Elected President Should Be Sworn-In In Parliament - Kyei Mensah

Elected President Should Be Sworn-In In Parliament - Kyei Mensah

 

 

The Majority Leader Mensah Bonsu says Parliament has resolved to discontinue the practice of swearing in newly elected Presidents at the Independence Square instead of Parliament. The constitution stipulates that a newly elected President should be sworn in before Parliament, however, by convention, all newly elected

 

Presidents except the first term of President Agyekum Kufour have been sworn in at the Independence Square. This the Majority Leader and Minister for Parliamentary Affairs says will be discontinued beginning January 2021 subject to security considerations. The Suame MP was speaking at the commissioning of the new Job 600

 

 

Annex. “The House has decided that the President-elect must follow the rules subject to security considerations be sworn in in the presence of Parliament, before parliament and in parliament. The parliament of Ghana is proposing that the swearing-in of the president-elect should be done in the present precincts of parliament

 

 

as it happened during the first inauguration of President Agyekum Kufuor.” Article 57(3) of the Constitution states that “Before assuming office the President shall take and subscribe before Parliament the oath of allegiance and the presidential oath set out in the Second Schedule to this Constitution.” Some have

 

 

interpreted the dictate of the constitution as having the president-elect being sworn in anywhere so long as parliament is convened there and not necessarily within the precincts of the Parliament House. Typically, the House has convened at the stroke of midnight ahead of the swearing in to be dissolved while the new parliament is sworn in. After this is done, they proceed to the Independence Square to convene a meeting there to oversee the swearing-in ceremony of the new president.