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  • Karl, how yuh nuh post this?

    PUBLIC AFFAIRS - A close shave
    published: Sunday | August 26, 2007

    Don Robotham, Contributor


    Robotham

    Hurricane Dean veered away from us at the last minute. Even more fortunately, another political hurricane also changed course at the eleventh hour. The Governor-General has at last been able to announce that the general election will shortly take place on September 3.

    After several painful lessons, the Jamaican people are learning to cope with natural disasters. Our problem is with the man and woman-made ones. It is the political storms we have to worry about. Right now, because of the principled stand of some members of the PNP Cabinet and the stern warnings of the independent members of the Electoral Commission, a constitutional crisis has been narrowly averted.

    The mere fact of the declaration of a state of emergency was not the problem. The problem was the back-door manner in which it was done, coupled with the election postponement fiasco. When, on the occasion of Hurri-cane Ivan, Mr. Patterson declared a state of emergency, this was done before the hurricane arrived - and in a context when there was no impending general election. Whether one agreed with him or not, it was clear that this was pre-emptive and non-partisan. In this current case, the declaration came after 'Dean' had passed, when there was little or no looting, on the eve of a general election.

    As time passed, it emerged that the step was not taken on the advice of the police high command. It also became apparent that the Minister of National Security was not consulted, not to mention the Leader of the Opposition.

    When the Governor-General's official proclamation was finally published, it was in stark contrast to the statement of the Prime Minister. The Prime Minister gave as her reason the danger of looting. But there is not a single word about looting in the Governor-General's proclamation.

    Even more oddly, the Prime Minister did not present this extremely serious decision to the country in person. She left it to a lowly functionary to read. Even when it came to reading the promised announcement of a new date for the upcoming general election on Wednesday night, she did not appear in person and there was no word about the promised new date.

    Instead, we were treated to a stealth presentation full of election handouts disguised as disaster relief - and arriving deep in the night to boot - audio only, plus a still photograph. When votes are to be hustled, there is no problem in appearing live and direct in broad daylight. When the fundamental rights of the Jamaican people are at stake, suddenly she is missing in action.

    POSTPONEMENT OF DATE

    As if the confusion over the state of emergency was not enough, it was followed by the scheming around the postponement of the date for the general election and the reopening of the school year.

    When it was announced that the election was postponed to September 3 on the unanimous recommendation of the Electoral Commission, this seemed eminently reasonable. But then we were told this was a mistake and that this was a mere recommendation which had first to be approved by Cabinet.

    Word soon spread of heated Cabinet meetings on Tuesday and Wednesday at which tongues were drawn! At both of these meetings, the Prime Minister was overruled and the September 3 date was reaffirmed. Strangely, despite this majority Cabinet decision, no new date was announced. One report said that the September 3 date had been sent to King's House. King's House reported no record of ever having received any such recommendation.

    Another Cabinet meeting was convened as late as Friday, in a last-ditch attempt to reverse the previous decision. Faced with the likelihood of resignations from the Electoral Commission, opposition to the September 3 date faded. The recommendation of the Electoral Commission prevailed.

    RIGHT TO VOTE

    In the first days after 'Dean', many were prepared to give the Government the benefit of the doubt. I certainly had no objection to a state of emergency. But this initial sympathy quickly evaporated. Something more dangerous was afoot.

    The real purpose behind the state of emergency was to put the JLP on the backfoot. That was also what was behind the frantic desire to postpone the general election beyond 30 days - into the special period, for the first time in our modern political history. Many months ago, I warned friends that there were political activists at large in Jamaica who wanted to push the election date down beyond October into the special period. I was dismissed as hysterical. Well, who is hysterical now?

    Many have been focusing on the rights or wrongs of a state of emergency. But bigger fish were being fried here. For the real issue before us was no longer the state of emergency. The most important right won by the Jamaican people since emancipation - the right to vote - was now in danger of being taken away.

    It is no secret that all recent polls indicated that the JLP had the political initiative and was gaining rapidly, if not passing the PNP. The last Bill Johnson Poll - not known for favouring the JLP - spoke of a "JLP surge". It pointed out that the JLP had gained four points, while the PNP was stagnant - a dead heat. Most important, Bill Johnson's report contained this innocuous but fateful conclusion: "Based on survey theory, it is likely that the JLP's current momentum willcontinue through to election day on August 27." (Daily Gleaner Thursday, August 16). The recent poll on the effect of the debates confirmed these findings conclusively.

    This and other poll results created despair and panic in the PNP camp, already demoralised by their lacklustre campaign. Then came 'Dean'. Suddenly it appeared that a heaven-sent opportunity had arrived. If one could somehow use 'Dean' to put off the election, time could be bought.

    In that breathing spell, 90,000 household could be promised "a one-off allowance of $2,000." Further, 80,000 pensioners could also be promised a "special allowance" of $5,000, which politicians could walk the length and breadth of Jamaica handing out to a grateful populace. In return for this unprecedented act of 'balancing people's lives', the pensioners and householders would fork over their vote, no questions asked. Most telling of all, the National Housing Trust (NHT) funds could be mobilised to provide a three-month moratorium on mortgage payments, "covering September 1 to November 30". Pay closest attention to this one - for it gives the game away.

    It is one thing to promise handouts, but it is another matte to actually deliver them into outstretched hands. Special agencies and handouts take time to organise and implement. Jamaican government bureaucracies are notoriously slow to move. Indeed, the NHT handout envisaged "a three-month period." In other words, the thinking here was not to postpone the election for a few days or even weeks. The vision was one of months. After all, time was needed for the handouts to reach the intended hands, to be actually pocketed and, hopefully, to turn the election around. From the point of view of the actors in this drama, a three-month delay was essential.

    POLITICAL DESPERATION

    This whole effort, born of political desperation, has now ignominiously collapsed, leaving the PNP utterly fragmented and in disarray. Many are like walking dead, wondering what they did when they chose the present Prime Minister to be their party leader. But don't fool yourself - the schemers could have succeeded.

    If we still have the right to vote in Jamaica, we have a number of people to thank. First, the courageous members of the Electoral Commission who did not waver in the face of extreme political pressure. Second, the principled members of the PNP Cabinet who stood firm in the best Norman Manley tradition in the face of all the vile appeals to political tribalism.

    It will probably cost them the election. But, belatedly, they have rescued what remained of the tattered reputation of their party. Finally, we owe a profound debt to all those in the media - especially Mr. Irascibility himself, Wilmot Perkins, who kept the issue alive. It was a close shave. Let this be a lesson to us all.

    Professor Don Robotham is an anthropologist and former a dean of the School for Graduate Studies and Research at the University of the West Indies, Mona.

  • #2
    karl is a "giggis'"..i.e. a spinner of gigs and of no mean order!

    Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

    Comment


    • #3
      Nothing new here Willi. You have said it all before.
      Filled with speculation! Buttressed with some truth!

      So many will be chokingly apologetic if Portia and the PNP wins.

      It will also be interesting to see who wins the popular vote.
      "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Willi View Post

        In that breathing spell, 90,000 household could be promised "a one-off allowance of $2,000." Further, 80,000 pensioners could also be promised a "special allowance" of $5,000, which politicians could walk the length and breadth of Jamaica handing out to a grateful populace. In return for this unprecedented act of 'balancing people's lives', the pensioners and householders would fork over their vote, no questions asked. Most telling of all, the National Housing Trust (NHT) funds could be mobilised to provide a three-month moratorium on mortgage payments, "covering September 1 to November 30". Pay closest attention to this one - for it gives the game away.

        It is one thing to promise handouts, but it is another matte to actually deliver them into outstretched hands. Special agencies and handouts take time to organise and implement. Jamaican government bureaucracies are notoriously slow to move. Indeed, the NHT handout envisaged "a three-month period." In other words, the thinking here was not to postpone the election for a few days or even weeks. The vision was one of months. After all, time was needed for the handouts to reach the intended hands, to be actually pocketed and, hopefully, to turn the election around. From the point of view of the actors in this drama, a three-month delay was essential.
        This is cheap political electioneering of which I am very embarrassed. It's a massive waste of money that is not benefitting anyone. Which roof cost $5000? Politicians should not be allowed to abuse people's money in this way.

        Shame PNP!!! Shame Portia!!!


        BLACK LIVES MATTER

        Comment


        • #5
          Interesting that I know not the gentleman and posted similar comments a week ago.

          SoE was a wrong call. Suspending rights when curfews are the effective tool is ludicrous.

          Comment


          • #6
            More shots across the bow.....

            Hurricane relief and pork-barrel politics
            By Rev Raulston Nembhard
            Tuesday, August 28, 2007

            From all indications, it would appear that Hurricane Dean has brought the PNP a windfall that it never anticipated. Some may interpret this as an answer to prayer, or the fulfilment of prophecy that once again it has been affirmed that God works in mysterious ways his wonders to perform; that, indeed, he plants his footsteps on the seas and rides upon the storms.

            It is to be expected after every national disaster that government moves with dispatch to help those most affected by it. We have seen this in the aftermath of other hurricanes that have hit the island.

            It is the proper and moral thing to do when considered in its right perspectives. Part of this perspective must be our gratitude to our friends and neighbours abroad, especially the United States, who are always willing to come to our aid in a time of national crisis.

            It cannot escape our thinking this time around that Dean occurred almost on the eve of a national election. If ever there was a time when a government felt justified in indulging in pork-barrel politics, this is it. Before the hurricane, there was a great deal of caution not to repeat Dr Davies' "run-with-it" extravagance of the 2002 polls. That extravagance can now be indulged, and it can be justified on the basis of a concern for the poor and a love for those who have been dispossessed by the hurricane. It can be justified by an appeal to human compassion, and who would quarrel with that?

            Indeed, the extravagance has begun in the new-found love for the pensioners. There has perhaps never been another group of people who have worked for government and who have been treated with greater contempt than our pensioners. It had to take a hurricane to cause an attitude adjustment on the part of the government with respect to the plight of our pensioners.

            What pensioners need is not a dole from government in the time of an emergency. They have given the best years of their life to the government service on behalf of the people of this country. They need consistency of care, and the National Insurance Fund has the resources that can guarantee them a better quality of life.

            They will take the $5,000 that the prime minister has offered to them for they need the money. Some are literally at a point of destitution and every cent helps. But they deserve better, Madam Prime Minister.

            The people of Jamaica must not be fooled with this new-found religion that has resulted in this overwhelming compassion for the masses. These are not ordinary times in Jamaica and the people must not be lulled into a false sense of complacency. The ill-advised State of Emergency has now been lifted. Its application was wobbly and its intentions dubious. It was removed only after leading members of civil society protested against it and when it finally dawned on party functionaries that it could not stand.

            Even they saw that it was doing more harm to the country than good. It was a poor public relations gamble and it might have done more harm to the country than the hurricane did. As long as it remained in place, the greater the danger that it could have inflamed the sensibilities of people and engendered social chaos.

            One may say that the emergency was intended to protect the rights of the people, but let us not be fooled. A State of Emergency gives the government vast and inordinate powers to cauterise and restrict the fundamental rights of citizens. It is the greatest tool available to government for the abuse of power. In the wrong hands it can do incalculable harm and wreak terrible havoc on a people. All well-thinking Jamaicans must be aware of the potential perils of a State of Emergency especially in the face of an impending general election. We have seen those perils in the past and we ignore them to our own detriment.

            The prime minister has finally concurred with the Electoral Office of Jamaica that the elections be postponed to September 3. In the wake of the hurricane this makes eminent sense. What is profoundly disturbing, however, is the indecisiveness of the government in acceding to the wishes of the EOJ.

            Why the delay in moving with dispatch to reassure the nation that somebody was in charge and their welfare was in good hands? Was the delay occasioned by the government's desire to "rinse" the postponement for political mileage? Was this the reason for what I understood to be the frantic political anxiety at Jamaica House where agreement was hard to come by? One wonders what might have happened if Dean had hit us with the intensity of a Gilbert or an Ivan.

            The prime minister is understandably concerned that the hurricane and other matters should not be politicised. But is she aware of her own culpability in politicising the relief efforts? In crafting her government's response to the crisis, what level of consultation has she had with Her Majesty's loyal Opposition?

            How bipartisan is the effort in easing the pain of those who have been more badly affected by the hurricane? Talk about transparency and accountability is one thing. What happens on the ground is quite another.

            In the meantime, the EOJ and Mr Danville Walker in particular must be strongly commended for the work that they have done in promoting a fair and balanced electoral process. They have approached their work with professionalism and great enthusiasm and the country is the better for it. This writer wishes them great strength as they approach September 3. This may yet be the most defining general election in our history since Independence.

            stead6655@aol.com

            Comment


            • #7
              why is it that i could have predicted that this would happen?!!

              Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

              Comment


              • #8
                This statement struct me:
                "The people of Jamaica must not be fooled with this new-found religion that has resulted in this overwhelming compassion for the masses".

                Is this a bad thing?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Picture this....75 yo, no money to buy food, yu clothes wet and soaked, yu have the cold, you get $5000....actually I think it should have been $10k. Just hope it is accross the political divide.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    whey yuh think?

                    Infidelity does not consist in believing, or in disbelieving; it consists in professing to believe what he does not believe. Thomas Paine

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Exile, of course people nah go push whey $5000, but it should have been awarded on some sort of need basis. That granny getting the same $5000 as another granny whose roof is down di lane and piece a zinc ******************** har in har 'ead. She might require a likkle more assistance, no?


                      BLACK LIVES MATTER

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I guess she is demonstrating her love for the poor.

                        sigh


                        BLACK LIVES MATTER

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Willi View Post
                          Interesting that I know not the gentleman and posted similar comments a week ago.

                          SoE was a wrong call. Suspending rights when curfews are the effective tool is ludicrous.
                          Well yuh done kno - I totally disagree!
                          btw - According to at least one person curfews are more restrictive than a State of (Public) Emergency!

                          I wish Gamma could and if he can...give us what the law says on each one.

                          ---

                          Secondly - Why would any sensible thinking person in/with our current polarized divisions...with emotions at a high spurred by electioneering institute targeted curfews to further inflame passions and risk having cries of victimisation? Yes! - why risk chaos?

                          Unless Willi is suggest an island-wide curfew? ...and, that would be in one sense 'same difference' as State of (Public) Emergency!
                          "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Of course not. But this handing out of fish instead of teaching how to fish is not going to help anybody.


                            BLACK LIVES MATTER

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              As Fae said in her article, the people didn't mind it (the SoE). The media houses and some politicians had a problem with it.


                              BLACK LIVES MATTER

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