GOANS ARE FED UP OF GOAN DIRTY POLITICAL GAMES OF CHANGING PARTIES AND
EXCHANGING MONEY IN CRORES EVERY SECOND DAY AND COMMON GOANS BECOMING
POOR,MISERABLE EXPLOITED AS THEY HAVE LOOTED GOA TOTALLY BY THESE GREEDY
GOONDA POLITICIANS CHANGING PARTIES OR SIDES ALMOST EVERY SECOND DAY AS
THOUGH THEY ARE ATTENDING LEISURE PARTIES AND WHOLE OF GOAN IS SOLD OUT BY
THEM TO NON GOANS.ARE WE GOANS AWARE OF THE SERIOUSNESS OF THESE POLITICAL
CRIMES ROBBING OUR CHILDREN OF A DECENT LIVING AS THEY ARE LOOTING THE PUBLIC
MONEY?LIFE IS REALLY UNBEARABLE AT THEIR HANDS.PLEASE WAKE UP AND WE WANT NO
MORE PEOPLE WHO ARE INVOLVED IN CRIMES OR SCAMS IN OUR POLITICAL SYSTEM. BETTER
GO IN FOR PRESIDENTS RULE OR ELECTION COMMISION TAKING OVER. OTHERWISE WE ARE
ONLY A FEW METERS AWAY FROM OUR GRAVES DUE TO THESE THE SO CALLED GREEDY
GLUTS/POLITICIANS AS ALSO NO HONEST POLITICIAN IS ALLOWED TO THRIVE FOR LONG
.WHY CANT WE HAVE PRESIDENT'S RULE OR ELECTION COMMISSION DEALING WITH IT?
A READER OF YOUR NET> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: [email protected]>
Date: Fri, 18 Jan 2008 09:00:08 +0530> Subject: [Goanet] Core Competence of
Goa> > Special political zone> Posted online: Friday, January 18, 2008 at 2313
hrs> With petty jostling for power, Goa's politicians once again spotlight>
constitutional dilemmas> The Indian Express> > : For a state as
administratively manageable and tranquil as Goa is, **it> has been
spectacularly consistent in framing constitutional dilemmas**. Just> in the
last six months it has brought to the national debate the role of the> speaker
and the efficacy of anti-defection provisions. And this week, Chief> Minister
Digambar Kamat once again stared at the prospect of having his> government
reduced to a minority when three MLAs threatened to bring his> support down to
18 in the 40-member House. By Thursday evening, he has> averted that
possibility after the Nationalist Congress Party rushed a Union> minister,
Praful Patel, to
read the riot act to its rebellious Goan> legislators. And, somewhat more
controversially, after the governor> prorogued the House, before it could
meet.> > The Kamat government may yet be saved. But **the unsavoury spectacles
that> the Goa assembly has been bringing to us with such regularity require
more> considered debate on the constitutional mechanisms that are failing to
keep> visibly clean the mechanics of government formation**. In July the Kamat>
government was kept in office after the speaker disqualified three>
floor-crossers from voting, and cast his own vote to prevent a possible tie.>
As was pointed out in these columns then, the partisanship that seems to be>
paraded with such regularity in Goa only showcases problems that have been>
bubbling up with less frequency elsewhere and that are always lurking to>
pervert our democracy. Does experience - more in the states than in Lok> Sabha
- recommend retaining the speaker as the rightful authority to decide> on de
fections? Or could it rest with an authority outside the House, like> the
Election Commission? Should the governor be instrumental in calling a> vote of
confidence? Or could a process be worked out whereby a certain> number of MLAs
could force the vote as a matter of right?> > These are not simply questions
for academic argument. The fact that they are> being asked so regularly calls
into question the democratic mandate of the> Kamat government to take
significant decisions. Just this month, it> announced the cancellation of 15
special economic zones, three of which had> already been notified by the Centre
and rest of which had been cleared by> the state government. When political
volatility seeps into policy stability,> it becomes much more than a clash of
political aspirants. Goa deserves> better.> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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