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  • The Jamaica Labour Party - A liberating force for 70 years

    The Jamaica Labour Party - A liberating force for 70 years


    Sunday, July 14, 2013













    The following is an edited version of the address by the former prime minister Edward Seaga on the occasion of the JLP's 70th anniversary function held on July 8, at the Jamaica Pegasus Hotel.

    TODAY, we gather on the very date, July 8, at the Jamaica Pegasus Hotel, which, exactly 70 years ago, in 1943, Alexander Bustamante and a team of like-minded political pioneers founded the Jamaica Labour Party.



    BUSTAMANTE… was absorbed with liberating the power of the working class and focusing their energies on securing a better life.


    1/2


    The JLP was to have a profound influence on the affairs of Jamaica in the 70 years that followed. It charted the critical direction at many cross-roads in the life of the nation.
    When the first rush of political determination raised doubts and anxieties as to whether worthy leaders would emerge in 1944; when the Federal alliance subverted Jamaican goals, and confounded and bewildered the nationalist agenda in the 1950s; when the fledgling nation had to steady itself and find sure feet in the early years of Independence; when socialist experimentation and communist flirtation consumed the national consciousness with fear and plunged the nation into panic in the 1970s, it was the sure-footed, unswerving leadership of the JLP that steadied the country and charted a course of certainty.
    Emerging Vision
    Unmistakably, the surge of militancy of the 1930s was not to achieve self-government. This was the objective of the nationalists whose mission at the time was more concerned with self-determination and the replacement of colonial government. As such, that was a replacement of colonial bondage in which ideas of brotherhood and equality and ideals of a benevolent godfather state stirred personal commitment and patriotic response.
    It was this compelling drive springing from the hopelessness of everyday conditions of the life of the mass of Jamaicans in the 1930s which surged to prominence in the last half of that decade. It was this flow of events, driven by the imperatives of economic deprivation and social desperation that converged in 1938 with a bang. As a result, it was the ordinary people who settled what needed change and when, by pooling their own demands for improved conditions into a momentous clamour and monstrous protest that broke loose on the waterfront, the sugar estates and in the public streets. That powerful surge was to take Bustamante, who had been riding the tide, to the forefront of leadership and change forever the course of Jamaica's history.
    Bustamante harnessed the anger of the working class and organised it into a force which liberated the strength of Jamaican workers to pave the way for that better future. This liberated force of labour is the recurrent theme that was to dominate individual enterprise and political policy over the decades to come. It was the first of many critical stages of our history in which the JLP liberated a new dimension of internal strength from within the people to power them into the next stage of take-off.
    That next stage grew out of another phase of brewing frustration and bewildering directions. As an emerging nation gearing toward full independence and self-determination in the 1950s, the course shifted dramatically as the decade aged. Those who championed self-determination from the socialist struggle shifted the focus away from the growing confidence of Jamaicans ready and willing to shoulder the responsibilities of independence as a nation. Great doubt was cast; it was believed that we could not shoulder the responsibilities of independence as a nation. Great doubt was cast; we could not shoulder those burdens alone, it was said. We needed to share the weight with other states much smaller, less populous and at a great distance, who were brothers and sisters we hardly knew. It was, in fact, almost ludicrous: The stronger was to seek succour from the weaker. Resentment grew about our need to rely on lesser states in which we could be bound in a federation as a minority player. The nationalism which had little strength at the outset in the thirties and throughout the forties, was strident enough in the fifties to reject the notion that Jamaica was unable to make its own way as an independent nation.
    The Next Phase
    Alexander Bustamante and the JLP were absorbed earlier with liberating the power of the working class and focusing their energies on securing a better life. That was the opening mission statement of the JLP. Nationhood was not on the agenda in the early days. Two decades later, as the energy of the worker movement became more and more absorbed in the political drive, a new national focus with a new thrust was needed. As the fifties drew to a close, the frustration and ambivalence of Jamaica's involvement in Federation would provide exactly the ferment that would be required to create the surge to the next dynamic phase of Jamaican history.
    The JLP, led by Sir Alexander Bustamante, moved to the forefront of the impasse, took the driver's seat, directed the traffic and pulled Jamaica out of its paralytic association in the Federation of the West Indies with a resounding victory in the Referendum of September 19, 1961, a pivotal date in our history.
    The independence of Jamaica which followed the JLP-led withdrawal from Federation was to be the new springboard. But it had its uncertainties. Many wondered, as in 1944, whether we were ready for leadership, this time entirely on our own. And the same people who doubted the process of political advancement in 1944 were the same who expressed fears in 1962: the money interests, landed proprietors, and the emerging middle class of substance. From these fears once again, the call was for a steady hand holding a steady course. The JLP again was the people's choice, by general elections on April 10, 1962, to take Jamaica through this period of uncertainty.
    New Dynamism

    As Independence dawned on August 6 of that year, a new dynamism emerged: The creation of national symbols - the flag, the anthem, the motto; the showcasing of our traditional culture, now feelingly more so our own than ever before - the Jamaica Festival; the surge of art and craft and a showcase for these talents - Things Jamaican and Devon House; the salute to national heritage - designation of our National Heroes and the return of the body of Marcus Garvey to Jamaica; the birth of our popular music - ska, rocksteady, reggae.
    The first salvo urging Jamaican ownership, the Jamaicanisation programme which led to:
    The birth of the Jamaican Life Insurance Industry;
    The Jamaicanisation of the financial sector;
    Jamaican share ownership in publicly quoted stocks on the stock exchange,
    The self-confidence of a nation of emerging economic strength expanding rapidly in mining. manufacturing, tourism and commerce;
    The launch of a national airline, Air Jamaica;
    The introduction of landmark social legislation and the expansion of social facilities - introduction of the National Insurance Scheme, new hospitals (Cornwall Regional and the Children's Hospital), introduction of family planning and doubling the number of secondary schools;
    Membership in international institutions, giving us pride of place.
    The decade of the sixties was no mere release of energy. It was an outburst of positive, patriotic, productive, broad-based initiative, exuberance, creativity, enterprise and application of effort which has not been duplicated since. It was Jamaica's golden age, the second wave of liberation of the positive energies of the Jamaican people with the JLP leading the way.
    Had we continued on this route, the Jamaica of today would have been among the noted success cases of the developing world. But that was not to be the case. The People's National Party was elected to govern on February 29, 1972. It was their second period as government. Where the first effort under Norman Manley was dominated by the failed federal adventure, the second period under Michael Manley became dominated again by a foreign adventure, this time with an alien ideology and uneasy fraternity with socialist and communist bloc nations. This adventure also failed but not before Jamaica was torn and shredded.
    Michael Manley tried to do what Bustamante and the JLP had done in the first and second terms of government. Where Bustamante had liberated the dynamic of the working class and energised a prideful independent people, Manley wanted to unleash the Jamaican psyche, to raise social consciousness and create an egalitarian society.
    Great Difference

    There was a great difference in the two approaches. The JLP liberated a positive dynamic which created a bigger cake to share. It was a "pulling-up" process which was fuelled by the inner need to create, and achieved more. The PNP was more concerned with dividing the cake into equal slices, a process which fed on envy of those whose bigger shares should be sliced thinner, a negative, "pulling-down" process.
    Recent events recall the rejection of the "pulling down" ideologies as we have now come to see in the world-wide demise of socialism and communism. They failed not because they were devoid of noble ideals, but because they were ideologies created from the top by authors who never asked the poor what was the first priority on their agenda. Had they done so they would have understood that economic betterment is the simple ideological priority of ordinary people which ranks first and second. The anger and frustration of diminishing slices of the national cake toppled the Berlin Wall and crushed the distributive ideologies.
    Mission of the '80s

    The forces liberated by adventure in socialism in the seventies did not succeed in expanding or building substance to increase the national cake. Hence, once again, the seventies were a period of intense frustration and danger, as in the thirties, and to a lesser extent the late-fifties. This set the stage for the third liberating movement which was to unleash a whole new dynamism in the 1980s. And again, the JLP led this thrust and charted the course which was to shape Jamaica's future. I had the responsibility to lead Jamaica into this new dynamic phase of the 1980s.
    A legacy of the 1970s was the dependency of the individual on the state, a natural outcome of the primacy of the state in socialist doctrine. In contrast, individual initiative and enterprise were to be the theme of the 1980s. This was the untapped reservoir of energy to be liberated, a process began in the early days but stifled in the seventies. The mission of the 1980s was to open this valve and release the energy of this enormous human potential responding to the push of achievement and the pull of reward.
    In contrast to the closed society of the seventies, the eighties were to become the stage for the new lifestyle of the open society, In this process of "freeing-up", encumbrances to initiative and enterprise would have to go.
    Government beauracracy would be deregulated starting with import controls, price controls and the simplification of the tax system. Later, exchange control regulations would have to follow.
    Demotivating taxes would be reduced to levels which did not stifle incentive. Punitive income tax rates were simplified and reduced; import tariffs were decreased in stages to more acceptable levels.
    The change of government on February 9, 1989 shattered the fragile model of economic management which had successfully restored the economic path of progress from which the country had been diverted over the previous dozen years. What followed was painful recent history.
    Gentler Nation

    The valve to unleash new energies to propel the country forward to the end of the decade and century has its roots in the turmoil and abuses of the 1970s. It was in that decade that Jamaicans awoke to the realisation that the Constitution of Jamaica chartered for Independence in 1962 was devised for a much kinder and gentler nation. Certainly it was written in the shadow of those unwritten understandings which ensured that the subjects of the United Kingdom needed no written charter. Everyone knew where the lines of misconduct were drawn and if the letter of the law did not spell out precisely the limits of power, no one would misuse the laxity of law to abuse the parameters of power because that simply wouldn't be cricket. Long and great traditions established the boundaries of permissible levels of tolerance.
    As a young nation we have no such long and great traditions of our own. We borrow from other nations those values -- which govern society and reject what we wish, when we wish to abuse the system. That plainly was the mode followed to instigate the most draconian violation of human values in our nation's history when the infamous State of Emergency was declared on June 19, 1976, on the flimsiest of grounds to justify the meanest of ends: political survival. Jamaicans learned then that our constitution was elastic and could be stretched to shape many unconstitutional conveniences.
    The JLP learned too, that year, that something had to be done to limit the elasticity of our Constitution which was not so much defective in what it says, but that it spoke in a soft voice where a stronger, firmer and more definite position should be stated. And where the Constitution was not the instrument of abuse the spirit of the Constitution was mauled by the power of the prime minister. In the late-1970s, the JLP charted the course to whittle down these powers that opened the way to abuses in sensitive areas of our national life.
    Landmark Decision

    The power of the prime minister was the first phase of this mission and his right through his minister to control electoral affairs, the first target. Out of this came the landmark decision in 1979 to remove the control of the minister over electoral affairs and the establishment of an independent Electoral Committee to take his place. The mechanism for selecting the independent members by the governor general after consultation with the prime minister and leader of the opposition removed the final power of decision by the prime minister to make the choice on his own. Next came the removal of that same power of unilateral decision making from other sensitive legislation already in existence: the ombudsman and the Integrity Commission, both in 1985.
    Thereafter, legislation establishing the contractor general and media commission followed this course in 1985 and 1986, again ensuring that the prime minister would have no unilateral power to name the membership of these commissions but would have only consultative power on the same basis as the Leader of the Opposition in advising the governor general in making his choice.
    The next phase in this course was to reduce the unilateral power of the Prime Minister in the appointment of members of the Police Service Commission and to remove the control of the police force from the minister, exactly as was done 14 years earlier with the electoral system.
    People's Expectation

    The struggle does not end with reducing the power of government at the level of the prime minister. The abuse of human rights still continues. I set our position clearly before the country in advocating the enactment of a new constitutional figure, the public defender, to deal with such abuses.
    This would strengthen the hands of "we the people" in contrast to the existing structure which protects and licences "we the government". It is a reversal of the role of power and resolution of whose hands ultimate power will reside that the new dynamic of a truly free people will evolve.
    Mission of the '90s

    Having freed the working class in the thirties, freed the federal bonds in the fifties to pave the way for Independence in the sixties, freed the country from the blight of socialism in the seventies, freed the economy in the eighties from stifling controls, it remains now to free "we the people" from our own excesses in political empowerment. The JLP has led the struggle through each of the stages of liberalisation and must accept this as a further mission. Notwithstanding the imminent hardships of today there are fundamentally deeper concerns which we fail to observe, prejudicing the ability of the nation to protect its poor and vulnerable.
    All men are equal under the law, says the Constitution. But, in practice, we ignore this precept honouring some as first-class citizens but dishonouring the great majority as second-class. Those in the underclass cannot contribute effectively to the building of the nation. They lack the education and the will to work condemning themselves to the seventy per cent of the population that are dependent on others for help. Until all men have equal respect and equal education they cannot contribute equally because they are unwilling and unable. The building of the nation will rest on the 30 per cent who are more privileged but they are insufficient to give the nation growth.
    Chapter 111 of the Constitution, the Human Rights section, has been virtually rewritten to produce a Charter of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms. This is the instrument required to ensure that men have the right to be equal. The Charter, of which I was the principal initiator, shifts the power of constitutional authority to "we the people". This prevents any more draconian measures of injustice which widen the gap between "we the people and them", the "haves and the have nots".
    Every year, schools graduate twice as many students who are uneducated as those with an education. The uneducated are left behind with crippled careers while the educated go forward. This is the wellspring of poverty, the source from which all injustice is derived, the splitting of the society into first- and second-class citizens.
    The Charter of Rights, if put to work and not left to rot, or to serve the elusive benefit of the privileged, can create what all the plans of the past have failed to do: it will lay the course with the sure hands that guided Jamaica through the uncertain pathways of the crossroads of our history when it steadied the ship, righted the course and sailed into safe harbour.
    And now having freed the working class in the thirties; freed the bonds of federation in the fifties to pave the way for Independence in the sixties; freed the country from the political blight of socialism in the seventies; freed the economy for production in the eighties, it remains now to free "we the people" through the Charter of Rights.
    Let the Charter be your Magna Carta, let it be your book of life to complete the liberation led by the JLP. "We the people" must be satisfied with nothing less than to unleash the powerful energies of the Charter of Rights to fulfil our destiny as a people. That will be our greatest liberating mission of all.




    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/colum...#ixzz2Z1BIL5bX
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

  • #2
    The JLP at 70: The challenge of renewal for relevance

    Claude Robinson

    Sunday, July 14, 2013












    THE opposition Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) last week began a year-long observance of the 70th anniversary of the party founded by Alexander Bustamante July 8th 1938 in the midst of region-wide social turbulence that would signal the beginning of the end of colonial rule in what used to be called the British West Indies.

    Naturally, the party leadership will use the occasion to highlight their achievements; support the claim as better managers of the economy; and favourably interpret their contribution to the unfolding of the epochal events in national development over the past seven decades.



    (L-R) P J PATTERSON... described National Hero Norman Manley as the indisputable architect of our nation. GOLDING… described the JLP as a leader-centric party


    1/1


    We heard some of that in the keynote address of former JLP Leader and prime minister, Edward Saga, at a celebratory event last Monday night.
    Among other things, he extolled the JLP for answering the bell for leadership of the political movement in 1944, for rescuing Jamaica from Federation in 1961 and pulling off another rescue act in the 1970s, this time from 'communism'.
    Ironically, Seaga spoke just a few days after a political rival and former prime minister, PJ Patterson, used the occasion of a civic ceremony on July 4, honouring the life and work Norman Washington Manley, founding president of the People's National Party, to present a very different reading of the early history of Jamaica's modern political movement.
    Patterson described the elder Manley as "the indisputable architect of our nation" who gave political leadership to the events of 1938 which, he reminded was part of "a regional revolt against the legacy of slavery, the inequities of the plantation system and the yoke of colonial oppression."
    He asserted that the formation of the PNP in 1938 was to give organised political expression to the ferment and by 1944, Manley had "won the struggle for Universal Adult Suffrage" which gave every adult Jamaican the right to vote for the first time.
    Bustamante, the first charismatic leader in modern Jamaican politics, undoubtedly earned his reputation as a defender of workers' rights, channeling the labour unrest of the period into pay increases for workers on sugar and banana plantations. The organisational vehicle was the Bustamante Industrial Trade Union (BITU).
    He was a member of the PNP for the first four years of that party's life, including the period 1940 to 1942 which he served in detention for his labour agitation. He resigned from the PNP in 1942 and formed the JLP as the political wing of the BITU, on July 8, 1943.
    It's not entirely clear why Bustamante left the PNP to form a rival party. Equally, we are left to speculate how different Jamaican history would have been if the colonial authorities and the privileged elite had to face a united political and labour movement at the time.
    What we do know is that Bustamante was able to transform his personal charisma into votes and so the JLP won the first two terms under Universal Adult Suffrage, first in 1944 and again in 1949.
    We also know that he stamped an autocratic leadership style on the party, a style which caused Bruce Golding, a JLP leader of more recent vintage, to describe the JLP as "leader-centric". I understand this to mean a party that derives its orientation more from the direction of the leader and less from a philosophical foundation or shared world-view.
    We also know that Bustamante, though inactive in the early years of Independence, only stepped down as prime minister in 1967 and party leader in 1974.
    So Donald Sangster, who served as acting prime minister for about three years and prime minister for only 48 days before his unexpected death, was never party leader. The same is true of Hugh Shearer who was first deputy leader during the five years he served as prime minister up to 1972 when the JLP was defeated by a rejuvenated PNP under Michael Manley's leadership.
    Political re-birth in times of turbulence

    Consistent with its formation during a time of turbulence, the JLP seems to go through leadership challenges at times of stress or national uncertainty.
    Edward Seaga prevailed in a closely fought internal leadership struggle in 1974 following the 1972 defeat and proceeded to rebrand the party, moving it from its labour roots to match his own technocratic style.
    Bruce Golding left the JLP to found the National Democratic Movement and later returned to the JLP as leader, as part of a political makeover. So after a string of defeats inflicted by a Patterson-led PNP on a Seaga-led JLP, Golding's reinvention helped the party win the 2007 election.
    Then and had to resign as prime minister and party leader as the former strong man in his constituency was convicted on drug and gun charges in the United States.
    In the wake of that sudden departure, would-be party leaders circled around Andrew Holness and anointed him leader with polls and other soundings showing that he was the person most likely to retain power for a party severely wounded by the Dudus scandal.
    But having lost the 2011 general election which he ran on a promise of "bitter medicine" to come, some seem to be having buyer's remorse especially as the new leader does not appear to be taking the fight, on behalf of the people, to the Portia Simpson Miller administration, itself struggling to breathe hope in a population hurting under severe economic strains.
    The men who put their ambitions on hold in favour of Holness have not buried those ambitions. But while they come close to the surface from time to time there are no clear indications that any of them would prevail in a challenge.
    Holness repeatedly disavows talk of a leadership challenge but former leader and elder statesman Seaga last week, in an interview on Nationwide radio, urged the party to settle the leadership question and present itself as a united, credible alternative administration.
    At issue is whether the party which has had a history of fractiousness will seize the moment to re-invent itself for 21st century politics or retreat into one of its periodic leadership squabbles. Can the party build up its grass roots organisation, clarify its position on the key policy issues facing the country and articulate a vision and a matching implementation programme?
    At the organisational level, Holness claims that people have been lining up to join the party in the aftermath of the party's defeat in the 2011 General election.
    "Right now we are still getting large numbers of people applying formally for membership in the JLP and I was pleasantly surprised by it," Holness told editors and reporters at the Jamaica Observer Monday Exchange at the newspaper's head offices in Kingston. The numbers have not been shared with the public.
    At another level, Holness has promised to publish the findings of a committee that examined the reasons for the loss of the 2011 election. That remains outstanding.
    There are a whole range of policy matters to be clearly articulated. These range from economic issues like jobs to social issues like abortion and gay rights and issues of regional cooperation do with the Caribbean Court of Justice and our continued membership in CARICOM.
    Holness says the JLP has to identify what it is the emerging population wants out of politics and represent that. "We have to communicate what we represent and say what we represent is very similar to what you would want, but that does not happen overnight," he said.
    With fewer Jamaicans voting nowadays, with a majority of Jamaicans placing political parties (along with the police) as the most corrupt institutions, with 53 per cent of the Jamaicans believing that the Government is run by a few big entities in their own interest there is no doubt that this is a time for political rebirth. It's an issue of concern for both parties, and the rest of us.
    kcr@cwjamaica.com



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/colum...#ixzz2Z1CyNZ6b
    Last edited by Sir X; July 14, 2013, 08:12 AM.
    THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

    "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


    "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

    Comment


    • #3
      'No labels for us' - Holness says party not stuck on philosophy
      Published: Sunday | July 14, 2013 0 Comments






      JLP leader Andrew Holness (second left) flanked by members of his team, (from left) Dr Horace Chang, Floyd Green, Marlene Malahoo Forte and Olivia 'Babsy' Grange at a Gleaner Editors' Forum last week. - Rudolph Brown/Photographer


      JLP leader Andrew Holness (second left) flanked by members of his team, (from left) Dr Horace Chang, Floyd Green, Marlene Malahoo Forte and Olivia 'Babsy' Grange at a Gleaner Editors' Forum last week. - Rudolph Brown/Photographer


      Gary Spaulding, Senior Gleaner Writer

      Leader of the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) Andrew Holness has painted the 70-year-old organisation as a pragmatic fusion of socialist and free market systems.

      However, Holness says the JLP shies away from obscure philosophical labels, unlike its main political rival, the People's National Party (PNP).

      Responding to questions at a Gleaner Editors' Forum last week, Holness conceded that JLP is struggling to communicate its concept of governance to Jamaicans.

      But the JLP leader shied away from a philosophical label for the 70-year-old party that the he said is "going through a very complicated and difficult time".

      Holness admitted that the hybrid nature of the JLP has triggered clashes and fierce divergence of views.

      "There are two elements in the JLP's approach to development - the social activist approach and the other is the free-market approach; from time to time they conflict with each other."

      Holness was supported by the party's general secretary, Dr Horace Chang, who argued that the JLP's philosophy is more enshrined in its programme and history rather than a document that you would articulate.

      A CHALLENGE

      "This is a challenge that we have to deal with in this era," Chang conceded.

      Holness said the JLP's socialist orientation came about because the party was formed out of the working class struggles of the 1930s.

      "We maintain a stance which could be classified in some respect as socialist," said Holness of the party that stood boldly on the side of capitalism in the ideologically divisive period of the 1970s and '80s.

      "So we maintain core principles as it relates to free access to education; free access to health care; protection of the poor and vulnerable," added Holness.

      "We do believe that the State ought to make provisions. We believe that the State should be proactive in lifting up the mass of the people," a sentiment that is reminiscent of Michael Manley who led the country through its foray into socialism.

      Ironically, Holness was born in 1972, the year that Manley led the PNP to an election victory, and two years before, the PNP president introduced Jamaica to the ideology of 'democratic socialism'.

      Holness, however, stressed that the party's practical approach to governance has induced it to some of the trappings of the free market principles.

      "The JLP is a pragmatic party, we are the party of what works, we take solutions, we put them together to deal with the problems that face us," emphasised Holness. "However, we do also take some free-market principles, we do believe in a small efficient Government as a core principle of the JLP.

      "We believe in private sector-led growth, we don't believe that the State has the capacity to drive growth (which) has to be private sector-led, and therefore we believe that the role of Government is to create the regulatory environment in which business can flourish," said Holness.

      NOT A QUESTION

      The JLP leader stressed that, at 70, the party is not fixated on an obscure ideological philosophy in the evolving political/economic environment in which Jamaica exists.

      "Whether or not a philosophy is necessary or needed in a political organisation is not a question that is resolved in any way, there are many political organisations that don't rely on philosophy," argued Holness.

      He stressed that instead of a defining philosophy, the JLP is guided by some fundamental core principles.

      CORE PRINCIPLES

      "We do have some core principles. As to whether you could say we have a socialist philosophy, we couldn't quite answer that. We couldn't quite say yes, but we have pragmatic way of doing things as we take what works."

      He argued that the JLP, as the political force that came after the PNP, was always in an unusual place.

      "We started as a working-class movement, born out of a union, but when the time for referendum (on Federation) came around the business class turned to the JLP and was incorporated into the structure of the party."

      The leader of the JLP for the past two years conceded that the party was celebrating its 70th anniversary milestone at a critical juncture in the country's development.

      "Right now, we are going through a transition, we are trying to rebuild the structures. At the same time, you have to recognise that that political environment has changed and is dynamic, and we have to be able to respond to that change."
      THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

      "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


      "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

      Comment


      • #4
        JLP need a leadership challenge, to be legit in my eyes ,Montaque, Robertson and Holness need to go from any leadership post in the JLP.


        Just my opinion
        THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

        "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


        "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

        Comment


        • #5
          no the issue is Jamaican are used to donship and not intellectuals.
          So they will follow blindly behid Eddie or sista P but Andrew comes from policy and pragmitism so they dont understand that.

          Comment


          • #6
            Andrew is a fool , look at the clowns around him , if robertson and monteque are considered intellectuals to be surrounded with , Jamaica inna trouble.
            THERE IS ONLY ONE ONANDI LOWE!

            "Good things come out of the garrisons" after his daughter won the 100m Gold For Jamaica.


            "It therefore is useless and pointless, unless it is for share malice and victimisation to arrest and charge a 92-year-old man for such a simple offence. There is nothing morally wrong with this man smoking a spliff; the only thing wrong is that it is still on the law books," said Chevannes.

            Comment


            • #7
              Seaga is very good at policies, can't take that away from him but also the other qualities you mention.

              The Jamaican people do not hold politicans accountable and force them to do their best.
              • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

              Comment


              • #8
                Andrew have to be able to sell himself within the next six to 10 months or he is going to have steep hill to climb. He had enough time to put a package and he has to sell it.
                • Don't let negative things break you, instead let it be your strength, your reason for growth. Life is for living and I won't spend my life feeling cheated and downtrodden.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Gwaaan Labarite!!!!!!!!!!!!!
                  TIVOLI: THE DESTRUCTION OF JAMAICA'S EVIL EMPIRE

                  Recognizing the victims of Jamaica's horrendous criminality and exposing the Dummies like Dippy supporting criminals by their deeds.. or their silence.

                  D1 - Xposing Dummies since 2007

                  Comment

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