News / National
MPs, senators to be sworn-in Wednesday
01 Sep 2018 at 03:51hrs | Views
Newly-elected National Assembly members and senators will take oaths of office on Wednesday next week, Clerk of Parliament Mr Kennedy Chokuda has said.
After taking the oaths, the National Assembly members will elect the Speaker of the National Assembly and his or her deputy and senators will also elect their president and his or her deputy.
According to a notice published in an Extraordinary Government Gazette yesterday, Mr Chokuda said MPs will be sworn in the morning and senators in the afternoon. He said the notice of oath of Members of Parliament is done in terms of the provisions of Section 128(1) of the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment No. 20 of 2013.
"It is hereby notified that, in terms of Section 128 (1) of the Constitution the day and time for members of Parliament to make and subscribe the oath of a Member of Parliament before the Clerk of Parliament in the form set out in the Third Schedule to the Constitution shall be: (a) ten o'clock in the morning on Wednesday, the 5th of September, 2018, for Members of the National Assembly; and (b) half past two o'clock in the afternoon on Wednesday, the 5th of September, 2018, for Members of the Senate; at Parliament Building, Harare."
The swearing in of the legislators followed the July 30 harmonised elections in which Zanu-PF retained its two thirds majority in the National Assembly after winning 145 out of the 210 contested constituencies.
The seven-party MDC Alliance managed only 63 seats, with the National Patriotic Front (NPF) winning one seat. Independent candidate Mr Temba Mliswa won the Norton National Assembly seat.
In 2013, the ruling Zanu-PF won 160 seats to the then MDC-T's 49, with one seat going to the MDC then led by Professor Welshman Ncube, who is now an MDC-Alliance principal. The Herald understands that the MDC-Alliance - created in a failed bid to beat the ruling Zanu-PF in the July 30 harmonised elections - intends to become a political party and not a mere coalition of opposition outfits.
Some of the laws that were passed during the Eighth Parliament were Local Government Amendment Act, Public Finance and Management Act, Special Economic Zones Act, Manicaland State University of Applied Sciences Act and Gwanda State University Act, The Trafficking in Persons Act, The Public Accountants and Auditors Amendment Act and the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Debt Assumption and Public Debt Management Act.
After taking the oaths, the National Assembly members will elect the Speaker of the National Assembly and his or her deputy and senators will also elect their president and his or her deputy.
According to a notice published in an Extraordinary Government Gazette yesterday, Mr Chokuda said MPs will be sworn in the morning and senators in the afternoon. He said the notice of oath of Members of Parliament is done in terms of the provisions of Section 128(1) of the Constitution of Zimbabwe Amendment No. 20 of 2013.
"It is hereby notified that, in terms of Section 128 (1) of the Constitution the day and time for members of Parliament to make and subscribe the oath of a Member of Parliament before the Clerk of Parliament in the form set out in the Third Schedule to the Constitution shall be: (a) ten o'clock in the morning on Wednesday, the 5th of September, 2018, for Members of the National Assembly; and (b) half past two o'clock in the afternoon on Wednesday, the 5th of September, 2018, for Members of the Senate; at Parliament Building, Harare."
The seven-party MDC Alliance managed only 63 seats, with the National Patriotic Front (NPF) winning one seat. Independent candidate Mr Temba Mliswa won the Norton National Assembly seat.
In 2013, the ruling Zanu-PF won 160 seats to the then MDC-T's 49, with one seat going to the MDC then led by Professor Welshman Ncube, who is now an MDC-Alliance principal. The Herald understands that the MDC-Alliance - created in a failed bid to beat the ruling Zanu-PF in the July 30 harmonised elections - intends to become a political party and not a mere coalition of opposition outfits.
Some of the laws that were passed during the Eighth Parliament were Local Government Amendment Act, Public Finance and Management Act, Special Economic Zones Act, Manicaland State University of Applied Sciences Act and Gwanda State University Act, The Trafficking in Persons Act, The Public Accountants and Auditors Amendment Act and the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe Debt Assumption and Public Debt Management Act.
Source - zimpapers