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GECOM’s Independence Under Fire
Description
Veteran GECOM commissioner Vincent Alexander warns against the illusion that a new opposition leader can simply replace commissioners, stressing that the constitution was designed to protect independence—not political loyalty. He argues that once appointed, commissioners are legally insulated from party pressure, with recall only allowed for serious misconduct or incapacity. Reflecting on GECOM’s evolution from a temporary body to a permanent institution, Alexander admits the commission often becomes a partisan battleground, but proposes learning from Jamaica’s model—blending party appointees with civil society experts to force consensus and reduce deadlock. His vision: a more collaborative, less politicized electoral system where decisions emerge from agreement, not party lines.
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