Minister pitched a Constitutional Court to unions as a fairness upgrade, promising cheaper justice, tougher accountability, and worker protections baked into the system.
Why unions got the briefing
Why unions got the briefing
- Moeti Caesar Mohwasa met trade union leaders on the proposed Constitutional Court.
- The talks framed unions as frontline voices for worker rights.
- Low-income earners sat at the center of the concern set.
- Collaboration got framed as non-negotiable for reform.
- Moeti Caesar Mohwasa said the court lowers financial barriers to legal remedies.
- Constitutional cases would get a dedicated forum.
- Marginalized groups were flagged as primary beneficiaries.
- The pitch tied justice access to livelihood protection.
- Moeti Caesar Mohwasa stressed that government decisions stay challengeable.
- The court would act as a check on unfair actions.
- Transparency and rule-of-law messaging stayed loud.
- Public confidence was the end goal.
- Moeti Caesar Mohwasa linked unions to shaping legal reforms.
- Organized labor was cast as policy co-pilots.
- The proposed court targets systemic inequality.
- Botswana was framed as moving toward fairer governance.