THE Honesty, Opportunity, Performance, Empowerment (HOPE) party wants an elected, non-partisan president, plus oversight committees for public spending and economic planning.
This from the party's leader, Timothy Hamel-Smith, at a briefing at his law firm in Port of Spain on Monday.
Also present were deputy leader Louis Lee Sing and party organiser Deosaran Jagroo.
Hamel-Smith said the party's proposals were sent to the committee under former speaker Barendra Sinanan, which is now hosting public consultations on constitutional reform.
He proposed the president be someone possessing "certain qualities" but have no political affiliation and directly elected by the people.
"HOPE will give a substantive job to the president."
He lamented that whoever now holds the office of president was seen as "the ruling party's person."
He said HOPE envisions that the president would name a fiscal council of representatives from academia, labour, business, religion and civil society chosen by him/her as a watchdog over fiscal prudence and accountability.
The president would also name an economic development and advisory committee to establish long-term economic policies.
He hoped such institutions would help curb TT's rampant gangsterism, as he asked, "Where will we be next?"
Hamel-Smith said the running of the Public Service could be made much more efficient by constitutional mechanisms than now need just a simple majority in Parliament to enact.
"It is independent, but does it function?" he asked of the Public Service at present.
Saying the TT Constitution now confers rights on citizens, he proposed it also lists their duties and responsibilities.
Hamel-Smith proposed citizen assemblies, saying these would have saved the UK from the Brexit episode, which he said resulted from a simple-majority popular referendum.
He proposed to make the criminal justice system work for everyone and said HOPE had proposals to combat corruption via a new post of an independent special prosecutor.
Lee Sing chimed in to say TT cannot just plod along whereby only the Prime Minister knew the election date, saying, "We need a fixed date."
Newsday asked Hamel-Smith if the fiscal council would be a non-elected alternative pole of power to the elected government.
He said it was more of a watchdog as opposed to exercising power and it could make recommendations and do a cost-benefit analysis on various proposals.
He clarified that his proposed president would have "a sort of executive role" but that Parliament would remain supreme. Hamel-Smith suggested a system of preferential voting to elect a president until he/she attained over 50 per cent of the popular vote.
Saying the former People's Partnership government – in which he was Senate president – had a proposal for Parliament to be autonomous, he lamented that today there is not even a strategic plan for Parliament.
He hoped for a new way for Parliament to consider new legislation, saying this action was "a specialist area."
Hamel-Smith said HOPE did not intend