GSA Issues List of OASIS Plus 8(a) Small Business Contract Awardees

The General Services Administration has released the list of 182 Phase 1 awardees under the 8(a) small business set-aside track of the One Acquisition Solution for Integrated Services Plus contract program.
GSA said Friday it plans to issue formal awards and notices to proceed for the OASIS+ 8(a) Small Business contract as early as Nov. 6.
The selected OASIS+ 8(a) businesses will be awarded contracts across seven domains.
According to the agency, there are 141 small business awardees that are authorized to participate in the management and advisory services domain; 105 in the technical and engineering services category; 20 in the intelligence services domain; 14 in research and development services; 12 in logistics services; 15 in facilities services; and 12 in environmental services.
The open on-ramping process for the OASIS+ contract program is expected to occur in fiscal year 2025.
Previous Awards Under OASIS+ Socioeconomic Set-Aside Tracks
In September, GSA’s Office of Professional Services and Human Capital Categories issued the lists of Phase 1 awardees under the OASIS+ women-owned small business, Historically Underutilized Business Zone small business and service-disabled veteran-owned small business set-aside tracks.
Under the three socioeconomic set-aside tracks, contracts will be awarded to 113 HUBZone small businesses, 345 SDVOSBs and 309 WOSBs across the seven domains.
In July, the agency unveiled the list of 1,383 awardees under the contract program’s Total Small Business set-aside track.
OASIS+ is a suite of six multiple-award, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contracts with a five-year base period and a five-year option term and is designed to help federal agencies meet their procurement requirements for services-based solutions.

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Dale Earnhardt widow’s push for business park hits Mooresville planning board snag

Ben Gibson

Plans by the widow of seven-time NASCAR champion Dale Earnhardt to turn 400 acres of land into the Mooresville Technology Park hit a snag when the city’s planning board considered the request this week.The town of Mooresville planning board voted down the request unanimously on Tuesday. The request was previously approved by the town’s staff.

A map of property that Earnhardt Farms LLC wishes to turn into the Mooresville Technology Park.

Ben Gibson

Teresa Earnhardt’s bid to develop a business park on a former farm site is not over, however. The Town of Mooresville Board of Commissioners could choose to approve the annexation and rezoning request at a future meeting.Bowman Construction applied for the zoning change on behalf of Earnhardt Farms LLC. Under the request, the 399.25-acre property would be annexed by the town and changed from residential agricultural zoning to industrial.The property is bordered by Patterson Farm Road and N.C. Highway 3 near the intersection of Iredell and Rowan counties. Dan Brewer of Bowman Construction said at the meeting the location would appeal to high-tech industry companies and bring 200 jobs to the area. 

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“We’re not planning on any manufacturing that would have distribution centers and stuff like that. It’s just not conducive to that type of development in that area,” Brewer said before taking questions from the planning board.Alan Goodman who lives on Coddle Creek Highway, spoke at the planning board meeting. He said that his 90 acres of farmland property shared a boundary line with the Earnhardt property. He said he recently worked with Three Rivers Land Trust to apply for a conservation easement on his property to stop any future development of the land bought by his family in 1917.”As you can hear, my roots run deep and I look to preserve the countryside around Coddle Creek Church,” Goodman said. “The residential agricultural designation of the land within miles around the Earnhardt property seems to be working as there is no industry, no dense housing, and most of the home sites are picturesque farms or large home sites. In other words, the RA zoning has worked because the quality of life in our area is great, with the exception of Highway 3 traffic.” Nicole Farnsworth of Johnson Dairy Road in Mooresville said Dale Earnhardt was an avid outdoorsman, farmer, and friend. “His goal was to preserve the land for future generations to come. I’m pretty sure this would have not been in his plans. But as we all know, his death changed that,” she said.Farnsworth said the town of Mooresville had failed the community when it comes to roads. She said that if water and sewer connections were extended to Teresa Earnhardt’s property, more development would follow. “If you build it, they will come. If the town of Mooresville runs city water and sewer to the county line, developers will come to the county line. All of the property around this area is mostly farmland. If this passes, it will be developed sooner, rather than later.”Town Clerk Jane Crosby said the matter would be considered for a future town board agenda. Earnhardt’s rezoning request was not on the Nov. 4 agenda as of 2 p.m. on Oct. 24.

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Six states, Washington to vote on adopting, abandoning ranked choice voting

Oct. 25 (UPI) — Ranked choice voting will appear on the ballot in six states and Washington on Nov. 5, possibly changing how those states administer elections.
Voters in Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon and Washington, D.C., will vote on propositions to adopt ranked choice voting for primaries, local, state and federal elections. Missouri will vote on an amendment to pre-empt and effectively ban ranked choice voting. Alaska will vote on repealing ranked choice voting after approving it in the 2020 election.
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Ranked choice voting tasks voters with selecting their preferences for office in order. A candidate must receive more than 50% of the first-choice votes to win.
If a candidate does not receive 50% of the vote in the first ballot, the election moves through rounds, eliminating the candidate that earned the fewest votes, until a candidate reaches the 50% threshold, making second place votes critical in determining who moves on.
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Voters may still choose to select only one candidate.
Claims and research
Proponents of ranked choice voting believe it can improve the electoral process over the current “pick one” system.
Deb Otis, director of research and policy for FairVote, told UPI candidates are incentivized to focus more on policy when campaigning.
“There is less mudslinging and negative campaigning,” Otis said. “Going really negative can cost you second-choice votes.”
Otis adds that ranked choice voting gives minority populations more voice and levels the playing field for a more diverse and representative slate of candidates to pursue office.
Larry Jacobs, professor of politics at the University of Minnesota, conducted a meta review of ranked choice voting, reviewing a compilation of research. He told UPI that there is little research to support the claims made by ranked choice supporters. In the cases of increasing participation by minority populations and those populations being better represented, the opposite is often true.
Jacobs’ research finds that people of color, with less education, lower incomes or a combination of these factors tend to participate less in ranked choice voting elections than people who are White, have more education and earn higher incomes.
“Those who are White, well educated and have higher incomes are benefitting,” Jacobs said. “That’s what’s adding to the question about whether ranked choice voting, as well intentioned as it is, is contributing to political inequality.”
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One of the main issues Jacobs observes with ranked choice voting is that it requires voters to be more dialed in to the many political campaigns and policy issues they will be voting on. They must also have a clear idea about their own positions.
“That is cognitively taxing. I don’t think there’s a way around that,” he said. “Frankly, at the university, a lot of my colleagues are very excited about ranked choice voting. I understand why. It’s a type of voting that caters to those that are in the knowledge industry.”
Cambridge, Mass., has the longest-running ranked choice voting election in the United States. It has been using this method to elect its city council for more than 80 years.
Charles Stewart III is a resident of Cambridge. He is also a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and director of the MIT Election Data and Science Lab.
“Eventually the political system does adapt to whatever election system you have,” Stewart told UPI. “However it adapts primarily around overcoming this information deficit.”
Stewart believes using this voting method in “lower stakes” local elections would be the best way to get voters familiar with it. The challenge is that there is less information easily available to voters about the nuances between candidates and policies when compared to the highest stakes elections like that of the president and members of the U.S. Congress. This is where the information deficit he refers to comes into play.
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“With most reforms, advocates oversell the possibilities about what the results are likely to be,” Stewart said. “The research findings are mixed with respect to what the claims are, which are mostly about electing more moderate or less extreme candidates.”
Alaska
A measure will appear on Alaska’s ballots in November to potentially repeal ranked choice voting, established by a ballot measure in 2020 that will remain in effect for November’s election where voters will rank up to four presidential candidates in the general election, including Vice President Kamala Harris, former President Donald Trump and several third-party candidates.
Ballot Measure No. 2 would also revert the state’s primaries back to partisan primaries, allowing voters to vote in only one party’s primary election.
The measure also codifies new rules and penalties related to campaign finance. Any entity that receives more than $2,000 in a year from a donor will be required to disclose all receipts from that donor.
The state’s division of elections estimates it will cost at minimum more than $2.6 million to implement the measure if it is passed into law. These costs will include carrying out a public education campaign to inform voters about reverting to the single-choice election system and political party primaries.
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“There are a couple highly publicized examples where a more centrist candidate won because of ranked choice voting,” Stewart said. “Alaska is the poster child of this.”
Stewart refers to Rep. Mary Peltola, D-Alaska, who defeated former Vice Presidential candidate and Gov. Sarah Palin in a race for the state’s at-large House seat in 2022 when Alaska first implemented ranked choice voting.
Colorado
In November, Colorado will vote on Proposition 131, a measure to adopt ranked choice voting statewide and establish all-candidate primaries. Ranked choice would be used for “certain state and federal elections.”

Boulder County, Colo., Clerk Molly Fitzpatrick oversaw the first ranked choice mayoral election in the city in 2023. The city approved it in 2020, giving her more than two years to prepare for the transition.
“It was an enormous lift. I’m very proud of what we did,” Fitzpatrick told UPI. “We delivered a great election for Boulder voters.”
The main argument against ranked choice is that it can be confusing for voters. Fitzpatrick told UPI it can be a more confusing process, increasing the need for voter outreach and education.
Fitzpatrick said she received positive feedback about how her office administered the election, particularly emphasizing voter education on the new method of voting. Yet she has reservations about implementing it statewide by 2026, as Colorado’s Proposition 131 calls for.
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Fitzpatrick, who is also president of the Colorado County Clerks Association, told UPI that she worries rural counties are ill-equipped to transition to ranked choice voting so quickly.
“It’s one thing for Boulder County to do it. We’re one of the best-resourced counties in the entire state,” she said. “We put a lot of resources and manpower into it. Honestly, small counties just don’t have that.”
Fitzpatrick adds that Boulder County hired a tech company to develop software that could display how the voter rankings moved from round to round. They also needed to invest resources in outreach to prepare voters.
“The state has to really step up and create the structure to do this successfully,” she said. “When I think about that, I think about a statewide voter education campaign, developing technology that doesn’t currently exist, election official education. They have to be trained on how this impacts their processes. Then of course rulemaking.”
Linda Templin, executive director of Ranked Choice Voting for Colorado, agrees that 2026 may be too soon to implement the new election process in Colorado. While she supports ranked choice voting, she believes Proposition 131 needs more work.
“I’m glad this is a statutory measure so the legislature can make changes as needed to deliver what voters believe they would be passing,” Templin said. “Every step of what [election offices] do changes. It may take until 2028 for it to actually get implemented and for clerks to be comfortable and have everything they need for a good rollout.”
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Idaho
A citizen-led initiative in Idaho called Proposition 1 will ask voters if they wish to adopt top-four primaries and ranked choice voting in general elections.
The drive to put this measure on the ballot was led by Idahoans for Open Primaries. The group delivered more than 97,000 signatures to the Idaho State Capitol in July to officially put the measure before voters.
If passed, voters will be allowed to participate in primary elections without being declared to a specific party. This will open the primary process up for independent voters, Ashley Prince, campaign manager for Idahoans for Open Primaries, said in a statement.
The Foundation for Government Accountability is one of the leading organizations to oppose the measure. In an informational packet the group submitted to the Idaho legislature, it alleges that ranked choice voting will slow down ballot counting, make the count less accurate and diminish voter confidence.
FGA also claims that ranked choice voting causes ballot exhaustion. It describes this as votes being tossed out because they were filled out incorrectly or the candidates voted for are no longer in contention.
“Ballot exhaustion leaves voters and voices uncounted — ballots are literally thrown in the trash because the RCV voting process renders their votes meaningless,” the packet reads.
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The Foundation for Government Accountability did not respond to requests for comment.
Missouri
Missourians will vote on a state constitutional amendment that would pre-empt any legislation attempting to implement ranked choice voting, effectively banning it in the state.
Under the amendment, voters will continue to have a single vote for each office up for election. It will also maintain the primary process that selects a single candidate to represent a political party in the general election.
State Sen. Ben Brown sponsored the amendment.
“Ranked choice voting initiatives further erode trust and disenfranchise voters,” Brown told the elections committee and senate earlier this year during a hearing. “Under ranked choice voting, the ultimate winner of the election is often not even the candidate who is even the first choice among voters.”
The state does not use ranked choice voting currently but St. Louis conducts a similar form of voting in local non-partisan elections, stateSen. Doug Beck said during a senate meeting in April.
St. Louis passed a proposition to enact approval voting in its mayoral elections in 2021. This offshoot of ranked choice voting allows a voter to select as many candidates as they want for office. The candidate that receives the most votes wins.
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Nevada
Voters in Nevada already voted in favor of open primaries and ranked choice general elections in 2022 but they must do so again for either measure to be adopted.
The state requires constitutional amendments to pass two consecutive ballot measures to be adopted.
Question 3 received more than 52% of votes in 2022, about 525,000 votes in total. If passed again in November, it will allow voters to participate in any primary election they choose, regardless of party. They will also be able to rank candidates for U.S. Congress, governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, treasurer, state controller, attorney general and the state legislature.
Unlike some states, Nevada’s proposed ranked choice system gives voters the option to rank their top-five choices.
Supporters of the measure in Nevada argued to the Ballot Question Committee that it will give voters “more voice” and “more choice.”
“Ranked choice is a simple change to our general elections that allows voters the opportunity to rank up to five candidates who best represent their positions, rather than having to choose between the ‘lesser of two evils,'” the report from the Ballot Question Committee reads.
The argument against the measure states that it will make elections more complicated and will be costly for taxpayers.
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“Currently, Nevada’s voting process is straightforward: voters pick which candidate they support, and the candidate with the most votes wins. Ranked-choice voting makes casting ballots more confusing and tedious, and decreases participation in our elections,” opponents argued.
Oregon
The Oregon legislature passed an election reform bill in 2023 to implement ranked choice voting. For it to be amended into the state constitution it must be adopted by voters in the general election.
Measure 117 aims to adopt ranked choice for state and federal offices. This includes the office of the president.
The estimated financial impact to the state government for implementing Measure 117 is about $1 million between 2023 and 2025, according to the Legislative Fiscal Office. This impact will grow to about $5.6 million for 2025 to 2027. The office notes that the cost to local governments is more difficult to discern.
County clerks project that it will cost about $2.3 million to improve voting technology, train staff and test new systems. Each statewide election will cost about $1.8 million for additional printing and planning. Software and maintenance contracts are expected to cost about $400,000 per year.
Washington, D.C.
Initiative 83 is a voter initiated ballot measure to implement ranked choice voting and open primaries in the capital city of the United States.
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Like Nevada, voters in Washington would be allowed to rank up to five candidates in an individual race for office. Voters may also participate in the primary election regardless of party.
As of Oct. 23, more than 24,000 drop-off ballots have been received. More than 36,000 have been received by mail. The D.C. Board of Elections began gathering ballots on Oct. 12. Early voting begins on Monday.
There were 344,356 votes cast in the 2020 presidential election in Washington.

Ransford Gyampo Needs Tutorials in Political Science 101

For an academic who so proudly boasts about his in-depth knowledge and appreciation for Constitutional Democracy, University of Ghana’s political scientist Ransford Yaw Gyampo gives a very poor impression about the reputation and the professional caliber of the kind of administrators who hired and groomed him to teach at the J. B. Danquah-championed and actively supported, oldest and foremost tertiary academy in the country.The last time that this writer wrote and published anything whose subject-matter had something to do with this garrulous and sloppy, passionately pro-Mahama and the street-brawling culture of the country’s main opposition political party, the National Democratic Congress (NDC), the article had to do with the intellectually and the logically unsound demand by the self-described Akuapem-Larteh and Saltpond native to have the much-maligned, populist old faux-socialist policy of “price control” slapped on cement traders in the country, because the prices of this admittedly most important commodity had begun to sharply rise on our local markets.Now, for a presumably learned political scientist who claims seating among the vanguard ranks of the nation’s scholars and political theorists and, perhaps, even thinkers, one would have expected that Prof. Gyampo would also remarkably appreciate something worthwhile about the indispensable centrality of Free-Market Culture and regime to the kind of Western type of Constitutional Democracy being presently practiced in Ghana, in particular the basic and the elementary principle of Supply and Demand or Demand and Supply of the kind and the brand which the likes of Yours Truly were taught in high school, while growing up in the Ghana of the mid-1970s and the early 1980s. Which called for the maximization of the production of “staple” consumer products such as that which is presently being herein discussed, in order to logically and organically arrest the sort of exorbitant and unsavory price gouging, as Americans are wont to say, that was making it extremely difficult for ordinary Ghanaian citizens intending to build their own homes and private residences to be able to comfortably afford the same.Even more ironic is the fact that the European Studies trained acerbic but scarcely sober and intellectually and rhetorically deliberate Prof. Gyampo belongs to a political party with a “revolutionary” tradition of persecuting free-market and capitalist-leaning Ghanaian entrepreneurs, even as the politically kleptocratic leadership of the erstwhile late Chairman Jeremiah “Jerry” John Rawlings-led junta of the Provisional National Defense Council (PNDC), the immediate institutional parent of the present-day National Democratic Congress (NDC), voraciously expropriated and cannibalized state-owned properties and thievishly privatized and appropriated the same as their own.Now, what the foregoing means is that his morally and personally irresponsible choice of political party affiliation, as well as ideological suasion, for that matter, leaves Prof. Gyampo with a negligibly little to absolutely nothing in terms of his moral authority and credibility to effectively deal with such serious matters of democratic culture and governance of the sort that recently brought the National Democratic Congress-sponsored Speaker of Ghana’s Parliament into what may be aptly characterized as respective governance “Turf Delineation Conflict” involving the Traditional Three Branches of Democratic Governance, namely, the Executive, the Legislature and the Judiciary.In the present instance, however, the problem has wholly and exclusively to do with the Strict Interpretation of Statute or the Law, which is the exclusive and the especial preserve of the Apex Court or the Supreme Court of Ghana. Now, we have Prof. Gyampo, who is not known to have acquired any significant professional training in the discipline and the practice of law, rudely and imperiously telling the general Ghanaian public that Chief Justice Gertrude Araba Esaaba Sackey Torkornoo-presided Supreme Court of Ghana has absolutely no constitutionally mandated power or right to “gag” the Legislature or Parliament (See “ ‘Judiciary Has No Power to Gag Parliament’ – Prof. Gyampo on Suspension of MPs Removal” Modernghana.com 10/18/24).The truth of the matter here, though, is that the Torkornoo Court has, thus far, made absolutely no attempt to either arbitrarily or capriciously put the kibosh on Speaker Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin-presided Ghana National Assembly. Speaker Bagbin, by the way, is himself a prominent and a veteran lawyer and lawmaker in ways that the University of Ghana’s Prof. Gyampo could only marginally fathom. In other words, if any authoritative leader or citizen in the country possesses the level of knowledge required to call the Apex Court to order on any matter verging on a flagrant violation of its constitutionally mandated terms of reference, that citizen is definitely Speaker Bagbin and not a complete professional outlier or disciplinary outsider like Prof. Gyampo.Now, the very adult question that may be discombobulating the relatively wet-eared Prof. Gyampo has strictly to do with the interpretation of Article 97 (1) (g) of Ghana’s 1992 Republican Constitution, regarding the strictly procedural removal of political party-sponsored Members of Parliament who, for any number of reasons, including sheer greed and megalomania, or purely predicated on matters of principle, decide to contest for the retention of the very seats which they have legitimately lost in a party parliamentary primary as Independents.You see, what an apparently psychologically and an emotionally agitated Prof. Gyampo conveniently ignores to let his audience in on, as it were, is the fact that the intervention by the Torkornoo Court, which promptly placed a “Stay of Execution” or temporary suspension on Speaker Bagbain’s rather curious and anomalous decision to remove the four Members of Parliament who had declared their official intention to contest for their Parliamentary Seats as Independents, rather than on the tickets of their respective political parties that had originally sponsored them to Parliament, was precipitated by a rancorous dispute between the New Patriotic Party’s Parliamentary Majority Caucus and a passionately partisan Speaker Bagbin and the members of the National Democratic Congress’ Parliamentary Minority Caucus, for which reason Mr. Alexander Afenyo-Markin, the Parliamentary Majority Caucus’ Leader had promptly sought an injunction from the Apex Court.Now, what clearly and comically appears to be his one most unbearable migraine is the fact that the Torkornoo Supreme Court had decided to historically unprecedentedly, and promptly, place a Stay of Execution or an order promptly suspending any mischievously calculated move by a strategically ever-scheming Speaker Bagbin to flagrantly and unconstitutionally “minoritize” the New Patriotic Party’s legitimately earned or acquired Parliamentary Majority Caucus’ status. It is not primarily or fundamentally because the Torkornoo Supreme Court has done anything either flagrantly Ultra-Vires or completely either out of the ordinary or out of order. It is not the endgame or a judicial finality. The most accurate interpretation of Article 97 (1) (g) still has yet to be definitively decided and resolved by the Torkornoo Court.*Visit my blog at: KwameOkoampaAhoofeJrBy Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., PhDProfessor Emeritus, Department of EnglishSUNY-Nassau Community CollegeGarden City, New YorkOct. 18, 2024E-mail: [email protected]

Ransford Gyampo Needs Tutorials in Political Science 101

For an academic who so proudly boasts about his in-depth knowledge and appreciation for Constitutional Democracy, University of Ghana’s political scientist Ransford Yaw Gyampo gives a very poor impression about the reputation and the professional caliber of the kind of administrators who hired and groomed him to teach at the J. B. Danquah-championed and actively supported, oldest and foremost tertiary academy in the country.The last time that this writer wrote and published anything whose subject-matter had something to do with this garrulous and sloppy, passionately pro-Mahama and the street-brawling culture of the country’s main opposition political party, the National Democratic Congress (NDC), the article had to do with the intellectually and the logically unsound demand by the self-described Akuapem-Larteh and Saltpond native to have the much-maligned, populist old faux-socialist policy of “price control” slapped on cement traders in the country, because the prices of this admittedly most important commodity had begun to sharply rise on our local markets.Now, for a presumably learned political scientist who claims seating among the vanguard ranks of the nation’s scholars and political theorists and, perhaps, even thinkers, one would have expected that Prof. Gyampo would also remarkably appreciate something worthwhile about the indispensable centrality of Free-Market Culture and regime to the kind of Western type of Constitutional Democracy being presently practiced in Ghana, in particular the basic and the elementary principle of Supply and Demand or Demand and Supply of the kind and the brand which the likes of Yours Truly were taught in high school, while growing up in the Ghana of the mid-1970s and the early 1980s. Which called for the maximization of the production of “staple” consumer products such as that which is presently being herein discussed, in order to logically and organically arrest the sort of exorbitant and unsavory price gouging, as Americans are wont to say, that was making it extremely difficult for ordinary Ghanaian citizens intending to build their own homes and private residences to be able to comfortably afford the same.Even more ironic is the fact that the European Studies trained acerbic but scarcely sober and intellectually and rhetorically deliberate Prof. Gyampo belongs to a political party with a “revolutionary” tradition of persecuting free-market and capitalist-leaning Ghanaian entrepreneurs, even as the politically kleptocratic leadership of the erstwhile late Chairman Jeremiah “Jerry” John Rawlings-led junta of the Provisional National Defense Council (PNDC), the immediate institutional parent of the present-day National Democratic Congress (NDC), voraciously expropriated and cannibalized state-owned properties and thievishly privatized and appropriated the same as their own.Now, what the foregoing means is that his morally and personally irresponsible choice of political party affiliation, as well as ideological suasion, for that matter, leaves Prof. Gyampo with a negligibly little to absolutely nothing in terms of his moral authority and credibility to effectively deal with such serious matters of democratic culture and governance of the sort that recently brought the National Democratic Congress-sponsored Speaker of Ghana’s Parliament into what may be aptly characterized as respective governance “Turf Delineation Conflict” involving the Traditional Three Branches of Democratic Governance, namely, the Executive, the Legislature and the Judiciary.In the present instance, however, the problem has wholly and exclusively to do with the Strict Interpretation of Statute or the Law, which is the exclusive and the especial preserve of the Apex Court or the Supreme Court of Ghana. Now, we have Prof. Gyampo, who is not known to have acquired any significant professional training in the discipline and the practice of law, rudely and imperiously telling the general Ghanaian public that Chief Justice Gertrude Araba Esaaba Sackey Torkornoo-presided Supreme Court of Ghana has absolutely no constitutionally mandated power or right to “gag” the Legislature or Parliament (See “ ‘Judiciary Has No Power to Gag Parliament’ – Prof. Gyampo on Suspension of MPs Removal” Modernghana.com 10/18/24).The truth of the matter here, though, is that the Torkornoo Court has, thus far, made absolutely no attempt to either arbitrarily or capriciously put the kibosh on Speaker Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin-presided Ghana National Assembly. Speaker Bagbin, by the way, is himself a prominent and a veteran lawyer and lawmaker in ways that the University of Ghana’s Prof. Gyampo could only marginally fathom. In other words, if any authoritative leader or citizen in the country possesses the level of knowledge required to call the Apex Court to order on any matter verging on a flagrant violation of its constitutionally mandated terms of reference, that citizen is definitely Speaker Bagbin and not a complete professional outlier or disciplinary outsider like Prof. Gyampo.Now, the very adult question that may be discombobulating the relatively wet-eared Prof. Gyampo has strictly to do with the interpretation of Article 97 (1) (g) of Ghana’s 1992 Republican Constitution, regarding the strictly procedural removal of political party-sponsored Members of Parliament who, for any number of reasons, including sheer greed and megalomania, or purely predicated on matters of principle, decide to contest for the retention of the very seats which they have legitimately lost in a party parliamentary primary as Independents.You see, what an apparently psychologically and an emotionally agitated Prof. Gyampo conveniently ignores to let his audience in on, as it were, is the fact that the intervention by the Torkornoo Court, which promptly placed a “Stay of Execution” or temporary suspension on Speaker Bagbain’s rather curious and anomalous decision to remove the four Members of Parliament who had declared their official intention to contest for their Parliamentary Seats as Independents, rather than on the tickets of their respective political parties that had originally sponsored them to Parliament, was precipitated by a rancorous dispute between the New Patriotic Party’s Parliamentary Majority Caucus and a passionately partisan Speaker Bagbin and the members of the National Democratic Congress’ Parliamentary Minority Caucus, for which reason Mr. Alexander Afenyo-Markin, the Parliamentary Majority Caucus’ Leader had promptly sought an injunction from the Apex Court.Now, what clearly and comically appears to be his one most unbearable migraine is the fact that the Torkornoo Supreme Court had decided to historically unprecedentedly, and promptly, place a Stay of Execution or an order promptly suspending any mischievously calculated move by a strategically ever-scheming Speaker Bagbin to flagrantly and unconstitutionally “minoritize” the New Patriotic Party’s legitimately earned or acquired Parliamentary Majority Caucus’ status. It is not primarily or fundamentally because the Torkornoo Supreme Court has done anything either flagrantly Ultra-Vires or completely either out of the ordinary or out of order. It is not the endgame or a judicial finality. The most accurate interpretation of Article 97 (1) (g) still has yet to be definitively decided and resolved by the Torkornoo Court.*Visit my blog at: KwameOkoampaAhoofeJrBy Kwame Okoampa-Ahoofe, Jr., PhDProfessor Emeritus, Department of EnglishSUNY-Nassau Community CollegeGarden City, New YorkOct. 18, 2024E-mail: [email protected]

Tourists issued queues warning as EU nation to enforce new border rules next week

Tourists could face more traffic jams and delays when travelling to France from Schengen-area countries.The French government introduced border controls over the summer, as they beefed up security ahead of the Paris Olympic Games. Enhanced checks were carried out at France’s Schengen borders with Belgium, Spain, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Germany and Italy.The temporary measures were supposed to last until October 31 and were introduced due to heightened terrorist threats.However, Emmanuel Macron’s government has now decided to extend the stricter controls until April 20 2025.The extension comes as concerns grow over public safety amid threats of terrorist activity and criminal organisations connected to illegal migration. All travellers entering France from the above-mentioned countries will have to show either a passport or national ID card – despite being part of the border-free area.British people living in France may need to show their carte de séjour too.Normally people can travel freely without any checks across international borders in the Schengen area.The Schengen area was created in 1985 and now includes 25 of the 27 EU member states plus four others, including Switzerland and Norway. Germany was one of the first EU countries to reintroduce border checks along its border with Austria.The move has led to considerable delays at the border, adding at least 30 minutes to car journeys from Innsbruck to Munich.Germany has since decided to tighten controls at every one of its land borders, in an attempt to control illegal immigration.Critics slammed the move as politically motivated and claimed it will bring an end to the Schengen area. Gerald Knaus, the chair of the European Stability Initiative think tank, also questioned the measure’s efficacy.“Internal border controls that are intended to have any effect mean the end of Schengen,” Knaus said on X.They would also require “federal border protection and fences around Germany” and, moreover, “will fail if neighbours are not interested in participating,” he said.

Venom: The Last Dance director talks her “beautiful memory” of filming the ending: “Everybody was super emotional”

Warning: The following contains major spoilers for Venom: The Last Dance! Turn back if you haven’t seen the new Marvel movie yet! As you can guess from the title, Venom: The Last Dance is the send-off for the Venom franchise, bringing the adventures of Eddie and his symbiote pal to a close. Now, if you’ve seen the movie, you’ll know the ending is a major tearjerker – Venom chooses to sacrifice himself to prevent big bad Knull from escaping his prison, which leaves Eddie alone. Though, luckily, the final Venom 3 post-credits scene hints that a tiny part of Venom survived. When GamesRadar+ caught up with director Kelly Marcel in London, she told us about the “beautiful memory” of filming that emotional ending. “We got to shoot the movie in order, so the last scene really was the very last scene, Eddie lying on the ground there,” Marcel says, referring to Eddie taking cover while Venom makes his grand sacrifice. “And I think that everybody was super emotional. You could see how much it had meant to everybody over the years, because we’ve taken most of our team with us through all three movies, and there just was this sort of collaborative well up of emotion on the set that was really lovely and felt cathartic and emotional for everyone.”It’s certainly a sad farewell for the duo, who have been unlikely buddies since the first movie brought them together. “In the first movie, they meet, and they don’t really want to be together,” Marcel reflects. “And in the second movie, they’ve been together for a while, and they’re sick of each other, so they split up. And in the third movie, it feels like they’ve reached symbiosis. They’ve left everything they know and love behind, and now it’s just the two of them, and they’re resolute in their being the lethal protector and moving forward together in their partnership.”Bringing all the latest movie news, features, and reviews to your inboxThe problem, though, is that their existence could lead to Knull’s freedom. “And then, of course, it’s their very partnership that is at jeopardy and puts the world at risk,” Marcel continues. “And so it’s sort of a tragedy in a way, because they want to be together and they can’t. And so I feel like the relationship’s come full circle in that way. And I love their bond, too. I love their friendship. I think it’s the axis on which everything spins.”Venom: The Last Dance is in theaters now. For more on the movie, check out our Venom 3 review for our spoiler-free verdict, or you can see what else is on the way with our guide to all the upcoming superhero movies. 

An ex-Marvel writer says one of the MCU’s most common complaints is being addressed: “Some of their series should have been films… they’re taking that more into account now”

After Armor Wars’ creative overhaul, its former writer says Marvel has learned from its past mistakes and is putting “more thought” into what should be a movie and what should be a Disney Plus series.Ex-Armor Wars head writer Yassir Lester has suggested in an interview with ComicBook.com that the Rhodey-centric project’s shift from a TV show to a movie is thanks to a change in behind-the-scenes thinking at Marvel Studios.”I think that Marvel is constantly in a state of ‘What is the most interesting?’” Lester said. “And I … honestly believe some of their films should have been series and some of their series should have been films. And I think that they’re taking that more into account, giving that a little bit more thought now.”While it’s not a recent complaint, fans have pointed to certain series – such as Secret Invasion and The Falcon and the Winter Soldier – feeling more like a movie spread out over six parts rather than an episode-by-episode TV show. Now, it seems, that will change moving forward.That will be a relief to those who have followed Armor Wars over the years, especially for fans who have been acutely aware of the back-and-forth nature of its production.Initially announced as a Disney Plus series by Kevin Feige in 2020 with Yassir Lester joining as head writer a year later, the project went into development limbo for around 18 months before – in 2022 – The Hollywood Reporter revealed that it would be reworked as a movie.Since then, there’s been practically radio silence on the project – with even star Don Cheadle, who plays Rhodey in the MCU, left in the dark.Bringing all the latest movie news, features, and reviews to your inbox”You can find out and let me know,” Cheadle told TVLine when asked for an Armor Wars update earlier this month.”I don’t know, I’m not sure where anything is right now. I think things are going through a lot of changes, and we’ll see what happens, we’ll see what it is.”For more on the MCU, check out our guides to upcoming Marvel movies and how to watch the Marvel movies in order.

Marine transport services restart in Business Bay, Water Canal areas

Image: RTA

Dubai’s Roads and Transport Authority (RTA) has resumed marine transport services around the Water Canal and Business Bay, following the completion of enhancement works.
This initiative aligns with RTA’s comprehensive marine transport plan for 2020-2030.
The revitalised service operates on two lines, linking key tourist attractions and residential areas.
Khalaf Hassan Abdullah Belghuzooz Al Zarooni, director of Marine Transport at RTA, said: “The aim of developing and resuming the operation of these lines is to facilitate public movement and enhance the attractiveness of waterfront developments.”
Marine transport services: Details
The first line, designated DC2, operates from 8am to 10pm, Monday to Saturday, and from 10am to 10pm on Sundays, with intervals of 30 to 50 minutes.
It connects stations at Waterfront, Marasi, Business Bay, Godolphin and Sheikh Zayed Road, offering commuters a convenient route to business and leisure hubs.
The second line, DC3, runs on Saturdays and Sundays from 4pm to 11pm, linking Al Jaddaf Station with the Dubai Design District Marine Transport Station. This service operates in both directions and provides efficient access for passengers wanting to connect to the Creek Metro Station on the Green Line.
The DC3 line operates every 35 minutes and charges Dhs2 per stop on both routes
In recent news, RTA announced a policy change, lifting its ban on e-scooters inside Dubai Metro and Tram.