Fuelling the class war
published: Tuesday | November 27, 2007
Vernon Daley
Portia Simpson Miller needs to meet with greater equanimity the cruel criticisms that naturally accompany the lives of public persons. It's hard to imagine that she has been in public life for some three decades without developing a more resistant armour to the slings and arrows of detractors.
I always thought that one of the traits of politicians was the ability to roll with the punches and give as good as they get. In this respect the Opposition Leader seems quite an untypical political figure.
Fuss over PM statement
Mrs. Simpson Miller has recently been making a fuss over statements made by [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]Prime [COLOR=orange! important]Minister[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR] Bruce Golding at his party's annual conference two Sundays ago. The Prime Minister accused the People's National Party (PNP) of "intellectual depravity" and suggested that termites had "infested their brain".
The comments were unnecessarily stinging, to say the least, and we can only hope that Mr. Golding will resist the temptation to be similarly harsh in the future. He does have a greater responsibility, as Prime Minister, to keep public discourse at a minimum level of decency.
However, the real mischief in all of this was created by Mrs. Simpson Miller, herself. Following Mr. Golding's speech, the PNP president accused him of waging a class war on her party and sug-gested that she was the primary target of his verbal assault.
Gender bias
Mrs. Simpson Miller apparently believes that every criticism of her and the PNP under her [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]leadership[/COLOR][/COLOR] is born out of some class or gender bias. In reacting to Mr. Golding's comments, the Opposition Leader went into her background, talking about where she came from and who her parents were. My question is: who cares?
This tired attempt to play on the sympathies of poor Jamaicans is not only cheap but dangerous politics.
Jamaica doesn't need political leaders who are about fuelling class and other kinds of divisions to mask their own inadequacies. When one looks back over the four decades of this country's independence all one can see is the great opportunities missed because of the divisions fostered by political leaders. This new generation of Jamaicans, to which I proudly belong, is more than a bit fed up with the kind of talk which pushes people apart rather than brings them together.
We want a new kind of leadership that understands that for this country to move forward we can't have some people pulling one way and some people the other. Everybody has to be moving in the same direction. Is Mrs Simpson Miller capable of helping to chart that [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]course[/COLOR][/COLOR] and that vision or is she a relic of the country's divisive political past?
Hypocritical comments
I have to say, also, that I find some of the Opposition Leader's comments about election spending hypocritical. During the run-up to the last [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]general [COLOR=orange! important]elections[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR], she complained about what was felt to be [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]big [COLOR=orange! important]money[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR] backing the Jamaica Labour Party and on several political platforms declared that she was not prepared to sell out the interest of Jamaica to a few powerful business people here.
She is obviously of the view that it was big money that cost her the elections and she uses each opportunity she gets to raise questions about the money the JLP got to run its campaign. Well, the entire Jamaica knows that some of those who were supporting the JLP in the last elections were on previous occasions fully in the corner of the PNP. I can't remember Mrs. Simpson Miller com-plaining about the money flowing to her party's coffers at that time.
published: Tuesday | November 27, 2007
Vernon Daley
Portia Simpson Miller needs to meet with greater equanimity the cruel criticisms that naturally accompany the lives of public persons. It's hard to imagine that she has been in public life for some three decades without developing a more resistant armour to the slings and arrows of detractors.
I always thought that one of the traits of politicians was the ability to roll with the punches and give as good as they get. In this respect the Opposition Leader seems quite an untypical political figure.
Fuss over PM statement
Mrs. Simpson Miller has recently been making a fuss over statements made by [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]Prime [COLOR=orange! important]Minister[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR] Bruce Golding at his party's annual conference two Sundays ago. The Prime Minister accused the People's National Party (PNP) of "intellectual depravity" and suggested that termites had "infested their brain".
The comments were unnecessarily stinging, to say the least, and we can only hope that Mr. Golding will resist the temptation to be similarly harsh in the future. He does have a greater responsibility, as Prime Minister, to keep public discourse at a minimum level of decency.
However, the real mischief in all of this was created by Mrs. Simpson Miller, herself. Following Mr. Golding's speech, the PNP president accused him of waging a class war on her party and sug-gested that she was the primary target of his verbal assault.
Gender bias
Mrs. Simpson Miller apparently believes that every criticism of her and the PNP under her [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]leadership[/COLOR][/COLOR] is born out of some class or gender bias. In reacting to Mr. Golding's comments, the Opposition Leader went into her background, talking about where she came from and who her parents were. My question is: who cares?
This tired attempt to play on the sympathies of poor Jamaicans is not only cheap but dangerous politics.
Jamaica doesn't need political leaders who are about fuelling class and other kinds of divisions to mask their own inadequacies. When one looks back over the four decades of this country's independence all one can see is the great opportunities missed because of the divisions fostered by political leaders. This new generation of Jamaicans, to which I proudly belong, is more than a bit fed up with the kind of talk which pushes people apart rather than brings them together.
We want a new kind of leadership that understands that for this country to move forward we can't have some people pulling one way and some people the other. Everybody has to be moving in the same direction. Is Mrs Simpson Miller capable of helping to chart that [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]course[/COLOR][/COLOR] and that vision or is she a relic of the country's divisive political past?
Hypocritical comments
I have to say, also, that I find some of the Opposition Leader's comments about election spending hypocritical. During the run-up to the last [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]general [COLOR=orange! important]elections[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR], she complained about what was felt to be [COLOR=orange! important][COLOR=orange! important]big [COLOR=orange! important]money[/COLOR][/COLOR][/COLOR] backing the Jamaica Labour Party and on several political platforms declared that she was not prepared to sell out the interest of Jamaica to a few powerful business people here.
She is obviously of the view that it was big money that cost her the elections and she uses each opportunity she gets to raise questions about the money the JLP got to run its campaign. Well, the entire Jamaica knows that some of those who were supporting the JLP in the last elections were on previous occasions fully in the corner of the PNP. I can't remember Mrs. Simpson Miller com-plaining about the money flowing to her party's coffers at that time.
Comment