Following the resignation of two APNU/AFC Members of Parliament, Speaker of the National Assembly, Manzoor Nadir, has written to Head of the Coalition party’s List of Candidates, David Granger, to commence the process of filling the vacancies, which would see the appointment of a new Leader of the Opposition.
Former Opposition Leader Joseph Harmon has officially resigned as an APNU/AFC Member of Parliament since March 15, while the Coalition’s Nicolette Henry’s resignation takes effect from today, March 31, 2022.

According to Clerk of the National Assembly, Sherlock Isaacs, the House Speaker is in the process of writing Granger to start the process of appointing the two new MPs.
“[Tuesday] I vetted the letter…and the Speaker should’ve signed it… I believe it was signed and dispatched to Mr Granger… Granger would have to write to the Chief Elections Officer, giving him the two names to be extracted from the list,” the clerk explained.
When asked, Isaacs indicated that there is no timeline within which this needs to be done.
Meanwhile, Chief Elections Officer (CEO) of the Guyana Election Commission (GECOM), Vishnu Persaud, when contacted on Wednesday, indicated that he is yet to receive any correspondence from Granger requesting him to extract two new names from the Opposition’s List.

The People’s National Congress Reform (PNCR), which is the leading party in the APNU/AFC Coalition, has already insisted that its Leader Aubrey Norton would be appointed as the new Opposition Leader. Therefore, it is likely that Norton would be appointed to one of the two Opposition vacancies in the National Assembly.
There has been no Opposition Leader in the National Assembly since Harmon resigned from the post on January 26 this year, following mounting pressure from the new PNC Executive. Though he stepped down as Leader of the Opposition, Harmon had indicated that he would remain a Member of Parliament.
But, earlier this month, he also announced his “intention to resign” from the National Assembly, and formally did so about two weeks later.
Harmon had contested for leadership of the PNC, but lost to Norton, who won by a landslide victory.











