Will Hon. Kamya’s appointment and acceptance of a ministerial post make things better or is it a sign that things are getting worse?

Should we therefore celebrate Hon. Kamya’s appointment as minister in the cabinet of the very same administration she critiqued?

Is Mayor Lukwago safe this time round?

As in during her leadership, as Minister for Kampala, will she pull him out of office or not?

Many, many, questions are floating around my mind.

No doubt this current term of political office – presidency and parliament – is causing concern, moreover within weeks of swearing in.

There is that whole business about nomination of ministers with questionable abilities – judged both by their paper qualifications and the practical experience using the knowledge as contained in their paper qualifications.

Some were rejected, but some were allowed by Parliament.

The pool from whence many of those ministerial appointees came from was from those who contested and or who were elected members of parliament.

Meaning that you have those with inferior and questionable abilities vetting their fellows with inferior and questionable abilities.

How likely is it that they will actually achieve the expectation of choosing the best – those with solid abilities?

Fearing that their inadequate abilities will become the focus of experienced journalists, members of parliament under the leadership of Speaker Kadaga, have kicked out of parliament the more experienced journalists.

Parliament raised the academic qualifications for journalists reporting on parliament to a minimum of a university degree.

I wonder why, when members of parliament and ministers do not have such qualifications or if they do, the quality is questioned.

The trend of things scares me.

The 10th Parliament of Uganda is the weakest ever – dominated by those with questionable abilities. The power balance in the 10th Parliament is now more skewed than ever before.

Local Councils which could have moved Uganda to the ideal of federalism and more inclusive participatory democracy are worse off in terms of those in office and financial resources. 

Lower council elections have not been held in decades.

Graduated tax, the major source for income without strings, which the local councils relied on was abolished. It was replaced by indirect taxes, such as excise duty, which favor the rich and which are collected centrally.

Local councils are at the mercy of the central government which determines the trickle of finances from the center to the local governments.

3 responses to “Emasculated governance institutions”

  1. Not only is the 10th parliament costly, but it is largely irrelevant in as much as the final say on all matters lies with the executive.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Norah Owaraga avatar
      Norah Owaraga

      Yes, Stan. Sadly that is the case.

      Like

  2. You have spoken very well Norah. The country’s institutions have been fused into one. The rest is an illusion.

    Like

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