By Marlon Bute
The issue before us is not difficult to show, however much legal language may be wrapped around it.
At its heart, it is whether the will of the people is to prevail, or whether it is to be displaced by the ambitions of men whom the people have already rejected.
That is the real issue.
Luke Browne has now made his position plain. If the court declares Dwight Fitzgerald Bramble ineligible, he would be prepared to accept being seated as the representative for East Kingstown. He does not appear to begin from the proposition that the people should be given another opportunity to vote. He does not appear to make the democratic case for returning the matter to the electorate. Instead, he seems content for the seat to be handed to him by judicial outcome after the people themselves refused to hand it to him at the polls.
That is revealing.
It reveals not democratic conviction but political ambition of a very naked kind. For a man rejected four times by the people of East Kingstown ought, if guided by democratic instinct, to be the first to say that any vacancy should be settled by the people themselves in a by-election. That is the path of legitimacy. That is the path of humility before the electorate. That is the path required by democratic tradition.
But that is not the path being embraced.
Instead, what we are hearing is an argument that amounts to this: though the people did not choose me, though they have repeatedly declined to do so, I should nonetheless be prepared to take the seat if the court opens the way.
That posture is deeply troubling.
The people of East Kingstown have spoken clearly over time. Twice, they chose Arnhim Eustace. Twice, they chose Fitzgerald Bramble. On each occasion Luke Browne presented himself, and on each occasion the electorate passed him over. That is not ambiguity. That is not a blurred mandate. That is a settled democratic verdict.
Yet even in the face of that record, he appears prepared to bypass the electorate rather than return to them.
That tells us something important. It tells us that the overriding concern is not democratic principle but political power. It tells us that office is being pursued with such determination that even repeated rejection does not inspire caution, reflection, or renewed submission to the public will. Instead, the apparent desire is to arrive at the same destination by another route.
That is why the Olympic analogy he offered is so absurd.
A constituency is not a running track. A parliamentary seat is not a medal. Elections are not mere contests of placement in which the second-place finisher automatically inherits the prize if the winner is later disqualified. Elections are exercises in public choice. They are how the people confer trust and authority upon the person they wish to represent them.
In a race, the result is mechanical. In an election, the result is moral, civic, and constitutional. It rests on consent.
That is why second place in an election does not create a mandate. The person who comes second has not thereby acquired some suspended right to office. He has simply lost. And if the winner is later found to be ineligible, the democratic answer is not to pretend that the losing candidate was somehow chosen after all. The democratic answer is to return the matter to the voters.
Anything else would be an artificial substitution of legal convenience for democratic legitimacy.
And if that logic were accepted, the absurdity would not stop with East Kingstown. It would extend further. It would mean that rejected candidates could enter Parliament, not because the people sent them there, but because procedural developments after the fact created an opening for them. In practical terms, it could mean Luke Browne and Carlos Williams, both rejected by the electorate, ending up in Parliament despite the people having denied them both.
That would not strengthen democracy. It would mock it.
There is something else here that cannot be ignored. Democratic principles and democratic traditions exist precisely to restrain this kind of appetite for office. They remind us that power is not an entitlement. They remind us that representation is not a personal prize. They remind us that the route to Parliament in a democracy is through the freely expressed will of the people, not through clever comparisons, strained analogies, or post-election manoeuvres.
For that reason, Luke Browne’s current posture cannot seriously be presented as a defence of democracy. It is more accurately understood as political ambition dressed up as legal reasoning. It reflects a willingness to place personal advancement ahead of the spirit that ought to guide public life.
If he truly believed in the people, he would trust them enough to face them again.
That is why the government’s move to clarify the law is important. Properly understood, it is a measure designed to safeguard the will of the people and to prevent outcomes that sit uneasily with democratic legitimacy. At its core are the very democratic principles of representation, consent, and respect for the electorate, principles to which others now seem almost allergic.
In the end, the question is not who can make the cleverest legal argument. The question is who should choose the representatives of the people.
In any real democracy, there is only one answer:
The people.
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