[Bill-Watch] Bill Watch 60/2013 of 17th December [2014 Budget on 19th December: Update on Printing of Bills]
Veritas Bill Watch
bill-watch at veritas.co.zw
Tue Dec 17 17:31:46 CAT 2013
BILL WATCH 60/2013
[17th December 2013]
The Minister of Finance and Economic Planning will Present the 2014 Budget
in the National Assembly on Thursday 19th December
President Recalls Parliament for 19th December Budget Presentation
Special recall by President
The President has used his constitutional right to recall both Houses of
Parliament for the presentation of the 2014 Budget on Thursday 19th
December. Section 146(a) of the Constitution authorises the President to
recall Parliament at any time "to conduct special business". The official
Parliamentary notice of the President's summons is as follows:
"Pursuant to section 146(1) of the Constitution of Zimbabwe, His Excellency
the President of Zimbabwe, Cde R.G. Mugabe has summoned Parliament to meet
on the 19th of December 2013. This is to enable the Minister of Finance and
Economic Planning to present the National Budget Statement. This command by
the President automatically amends the resolution by Parliament to adjourn
business until the 28th of January 2014."
Section 146(a) constitutes an exception to the discretion Parliament
otherwise has to determine the time and duration of its sittings and periods
of recess.
[Note: Bill Watch 59/2013 of 11th December incorrectly stated the recall
would be by the Speaker, at the President's request, in terms of Standing
Order 194. The error is regretted.]
The agenda for 19th January
National Assembly The Budget Statement will be presented to the National
Assembly, as required by section 305 of the Constitution - not to a joint
sitting of both Houses, although both National Assembly and Senate have been
recalled. It is item 1 on National the Assembly's Order Paper.
It is unlikely that there will be time for business apart from the Budget
presentation and the tabling of the Estimates of Expenditure for 2014 and
the draft Finance Bill detailing proposed taxation changes. The Order
Paper, however, lists as agenda items 2 and 3 the ongoing debates on the
President's September speech opening Parliament in September, and a new
motion by MDC-T MP Brian Tshuma calling for on the Government as majority
shareholder to ensure the payment of accumulated outstanding wages to Hwange
Colliery workers.
Senate The Order Paper for the Senate lists Question Time; ongoing debates
on motions on alignment of existing laws with the Constitution, cancer
policy and the President's September speech; and a new motion proposing
reduction of carnage on the country's highways by limiting hours of use by
heavy transport vehicles and rehabilitating the railway system. [Note: It
is customary for the Senate to suspend its own business for an hour or two
on Budget Day to enable Senators to follow the Budget presentation in the
other House.]
Portfolio Committee meetings
The dates of the customary follow-up Post-Budget workshop for MPs, and the
portfolio committee meetings on allocations of funds to the individual
Ministries and institutions that they monitor, will be covered in a separate
bulletin as soon as they become available.
Electoral Amendment Bill
Electoral Amendment Bill being printed for Parliament The Minister of
Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs' Electoral Amendment Bill has been
sent to the Government Printer for printing and gazetting in preparation for
its presentation in Parliament. The Bill should have been brought to
Parliament and passed in time for it to become law as an Act no later than
the 10th December, so it is particularly urgent [see reasons below].
Electoral Law constitutionally defective since 10th December The Bill is
urgently needed, because since 10th December the Electoral Act has reverted
to its pre-June 2013 form, meaning that it is no longer complies with the
new Constitution. This state of affairs has been brought about by the
expiry with effect from 10th December of the amendments to the Act made by
SI 85/2013, the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) (Amendment of
Electoral Act) Regulations [see explanation of expiry below]. Section 7 of
the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) Act states expressly that a law
that was suspended, amended or modified by SI 85 will "with effect from the
date of such expiry or repeal, have force in all respects as it existed
before being suspended, amended or modified by the regulations".
No procedure for filling party-list vacancies in Parliament One of the
results of the expiry of SI 85/2013 is that the Electoral Act no longer
provides a procedure for the filling of vacant party-list seats in
Parliament, in breach of section 157(1)(d) of the Constitution, which states
that "an Act of Parliament must provide for . the procedure for filling
vacancies" in party-list seats. [Note: Bill Watch 44/2013 of 6th
September, and Bill Watch 59/2013 of 11th December, set out the painstaking
procedure for filling such vacancies laid down by SI 85/2013's short-lived
modifications of section 39 of the Electoral Act.]
Two current Senate party-list vacancies cannot be filled It follows that
until the present Bill becomes law, party-list vacancies in the National
Assembly and the Senate cannot be filled. This means that ZANU-PF will now
have to wait before filling the two Senate vacancies that have already gone
unfilled for several months. One is the Mashonaland West seat left vacant
by the election of Mrs Madzongwe as Senate President; the other is the
Manicaland seat left vacant by the death of Senator Kangai and reportedly
earmarked for former Reserve Bank Governor Gideon Gono.
Why SI 85/2013 has expired As the name of the Act warns, regulations made
under the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) Act are merely temporary
measures, which under the Act "expire and cease to have any effect"
immediately before the 181st day after they came into force [Act, section 6,
which also prohibits repeat regulations for the next six months]. SI
85/2013 was gazetted and came into force on 12th June 2013. 10th December
was the 181st day after the 12th June.
Comment: The lengthy regulations amending the Electoral Act that made up SI
85 were regarded by many in legal circles as unconstitutional and ultra
vires the Presidential Powers (Temporary Measures) Act. Nevertheless, legal
arguments to that effect were unanimously rejected by the Constitutional
Court on 4th July when it dismissed four cases seeking the postponement of
the election date [see Court Watch 12/2013 of 3rd September]. As a result
the harmonised elections went ahead under an Electoral Act modified by
temporary amendments valid for 180 days only. The reasons for the
Constitutional Court's decision have not been released.
Kwekwe Central National Assembly Seat:
Suspension of Electoral Court's Order to Hold By-Election
Order granting MDC-T election petition On 2nd December Justice Mutema,
sitting in the Electoral Court in Bulawayo to hear an election petition
lodged by MDC-T's Blessing Chebundo, granted an order setting aside the
election of ZANU-PF's Masango Matambanadzo as National Assembly member for
the Kwekwe Central constituency and ordering a by-election. Mr Chebundo
represented the constituency in the previous Parliament, but was an
unsuccessful candidate for the seat in the 31st July elections.
A default judgment Justice Mutema's decision was a "default judgment" - a
judgment given when neither the respondent, Mr Matambanadzo, nor his lawyers
were in court to oppose the granting of Mr Chebundo's election petition. Mr
Matambanadzo's lawyers promptly announced that the default had been caused
by an administrative failure leading to their not having received notice of
the hearing date. They lodged a court application to have the judgment set
aside and a separate urgent chamber application for Justice Mutema's order
to be suspended pending finalisation of the first application. [Note: The
rules of court allow a court to set aside its own default judgment for "good
and sufficient cause".]
Vacancy order suspended for time being On 4th December Justice Moyo granted
the urgent chamber application and suspended Justice Mutema's order until
the finalisation of the other application to set the default judgment aside.
The effect is that Mr Matambanadzo continues as Kwekwe Central MP for the
time being, until the court decides whether the 2nd December judgment
against him should be set aside. This matter will be dealt with separately
- but presumably very soon, because the law states that election petitions
must be decided within 6 months of their lodging, i.e., for present
purposes, by no later than mid-February 2014 [Electoral Act, section 182].
[Comment: In an official statement issued after the party's National Council
meeting on 6th December, MDC-T said its National Council welcomed Justice
Mutema's decision and "called upon SADC and AU to revisit their positions on
the July 31 elections, now that the court has confirmed that the elections
were rigged". The suspension of the judge's decision has weakened that
call.]
Update on Income Tax Act
President Mugabe had until Friday 29th November to decide whether to sign
the Bill for this Act into law - or to send it back to Parliament
[Constitution, section 131]. The Act has not been gazetted, and the
President's decision has not been made public. It is to be hoped that the
Minister of Finance and Economic Planning will explain the position in his
Budget presentation, if not earlier.
Update on Bills
Four Bills are being prepared by the Government Printer for gazetting prior
to presentation in Parliament [summaries and copies cannot be provided until
they have been gazetted]:
. National Prosecuting Authority Bill [sent to printer 13th December]
. Electoral Amendment Bill [sent to printer 4th December] See note at
the beginning of this bulletin.
. Sovereign Wealth Fund of Zimbabwe Bill
. Biological and Toxin Weapons Crimes Bill
Government Gazette of 13th December
Statutory Instruments [SIs]
SI 164/2013, backdated to 10th July, makes additions to the licence fees set
out in the Second Schedule to the Postal and Telecommunications (Licensing,
Registration and Certification) Regulations. A new item 5A sets out the
fees for "private network licences", and a new sub-item 6(iii) the fee for
"VSAT with local hub'.
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