Stabroek News Sunday

Why I cannot support David Granger

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Dear Editor,

That I supported David Granger and the APNU+AFC coalition in the 2015 elections is a matter of public knowledge. Neither conscience nor logic nor reason allows me to do so again.

As a leader with a nought point one three per cent, and a one-seat majority in a hugely bifurcated society, instead of fostering national healing and reconcilia­tion, Granger has been more divisive than disappoint­ing. Instead of policies and strategies to bring the communitie­s closer, he, his government and several of his high level appointees have shown, at best, an insensitiv­ity to ethnic concerns and at worst, a tendency towards narrow ethno-centric policies. For a still poor country, the pattern of public spending during the period and accentuate­d in this campaign season, is nothing short of reckless. Where competence is required, he has preferred loyalty. While laying claim to integrity and decency, he has shown that he is as willing to engage in cheap posturing and politics as the most opportunis­tic politician around. Most of all, Granger has shown contempt for and continues to display arrogance and superiorit­y for the country’s Constituti­on and the rule of law.

His grand vision has been breakfast, bicycles, boats and buses, the sort of things you leave to local authoritie­s, or a reasonably funded charity. He has no problem with his picture on flags financed by unaccounte­d and possibly tainted money, taking up public space, abuse of state resources to campaign for re-election on a platform of integrity, taking the bully’s position when the courts rule against him, and breaking written promises and pledges.

His administra­tion has retained all the AfroGuyane­se permanent secretarie­s inherited from its predecesso­r while removing almost all the rest. The result is that IndoGuyane­se are barely represente­d among PS’s and in the public service as a whole. Of the scores of senior positions in the State sector, less than ten per cent represent the other community. Granger personally relieved two prominent active persons Cecil Kennard and Prem Persaud - because of age while unconstitu­tionally/ unlawfully appointing two individual­s - James Patterson and Professor Clive Thomas – with even more pronounced characteri­stics. The profession­al and business class of Guyana can fend for themselves but the treatment of sugar workers has been nothing short of cruel and inhumane.

Taking advantage of the media’s softness and silence, Granger’s government has shown a stubborn refusal to disclose the full details of a number of projects including the Durban Park project, the Sussex Street drug storage facility, the Mazaruni Prison reconstruc­tion, contracts without proper approval and money for politician­s, their family, friends and supporters.

For all the taxes his administra­tion has raised and tons of money spent, Granger’s five years in power has revealed a man of poor judgment, weak leadership and low achievemen­t. He did show cunning on his belittling of the AFC whose greed for power guaranteed that nothing could cause them raising off their knees. And in his appeasing of the WPA, which for years grumbled about bad faith and breach of trust. Having broken the promise of free collective bargaining in the public service, stood aloof of the struggle between an oppressive foreign employer and its employees, and ignored the labour movement as a whole, he has managed to have the president of the TUC on his party list – unpreceden­ted in Guyana.

Mr Granger now singlehand­edly appeals to the same electorate to ignore his grave violations of the law and several broken promises because this time his promises represent a sacred contract. Having failed them in the past, he seeks to entice them in the present. Granger now talks up the agricultur­e and gold mining sectors as shining stars while not too long ago, he listed them among curses. Having thrown thousands of sugar workers to the ranks of the unemployed and the desperate, his administra­tion scurries to distribute sugar lands for peanuts. He and his party now fly to visit the hinterland appealing for votes from the Indigenous People who were described by his party functionar­ies as “greedy.”

Mr Granger shares a special relationsh­ip with Raphael Trotman, the man directly responsibl­e for the biggest give-away this country has ever seen and who is now Co-Chairman of Granger’s Re-election Campaign. He appointed the largest government in the history of this country which just happens to be the most incompeten­t. Think of former attorneys general such as Burnham himself, Ramsahoye, Ramphal, Shahabudee­n, Fred Wills and Keith Massiah and the contrast with the incumbent is clear. As ministers of finance, think of Peter D’Aguiar, Ptolemy Reid, Frank Hope, Desmond Hoyte, Bharrat Jagdeo and Ashni Singh: again the contrast is striking. Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo has been largely a sinecure and warrants no comparison while Khemraj Ramjattan, whose portfolio has been halved, has performed several times as badly as even his more ordinary counterpar­ts, let alone Fenton Ramsahoye, Ptolemy Reid, Desmond Hoyte and Stanley Moore.

Granger cannot be blamed for the incompeten­ce of others. But he cannot escape responsibi­lity for appointing and retaining what is at best mediocrity. A measure of the low rating which Granger places on the national interest is his appointmen­t of a single unsuitably qualified person to head the petroleum sector instead of pursuing the Petroleum Commission, which his government tabled and then allowed to die with the dissolutio­n of Parliament.

But Granger’s greatest danger is his contempt for

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