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| EDITORIAL |
| TnT General Elections |
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Our just concluded general elections
were fraught with incidents that could have come straight
out of a movie script. The usual name calling, accusations,
a new twist with an alleged setup and much more. But
by and large a typical Caribbean election. Now Trinidad
and Tobago is going through its share.
Roads are being paved, water is flowing in the pipes,
the tassa drummers and rhythm sections are turning up
the volume and the political temperature is rising in
Trinidad and Tobago. More or less the 21st Century version
of rum & roti politics as they say in the twin island
republic. All this can only mean one thing: elections
fever.
After Prime Minister Patrick Manning surprisingly called
a snap election on April 8, he kept the nation in suspense
for eight days - for reasons known only to himself and,
if mischievous tongues are to be believed, the person
generally referred to as his 'seer woman' - before announcing
that the general election would be held on May 24.
Even though many observers have been unable to discern
any significant strategic advantage in delaying the
announcement of the date, the machinery of the incumbent
People's National Movement has already rolled into action,
screening and selecting candidates to contest Trinidad
and Tobago's 41 constituencies, and hitting the campaign
trail with much sound and fury.
Mr Manning has launched his crusade for personal vindication
with liberal references to the Bible and, in telling
his devotees that he is the "most vilified"
prime minister the country has ever had, he comes dangerously
close to likening himself to the persecuted martyrs
of olden times.
However, in acknowledging how many in the country feel
about him, Mr Manning failed to address what might be
the cause for such strong sentiments. An editorial in
a TnT newspaper suggested that he "commit to some
deep introspection during which he should ask himself
why his style of leadership and his management of the
country engender such negative feelings among so many
people."
The editorial also listed some possible reasons for
Mr Manning's unpopularity: he is "disconnected"
and authoritarian; he has neglected human and physical
development in poor urban areas and the countryside;
too many citizens lack for basic needs, especially running
water; he has been unable to diversify the economy away
from its dependence on oil and gas; he has squandered
abundant financial resources; he has countenanced mismanagement
and corruption, particularly at the Urban Development
Corporation of Trinidad and Tobago; and he has failed
to hold local government elections in four years. Others
have also accused Mr Manning and his government of poor
governance and failing to rein in runaway crime. Something
we are all too familiar with in this twin island federation.
An opposition coalition has been announced and a formal
agreement signed. The United National Congress, led
by Kamla Persad-Bissessar; the Congress of the People,
led by Winston Dookeran; the Tobago Organisation of
the People, led by Ashworth Jack; the National Joint
Action Committee, a pioneering group in the 1970 Black
Power movement led by veteran activist Makandal Daaga;
and the Movement for Social Justice, comprising prominent
trade unionists under the chairmanship of the former
president of the powerful Oilfields Workers Trade Union,
Errol McLeod, have agreed to contest the elections,
under the leadership of Mrs Persad-Bissessar. They are
presenting themselves on a common platform, with a joint
manifesto and the express intention of removing Mr Manning
and the PNM from office.
Not surprisingly, Mr Manning and the PNM are already
attacking the alliance, pointing out that coalition
governments have a dismal record of failure in Trinidad
and Tobago, reminding the country of corruption under
the UNC government of 1995-2001, and even taking personal
potshots at Mrs Persad-Bissessar, Mr Dookeran and Mr
McLeod.
Mrs Persad-Bissessar has in turn indicated that the
"one common denominator in all those coalitions"
is no longer present. She did not name him but she was,
of course, referring to the divisive and manipulative
figure of Basdeo Panday, who has finally read the writing
on the wall and is not offering himself for re-election.
A lesson somewhere here?
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