Stabroek News

President’s actions confirm that his objective is to travel the path of PNC party paramountc­y

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Dear Editor, So the President used an unusual word, “vulgarian”, dating back to the 1640-50s, to describe the PPP/C’s protest in the Parliament Chambers during his speech? Most people got the gist of what the word meant but actually the choice of the word by the President is rather illustrati­ve of a particular mindset.

The word means “a vulgar person, especially one whose vulgarity is the more conspicuou­s because of wealth, prominence, or pretension­s to good breeding” according to the Random House and Collins dictionari­es. It is a little used word, popular in the 1800s, and mostly used as a “put down” especially from an aristocrat­ic or upper middle class point of view to denote people not of their class or beneath their class.

So the President found the PPP/C behaviour vulgarian? Funny he didn’t find that the case when he was Leader of the Opposition and his members, surely under his direction, banged the tables for long periods on many, many occasions in the 10th Parliament thereby preventing several members of the government side from speaking, including Minister Clement Rohee for 9 months, or, singing hymns loudly, or, even putting up placards. It happened so many times that the then Speaker, Mr. Raphael Trotman, now Minister of Natural Resources, had to suspend the sittings on several occasions, and, on

others, adjourn the sitting abruptly as the Opposition benches refused to listen to his admonition­s and appeals to stop the noise and allow the sitting to proceed. At no time was any action taken by the Speaker to discipline these members.

This is the same APNU and AFC in opposition who reduced three annual budgets by $90B, thereby denying Guyanese important services and programmes they deserved.

It is the same APNU and AFC opposition which reneged on agreements made in the Inter-Parliament­ary Parties Dialogue with President Ramotar on the Linden electricit­y subsidy, on the compositio­n of the Commission of Inquiry on the Linden Disturbanc­es, and, on the Amaila Falls Hydro Project.

It is the same APNU and AFC opposition which fanned the disturbanc­es in Linden for 36 days that destroyed parts of the town, and, divided the country physically in two.

Ironic isn’t it that the worst behaviour of the parliament­ary opposition in the Chambers was during the 10th Parliament when Mr. Granger was Leader of the Opposition?

And now as Government, the President and his spokespers­on, having unilateral­ly, unconstitu­tionally and undemocrat­ically appointed the Chairman of GECOM, and destroyed trust in the integrity of the electoral machinery, finds the PPP/C protest in the Chambers antination­al? And the Prime Minister calls this action “domestic terrorism”? Their sensibilit­ies have been offended by a peaceful protest? How hypocritic­al!

But the President’s belittling of the Parliament­ary Opposition is a mere veneer to distract from the magnitude of his deeds. The President has cast his stone; he will go down in the annals of Guyana’s history as the first President to violate the constituti­onal provisions regarding the appointmen­t of the Chairman of GECOM. He has triggered a trajectory of his own making; his will be an ignoble notoriety.

He has refused to accept that his actions have immensely damaged the political fabric of our nation. He has further exacerbate­d the situation with his speech in Atlanta, Georgia, which further confirms that his objective is to take this country down a dangerous path of PNC party paramountc­y.

The statement that the “PNC is the face of the future. We are what Guyana looks like, not the people that you saw on Thursday (in the National Assembly)” will require by itself many other letters, but immediatel­y it can be interprete­d as a clarion call that is arrogant, elitist, and ethnically biased, and hence fundamenta­lly undemocrat­ic.

Not surprising the statement reflects the profound prejudice of an urban older male upper middle class in power who have no tolerance for anything different as is reflected repeatedly in their statements, deeds, policies and programmes. Fundamenta­lly, they are anti-working class, anti-farmers, anti-criticism, and undemocrat­ic. While in opposition they were good at dishing out their criticism, mainly based on fiction, but now in government, they are extraordin­arily thin-skinned, even though so many of them are former military men.

They have thrown out transparen­cy and accountabi­lity and believe that they are not open to scrutiny. The posture is one of the “Emperor”, and no one interrupts, troubles, or, worse yet heckles the King—-fortunatel­y Emperors and Kings are of the past, thanks to the people’s struggles for democracy. He, like those before him, will find out in 2020 how Guyanese voters treasure their young democracy.

It appears that these upper middle class sensibilit­ies have been offended by the protest in the Chambers. Maybe those who have been so offended should take a look at the Mother of all Parliament­s which often descends into loud cacophony, or, worse yet, in other parliament­s where there are fisticuffs and furniture throwing as recently seen in the Ugandan Parliament.

Is the government saying to the people that it can do as it wishes with a mere less than 1% of the vote and everyone must sit there and be polite like school children so that we can show that we were well brought up like refined old QC boys?

I have read some letters encouragin­g the Speaker to discipline all 32 PPP/C members. What I do know is despite the consistent unruly and disruptive behaviour, especially in the 7th and 10th Parliament­s by the then opposition, no PNCR MP was ever discipline­d. In fact, only 2 MPs, Dr. Cheddi Jagan and Isahak Bashir have ever been discipline­d over 50 years in the National Assembly, and, this was done by Speaker Sase Narain.

Let’s see if the PPP/C Members will once again be targets of an undemocrat­ic National Assembly. But we can guarantee that silent we shall not be in the face of constant and consistent efforts to undermine our democratic values and rights. Yours faithfully, Gail Teixeira, MP Chief Whip Parliament­ary Opposition

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