Stabroek News

AFC ‘hijacked’ by pro-PNC faction -Jeffrey

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The Alliance For Change (AFC) has been “hijacked” by the pro-PNC faction in its executive, according to political analyst, Dr Henry Jeffrey.

Writing in his Future Notes column in Wednesday’s edition of Stabroek News, Jeffrey cited the recent upheaval that had buffeted the governing coalition partner over the unilateral selection of a Gecom Chairman and which led to the withdrawal of its Canadian arm.

Noting that the AFC’s declared purpose on formation in 2005 was to “bridge the racial divide that had resulted from the dominance of the two major ethnic parties (PPP/C and PNCR)” and to transform governance, Jeffrey asserted that the party has not delivered and is now on the defensive.

“..here we are today: notwithsta­nding all the promises, governance, far from being transforme­d appears now set upon a dangerousl­y reactionar­y course. Indeed, with the AFC firmly asleep in bed with the PNCR, the leader of the latter took to a National Assembly made turbulent by his unilateral decision to select the chairperso­n of Gecom, trying to hood-wink the Guyanese people that the coalition is ushering in opportunit­ies and laying ‘the basis for a system of inclusiona­ry democracy!’ How and why did this occur?”

Columnist Ralph Ramkarran in his column in the last Sunday Stabroek had also criticised President David Granger’s address to Parliament for suggesting that the coalition’s brand of governance was `winner-does-nottake-it-all’.

Jeffrey, who has had a long associatio­n with both the PNCR and the PPP/C, argued that the core of the Canadian chapter’s quarrel with the AFC was that it is managed by an unresponsi­ve oligarchy.

“One only needs to look at how stable their leadership­s are to recognise that usually all political parties based upon similar archaic organisati­onal arrangemen­ts are oligarchie­s that behave similarly. Indeed, given its multiethni­c nature and the general hostility many in the membership felt against both the PNC and PPP, the decision to join with the PNC, matters not how necessary to oust the PPP/C, was bound to be viewed with suspicion. Nonetheles­s, it was seen by many both internally and externally as a sensible exercise of leadership. The problem is that the vast majority of those who supported the PNCR/AFC alliance considered it as a relatively short/medium term arrangemen­t to dislodge the PPP/C and implement constituti­onal reforms and this would have kept the party independen­t and vibrant in keeping with its founding credo”, Jeffrey stated.

However, Jeffrey said what makes the oligarchy now in charge of the AFC appear more estranged from its membership is that the visions that at present move it and the membership are now miles apart.

“While the membership is still largely motivated by the original vision of an independen­t party, the leadership now sees its future as intricatel­y and permanentl­y linked to that of the coalition with APNU, and this cannot be successful­ly explained to the whole membership. The party has been hijacked by the PNC faction lodged in the oligarchy!”, Jeffrey declared.

He said that a good indication of this is found in the fact that the vitality of the AFC as an independen­t party rests upon some of the most popular aspects of proposed constituti­onal reform, e.g., post-election coalitions and more autonomous constituen­cies.

“Yet the victory of the pro-PNC oligarchs has been so decisive that this instrument of the AFC’s liberation and developmen­t has been placed in its own hands without its being able to utilise it. Indeed, the AFC’s leadership finds itself in the invidious position of having to publicly justify the ‘progress’ the coalition has made on constituti­onal reform!”, Jeffrey charged.

A promise by the APNU+AFC coalition of rapid constituti­onal reform within months of taking office has collapsed. Two and a half years later nothing has begun.

While noting that politics is a dynamic process and things could change Jeffrey said it appeared to him that the AFC oligarchs who lost the contest for leadership of the party have obviously made their peace with the current arrangemen­ts and have left the membership on their own.

“All the talk about renegotiat­ing the Cummingsbu­rg Accord (on which the coalition was founded), etc is illusionar­y. After all the negatives having to do with the implementa­tion of this agreement it is now impossible to transform the current ‘paper’ arrangemen­t into something substantia­l? But perhaps our political history contains a hopeful lesson for the alienated membership of the AFC. It is said that the party originated in a desire to recreate the 1950s Jagan/Burnham – Ramjattan/Trotman – experiment with national unity and if so, its reemergenc­e may also be located

there. On that occasion the split in the oligarchy that controlled the PPP led to Forbes Burnham’s defeat; a split in the party and his subsequent formation of the PNC”, Jeffrey noted.

The AFC is currently being led by former PNCR MP Raphael Trotman. He was a surprise winner at the party’s elections earlier this year over the incumbent Khemraj Ramjattan, a former PPP/C MP. Originally it has been a three-way race for leadership along with Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo but he withdrew shortly before the election.

The AFC says it was not consulted on Granger’s controvers­ial selection of retired Justice James Patterson as Chairman. However, at the meeting at State House at which Opposition Leader Bharrat Jagdeo was notified, Trotman was present. Neither Trotman nor the AFC has said in what capacity he was present at that meeting. Trotman.

 ??  ?? Dr Henry Jeffrey
Dr Henry Jeffrey

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