Malaysian Bar backs call for elected senators
May 27, 2013 20:08 MYT
The Malaysian Bar has thrown its weight behind the idea that there should be more elected representatives in Dewan Negara as opposed to appointed ones.
“It is preferable and we should have more elected members in the Upper House than there are appointed senators," Bar Council president Christopher Leong told Astro AWANI.
Leong said that the thinking behind having a Dewan Negara, or Senate, is that its members should be distinguished and experienced members of society.
These, he said, include professionals, notable people in industry, commerce, agriculture, involved in cultural activities or social services, or are representative of racial minorities or capable of representing the interests of aborigines.
“They are definitely not intended to be a proxy of the executive governments,” said Leong.
Leong said that the public perception was that “the Dewan Negara has not lived up to expectations as an effective check and balance...as there is the view that the majority of the members are appointed, as opposed to being elected".“They(Senators) are intended to act independently, bringing their individual experiences and expertise as a check and balance of matters coming up from the Dewan Rakyat,” he said.
Leong said that if the original purpose of these appointed senators does not appear to be bearing up, then Subarticle 4 of Article 45 in the Federal Constitution can be used.
“Through that provision, Parliament may by law either: decrease the number of appointed members of the Senate or abolish appointed members entirely; increase to three the numbers of members to be elected in each state; or provide that the members to be elected for each State shall be so elected by the direct vote of the electors in that State,” said Leong.
There are a total of 70 senators in the Dewan Negara.
Meanwhile, constitutional expert Professor Emeritus Datuk Shad Saleem Faruqi supported having a fully-elected Senate' as he argued that it would be “more democratic”
“The Constitution has certainly provided for that eventuality, and the founders have contemplated that there should be a full election for senators, it would certainly more democratic, I would rather have that,” said Shad.
However, he said that having a Dewan Negara fully voted in by the people must be premised upon having a Upper House that was more powerful.
“Currently, the Dewan Negara is subordinate to the Dewan Rakyat due to the Article 68 of the Federal Constitution, which means that laws can bypass the Upper House,” he said.
“So if we want a fully elected house, it has to be powerful, like the Senate of Australia or the US. Rather than being subordinate, they are coordinate(equal).”
Recently, DAP chairman and Bukit Gelugor MP Karpal Singh called on the federal government enact a parliamentary statute to enable all states to conduct public elections to elect their respective senators, as provided under Section 45.4(b) of the Constitution.