Liberia: Majority Bloc Declares Koon Speaker As Koffa Fights Back in Supreme Court

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Monrovia — Amid a legal challenge from Speaker Jonathan Fonati Koffa at the Supreme Court, the breakaway group of lawmakers at the House of Representatives has controversially elected Montserrado County Representative Richard Koon as Speaker.

The majority bloc convened in the joint chamber of the Legislature on November 21, 2024, declaring the Speaker’s seat vacant before electing Koon as Speaker. According to the bloc, their decision stemmed from dissatisfaction with Koffa’s leadership and his alleged failure to address their concerns. Shortly after the election, the bloc instructed the House’s clerical staff to notify key stakeholders, including the Executive Branch, Judiciary, Senate, and Liberia’s diplomatic community, of the leadership change.

In a resolution passed during the session, the majority bloc called on the Executive to strip Koffa of all amenities associated with the Speakership, including official vehicles, security, and other entitlements, and transfer them to Koon. Additionally, they issued a one-week ultimatum for Koffa to vacate the Speaker’s office.

Speaker Koffa has dismissed the majority bloc’s actions as invalid, asserting that they lack the constitutional authority to remove him from office. Taking to Facebook shortly after the session, Koffa stated, “Nothing has happened,” signaling his intent to disregard the election of Koon and maintain his position.

Koffa’s loyalists have condemned the majority bloc’s actions, describing them as a “mockery of democracy” and a violation of the Constitution and the House’s Standing Rules. They vowed to escalate the matter to the Supreme Court, which is already reviewing a petition filed by Koffa’s legal team to address what they describe as a “constitutional procedural impasse.”

In the petition, dated November 19, 2024, Koffa and his minority bloc accused the majority bloc, led by Deputy Speaker Thomas Fallah, of deliberately boycotting plenary sessions to paralyze the Legislature. The petitioners argued that this boycott has prevented the House from achieving the quorum required under Article 33 of the Liberian Constitution to conduct official business, including the passage of the 2025 National Budget.

“The respondents’ refusal to attend duly convened legislative sessions of the Plenary of the House of Representatives has impeded, obstructed, and prevented the House’s ability to carry out and perform its mandated constitutional and legislative functions, including the enactment of the national budget into law for the ensuing 2025 financial year,” the petitioners stated.

The petitioners have asked the Court to declare the Majority Bloc’s refusal to attend plenary sessions as a violation of Article 33 of the Constitution and to compel them to comply with constitutional mandates. They also requested that the petition be forwarded to the Bench en banc, citing the gravity of the constitutional issues at stake.