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Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Liberia’s Civil Service Chief Fires Back at Senator Over Rally Controversy — But Lawmaker Vows Senate Probe

A public war of words has erupted between Liberia’s Civil Service Agency boss and a prominent senator after videos emerged of the CSA Director General dancing in partisan campaign gear at a political rally — raising fresh questions about where the line falls between constitutional freedom and official conduct.

Dr. Josiah F. Joekai Jr., head of the very institution charged with enforcing neutrality and discipline within Liberia’s public sector, was filmed last Sunday at a Monrovia rally organized by Deputy Speaker Thomas Fallah under the banner of the National Independent Movement for Boakai (NIMBO) — a movement rallying support for President Joseph Boakai’s anticipated 2029 re-election bid. Images circulating on social media showed Joekai in NIMBO-branded attire, dancing alongside other government officials and a large crowd.

The footage lit a fuse.

‘I Am Not a Civil Servant’

Gbarpolu County Senator Amara Konneh was among the first and loudest to condemn the appearance, calling it a dangerous trend of civil servants openly engaging in partisan politics. Joekai pushed back hard.

In a lengthy statement posted to social media, the CSA chief drew a sharp legal distinction between himself and the civil servants he oversees. “I am not a civil servant — I am a political appointee with the mandate to head and manage the civil service,” he wrote, adding that civil service regulations bind civil servants, not political appointees. He called Konneh’s comparison of his case to that of former official Madam Emma Glassco — who held a tenure position with distinct legal protections — “completely false, misleading, and intellectually dishonest.”

Joekai further argued that his Sunday attendance at NIMBO was a lawful exercise of his constitutional rights as a Liberian citizen. “Liberia remains a democratic state governed by law,” he wrote, “and no citizen should be criminalized or politically attacked for exercising lawful constitutional freedoms.”

He also denied being a formal member of any political party, rejected claims that Monrovia City Corporation employees were disciplined for political reasons, and accused Senator Konneh of waging a campaign of “bitterness, hostility, and relentless attacks” against officials associated with the Boakai administration.

Konneh Holds Firm — and Raises the Stakes

Senator Konneh was not persuaded. In a point-by-point rebuttal, the senator cited Part V, Section 5.1 of Liberia’s National Code of Conduct for Public Officials, which he says explicitly restricts all presidential appointees — not just civil servants — from engaging in partisan political activities. The prohibited conduct listed includes engaging in political activities, serving on campaign teams, and using government resources in support of political causes.

“By wearing a t-shirt of a movement supporting the re-election of President Boakai in 2029, he broke the law and violated his commitment to the President,” Konneh wrote, noting that Joekai himself had signed a performance contract and Code of Conduct with President Boakai on behalf of the CSA.

Konneh closed with a pointed promise: he intends to request that the Liberian Senate formally invite Joekai to appear and account for his actions. “For Liberia to be better,” the senator wrote, “the law must remain supreme over personalities and politics.”

A Test of Institutional Credibility

The dispute cuts to a deeper tension in Liberian governance — who exactly is bound by the country’s ethics and conduct rules, and whether the official responsible for enforcing those standards across the public sector can credibly claim exemption from the spirit, if not the letter, of those same rules.

What happens in the Senate chamber next could determine whether the controversy ends as a social media spat or becomes a defining test of institutional accountability under the Boakai administration.

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