place on the last Monday in August. The
schools are closed and the weekend allows the EC to move votes and work
on other logistics. Voting day shall be
a national holiday; voting for all political offices in each election
year should be on the same day. It is insane to have presidential
elections in March, parliamentary election in June, and local elections
later. It is inefficient and costly in both time and human resources.
Imagine how many people have died during the Presidential campaigns!
Ugandans are spending too much time politicking at the expense of other
productive activities such as farming, business, etc. |
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