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Reply to "Guyana is a Unique Country"

Django posted:
Stormborn posted:
Django posted:

Guyana is unique,with the Constitution, People, Politicians, Government..etc..

I made a post "Just for curiosity, can you define Presidential form of Government, the category of which Guyana belongs to"  on thread below,there was no real answers.

Caribbean Court says Granger’s gov’t in “caretaker” mode, elections must be determined locally

I have decided to present some info "see attachment  and link  http://mattgolder.com/files/te.../chapter12_white.pdf" what are the utmost understanding of Article 106 (6) and (7) of the  Guyana Constitution after reading the paper ?

“The mind of man is capable of anything.” — ...

Guyana is a Westminster type parliamentary system. Its constitution, even though a convoluted mess of indeterminate clauses, would serve well were we a homogeneous society. We are however an ethnically bifurcated society with our ethnic populations being almost evenly matched.

Actually Guyana is in the Category of  Presidential System of Government. Wiki says it's Presidential Republic.[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presidential_system]

There are different rules to remove the President . What i am trying to get at, there seems to be some conflict with  the amendment  (6) and (7) of Article 106 of the Constitution. I am aware it was construed to cut Presidential Powers, there are grey areas.

LInk for further explanation https://www.slideshare.net/LAT...tary-system-61132047

Guyana is not technically a republic. That is a label attached to it with practically no meaning in term of what constitute true republicanism. A republic has direct representatives. Guyana is essentially a one constituency system where we elect and executive who per a previously declared list select the legislators. 

Rules for removing the president are not particular to any form of government. Each system has a definite process. 

At this point of my life I am beyond being advised on the forms of government. That was part of my formal training eons ago and since then have had my fill on what each form entails.

I actually wrote a four part series published by the Guyana Journal on comparative constitutions and forms of government and what I think is best for us some 20 years ago. It had since morphed to a book which I forgot about but which with a bit of updating is almost ready for publishing. 

FM
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