Dear Editor,
The recent statements attributed to Speaker Manzoor Nadir warrant careful reflection. While it is accurate that the Constitution specifies no fixed timeframe for certain parliamentary actions, the absence of explicit prescription does not confer unlimited discretion. Every such decision must still be guided by constitutional intent, the principles of representative accountability, and the long-established requirement that the Speaker act with strict impartiality.
The Speaker’s observations regarding “fugitive status” and comparative democratic practices raise additional concern. The eligibility of Members of Parliament is governed by express constitutional provisions, and it is neither necessary nor appropriate for the Speaker to extend those requirements by reference to moral standards or foreign analogies. Such commentary risks widening the boundaries of the office beyond its intended neutrality.
It is also regrettable that commentary directed at members of the diplomatic community was made in a manner susceptible to political interpretation. The Speaker’s high office demands restraint, especially in the handling of external relations and matters touching international confidence in Guyana’s parliamentary system. The role, properly understood, is to uphold decorum and balance rather than to enter public disputation.
Ultimately, the authority of the Speakership lies not in public pronouncement but in the consistent, measured exercise of fairness within the Assembly. Fidelity to both the letter and spirit of the Constitution remains the surest protection of parliamentary integrity.