The National Coordinator of the District Road Improvement Programme (DRIP), Nii Lantey Vanderpuye, has called on the Minority in Parliament to allow the constitutional process regarding the petition against the Chief Justice, Her Ladyship Gertrude Torkornoo, to proceed without obstruction.
His comments come in response to the Minority's public appeal to religious and traditional leaders to intervene and persuade President John Dramani Mahama to halt what they describe as a baseless process to remove the Chief Justice.
The Minority has argued that the petitions lack merit and fall short of the constitutional standards required to initiate such action.
However, Vanderpuye, while speaking on Channel One TV's breakfast daily on Thursday, April 17, noted that the constitutional machinery must be allowed to operate independently and fully. "What I want them to understand is that as soon as they start thinking, we have already thought about the steps they will take.