Bunting's unsteady relationship with the PNP
Man in the news
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Peter Bunting's relationship with the Opposition People's National Party (PNP) can, at best, be described as unsettled.
In December 1994, for instance, when he resigned as parliamentary secretary for health in the PNP Government led by P J Patterson, Bunting had expressed frustration at his inability to encourage systems of accountability and greater openness in government among traditionalist colleagues.
Peter Bunting (centre) has a laugh with Portia Simpson Miller and Howard Aries at the People's National Party's (PNP's) 67th annual conference in September 2006. At the time Bunting supported Dr Omar Davies's bid for the leadership of the party. That race was won by Simpson Miller who today is still president of the PNP. (Photo: Observer library)
At the time, Bunting had told Patterson that the best contribution he (Bunting) could make was to concentrate on the process of constitutional reform and on his South-East Clarendon constituency, which he had won from the veteran politician Hugh Shearer in the 1993 general elections.
But a source close to the PNP told the Observer at the time that Bunting "was on a crusade and just felt that he wasn't getting anywhere".
At the time, the 33-year-old Bunting was among a new bunch of politicians who had called for the modernisation of the Government, making proposals such as giving ministries definable targets and judging their performance against the targets.
In fact, his suggestion that the agriculture ministry should be revamped to deal with the issues that were likely to arise in the global economy angered the then agriculture minister.
Bunting also annoyed older politicians by questioning the demand for junior ministers, such as himself, to subscribe to the concept of collective responsibility when they were not part of the process of decision-making.
"Peter kept raising this issue of responsibility without authority and it would be discussed but not really get anywhere," a PNP insider revealed at the time.
Party insiders said then that the young politician was expected to advocate reform of the political and government systems from within the councils of the PNP and from the parliamentary back benches.
But Bunting eventually returned to his private business and never contested the 1997 general elections, leaving the seat to Basil Burrell, who again won it for the PNP by 54 votes over the Jamaica Labour Party's Edwin Singh.
The Government, though, recognising the young investment banker's business acumen, appointed him chair of the National Water Commission (NWC) in January 1998. After all, Bunting, by then, had had a dazzling career in the financial sector at Citibank, before helping to start Manufacturers Merchant Bank. He served as president of the National Investment Bank of Jamaica before joining with colleague businessmen Christopher Dehring and Mark Golding to form investment brokerage house Dehring Bunting and Golding (DB&G).
Under his chairmanship a record number of water supply projects were undertaken by the NWC and more than 300 communities received water for the first time.
However, in December 2001 Bunting resigned the NWC chair, saying that he wanted to give more time to DB&G.
But even as he placed more focus on his successful brokerage house, Bunting never stayed far away from politics, and in 2006 he supported Dr Omar Davies's bid for the leadership of the PNP.
Davies, Dr Peter Phillips, Dr Karl Blythe and Portia Simpson Miller contested the vacancy created by Patterson's decision to retire.
The battle, won by Simpson Miller, proved bruising and created deep divisions in the party that have still not yet been closed.
By May 2007, Bunting, who in an interview with the Business Observer in 2003 admitted that he was "at heart a public servant", was headed back to representational politics. At the time, he told the Observer that after 18 years in power, the PNP needed to reinvent itself and hopefully he could be part of that.
"With my background in finance, I would like to see the Government make more business-like decisions and display management competence and political ability," he said. "We need to see new ideas come to the fore, more particularly in the governance of Jamaica," he added.
Four months later in the general elections, he beat the JLP's Sally Porteous 8,453 to 8,338 votes to take the Manchester Central seat. The defeat was particularly crushing for Porteous as she had been working in the constituency for years. Bunting entered the race as the replacement for Vando Palmer who had fallen out of favour with the PNP hierarchy.
The PNP's perception of Bunting's value as a candidate was undoubtedly boosted after he and his partners improved their personal financial stocks by selling 68 per cent of DB&G to Scotiabank in December 2006.
At the time of the sale, DB&G was the largest equity broker in the country, reporting total assets of $31 billion for the financial year ending March 31, 2006 and funds under management of $33 billion as at June 30, 2006.
But the PNP lost the parliamentary elections as well as the local government poll that followed. Bunting, by then the Opposition spokesman on industry and commerce, was elected general secretary of the party in January 2008. Later that year he had to referee another divisive contest for the presidency of the PNP as Phillips failed in his bid to unseat Simpson Miller.
Still reeling from losses in the general and parish council elections as well as internal divisions, the PNP went into campaign mode for the court-ordered by-election for the West Portland seat in March this year.
The PNP's Kenneth Rowe lost that election to the JLP's Daryl Vaz by more than 2,000 votes, adding more fuel to criticisms of Bunting within the party, as some members accused him of not showing aggression in the campaign.
"The general secretary doesn't have a clue," one PNP insider told this newspaper in the lead-up to the West Portland election as he sought to inject energy into what was considered a weak campaign.
The criticisms grew louder after last Tuesday's by-election for the North-East St Catherine seat which the JLP's Gregory Mair won comfortably over the PNP's Granville Valentine.
By Wednesday evening, Bunting was in the news, having posted on his Facebook page a famous quote by Albert Einstein - "Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results."
The posting generated huge response and was regarded by some Simpson Miller loyalists as a criticism of her leadership.
The following morning, RJR News reported that Bunting had removed the quote overnight and replaced it with one that read: "A genuine leader is not a searcher of consensus but a moulder of consensus".
According to RJR, the second quote was widely believed to be a swipe at Simpson Miller.
Later that day, Bunting removed the controversial quote from his Facebook page and posted a response to the brouhaha.
"I'm surprised at the attention being given by the media during the last 24.
hours to two quotes - by Albert Einstein and Martin Luther King Jr respectively - which I posted on my individual Facebook page without any personal comment," he wrote. "In fact, the second of these quotes I originally posted as far back as October 2008. Some reports have sought to interpret this as an attack on the party leader; let me state unequivocally that this was not my intention.
"These posts also attracted many comments, which I generally welcome as I believe that different ideas and opinions should contend. However, a few of the comments were disrespectful and offensive, and while I had no control or responsibility for those unfortunate comments, I wish to disassociate myself completely from those remarks," Bunting said.
On Friday, the Daily Observer reported that there was a move afoot in the PNP to cashier Bunting, as it was felt that he had failed to energise and recapitalise the party.
"Peter has not been the kind of general secretary that the party needs to rev the engine and to get things moving," the paper quoted one senior official who asked not to be named. "The party leader and many other members of the leadership are not pleased with his performance and work," the un-named official added.
The thinking in the party, insiders said, was that veteran politician Dr DK Duncan, who served as general secretary in the 1970s, would make a better general secretary.
But on Friday night, the PNP sought to avoid the brewing controversy, voicing support for Bunting in a release after an officers' meeting which engaged in a preliminary review of the outcome of the North-East St Catherine by election.
"In light of recent media reports, the officers reassert their confidence in the party leader, Cde Portia Simpson Miller and general secretary, Cde Peter Bunting," the release said.
Man in the news
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Peter Bunting's relationship with the Opposition People's National Party (PNP) can, at best, be described as unsettled.
In December 1994, for instance, when he resigned as parliamentary secretary for health in the PNP Government led by P J Patterson, Bunting had expressed frustration at his inability to encourage systems of accountability and greater openness in government among traditionalist colleagues.
Peter Bunting (centre) has a laugh with Portia Simpson Miller and Howard Aries at the People's National Party's (PNP's) 67th annual conference in September 2006. At the time Bunting supported Dr Omar Davies's bid for the leadership of the party. That race was won by Simpson Miller who today is still president of the PNP. (Photo: Observer library)
At the time, Bunting had told Patterson that the best contribution he (Bunting) could make was to concentrate on the process of constitutional reform and on his South-East Clarendon constituency, which he had won from the veteran politician Hugh Shearer in the 1993 general elections.
But a source close to the PNP told the Observer at the time that Bunting "was on a crusade and just felt that he wasn't getting anywhere".
At the time, the 33-year-old Bunting was among a new bunch of politicians who had called for the modernisation of the Government, making proposals such as giving ministries definable targets and judging their performance against the targets.
In fact, his suggestion that the agriculture ministry should be revamped to deal with the issues that were likely to arise in the global economy angered the then agriculture minister.
Bunting also annoyed older politicians by questioning the demand for junior ministers, such as himself, to subscribe to the concept of collective responsibility when they were not part of the process of decision-making.
"Peter kept raising this issue of responsibility without authority and it would be discussed but not really get anywhere," a PNP insider revealed at the time.
Party insiders said then that the young politician was expected to advocate reform of the political and government systems from within the councils of the PNP and from the parliamentary back benches.
But Bunting eventually returned to his private business and never contested the 1997 general elections, leaving the seat to Basil Burrell, who again won it for the PNP by 54 votes over the Jamaica Labour Party's Edwin Singh.
The Government, though, recognising the young investment banker's business acumen, appointed him chair of the National Water Commission (NWC) in January 1998. After all, Bunting, by then, had had a dazzling career in the financial sector at Citibank, before helping to start Manufacturers Merchant Bank. He served as president of the National Investment Bank of Jamaica before joining with colleague businessmen Christopher Dehring and Mark Golding to form investment brokerage house Dehring Bunting and Golding (DB&G).
Under his chairmanship a record number of water supply projects were undertaken by the NWC and more than 300 communities received water for the first time.
However, in December 2001 Bunting resigned the NWC chair, saying that he wanted to give more time to DB&G.
But even as he placed more focus on his successful brokerage house, Bunting never stayed far away from politics, and in 2006 he supported Dr Omar Davies's bid for the leadership of the PNP.
Davies, Dr Peter Phillips, Dr Karl Blythe and Portia Simpson Miller contested the vacancy created by Patterson's decision to retire.
The battle, won by Simpson Miller, proved bruising and created deep divisions in the party that have still not yet been closed.
By May 2007, Bunting, who in an interview with the Business Observer in 2003 admitted that he was "at heart a public servant", was headed back to representational politics. At the time, he told the Observer that after 18 years in power, the PNP needed to reinvent itself and hopefully he could be part of that.
"With my background in finance, I would like to see the Government make more business-like decisions and display management competence and political ability," he said. "We need to see new ideas come to the fore, more particularly in the governance of Jamaica," he added.
Four months later in the general elections, he beat the JLP's Sally Porteous 8,453 to 8,338 votes to take the Manchester Central seat. The defeat was particularly crushing for Porteous as she had been working in the constituency for years. Bunting entered the race as the replacement for Vando Palmer who had fallen out of favour with the PNP hierarchy.
The PNP's perception of Bunting's value as a candidate was undoubtedly boosted after he and his partners improved their personal financial stocks by selling 68 per cent of DB&G to Scotiabank in December 2006.
At the time of the sale, DB&G was the largest equity broker in the country, reporting total assets of $31 billion for the financial year ending March 31, 2006 and funds under management of $33 billion as at June 30, 2006.
But the PNP lost the parliamentary elections as well as the local government poll that followed. Bunting, by then the Opposition spokesman on industry and commerce, was elected general secretary of the party in January 2008. Later that year he had to referee another divisive contest for the presidency of the PNP as Phillips failed in his bid to unseat Simpson Miller.
Still reeling from losses in the general and parish council elections as well as internal divisions, the PNP went into campaign mode for the court-ordered by-election for the West Portland seat in March this year.
The PNP's Kenneth Rowe lost that election to the JLP's Daryl Vaz by more than 2,000 votes, adding more fuel to criticisms of Bunting within the party, as some members accused him of not showing aggression in the campaign.
"The general secretary doesn't have a clue," one PNP insider told this newspaper in the lead-up to the West Portland election as he sought to inject energy into what was considered a weak campaign.
The criticisms grew louder after last Tuesday's by-election for the North-East St Catherine seat which the JLP's Gregory Mair won comfortably over the PNP's Granville Valentine.
By Wednesday evening, Bunting was in the news, having posted on his Facebook page a famous quote by Albert Einstein - "Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results."
The posting generated huge response and was regarded by some Simpson Miller loyalists as a criticism of her leadership.
The following morning, RJR News reported that Bunting had removed the quote overnight and replaced it with one that read: "A genuine leader is not a searcher of consensus but a moulder of consensus".
According to RJR, the second quote was widely believed to be a swipe at Simpson Miller.
Later that day, Bunting removed the controversial quote from his Facebook page and posted a response to the brouhaha.
"I'm surprised at the attention being given by the media during the last 24.
hours to two quotes - by Albert Einstein and Martin Luther King Jr respectively - which I posted on my individual Facebook page without any personal comment," he wrote. "In fact, the second of these quotes I originally posted as far back as October 2008. Some reports have sought to interpret this as an attack on the party leader; let me state unequivocally that this was not my intention.
"These posts also attracted many comments, which I generally welcome as I believe that different ideas and opinions should contend. However, a few of the comments were disrespectful and offensive, and while I had no control or responsibility for those unfortunate comments, I wish to disassociate myself completely from those remarks," Bunting said.
On Friday, the Daily Observer reported that there was a move afoot in the PNP to cashier Bunting, as it was felt that he had failed to energise and recapitalise the party.
"Peter has not been the kind of general secretary that the party needs to rev the engine and to get things moving," the paper quoted one senior official who asked not to be named. "The party leader and many other members of the leadership are not pleased with his performance and work," the un-named official added.
The thinking in the party, insiders said, was that veteran politician Dr DK Duncan, who served as general secretary in the 1970s, would make a better general secretary.
But on Friday night, the PNP sought to avoid the brewing controversy, voicing support for Bunting in a release after an officers' meeting which engaged in a preliminary review of the outcome of the North-East St Catherine by election.
"In light of recent media reports, the officers reassert their confidence in the party leader, Cde Portia Simpson Miller and general secretary, Cde Peter Bunting," the release said.
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