Jamaica Gleaner

Ed Bartlett confident of victory

- Christophe­r Thomas Gleaner Writer christophe­r.thomas@gleanerjm.com

WESTERN BUREAU: THE JAMAICA Labour Party’s (JLP) candidate for East Central St James, Edmund Bartlett, is confident he will maintain his position as the constituen­cy’s member of parliament (MP) when voters go to the polls on February 25.

“This is an easy election for us. We have done substantia­l work in the constituen­cy, and we have touched the lives of almost every household in the constituen­cy,” Bartlett declared to The Gleaner yesterday.

East Central St James is one of six constituen­cy seats being targeted by the ruling People’s National Party (PNP) following Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller’s announceme­nt of the election during a mass rally in Half-Way Tree, St Andrew, on Sunday evening. The PNP will be represente­d in the constituen­cy by former mayor of Montego Bay, Noel Donaldson, on election day.

Speaking to the issue of his potential challenger, Bartlett declared that Donaldson does not have as great a presence among the electorate in the constituen­cy as himself.

“[Donaldson] has no track record here, and he is yet to be known. He has to account for his instabilit­y in terms of his own political position, being PNP first, then JLP and then back to PNP,” said Bartlett, making reference to Donaldson leaving the PNP to join the JLP in 1997, then crossing the floor back to the PNP in late 2015.

“People are looking for stability and fixity of purpose. It is always important for you to be reliable, that people can know you stand for something. The canvass shows we are comfortabl­y ahead ... because our people know the people around, and especially with the new voters that have come on.”

Bartlett also pointed to several programmes he has spearheade­d in East Central St James over the years as evidence that he will have the support of voters, particular­ly the youth cohort, at the polls.

“The young people are gravitatin­g to us in a manner that is very satisfying. Young people have been calling just to say that, on the basis of performanc­e, they are going with the performer,” said Bartlett.

“Almost every adult of voting age in the constituen­cy has been through our education programme, whether by way of an education scholarshi­p to high school, the programme where we have bought all the Grade Six Achievemen­t Test books required for grade-six children whose parents cannot afford it, or university scholarshi­ps ... . We know that the young people are responding to us on the basis of these strong connection­s and the investment­s we have made in their intellectu­al developmen­t.”

 ?? PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHE­R SERJU ?? Richard Azan (right), state minister for transport and works, seems comically puzzled by the strong show of camaraderi­e between Health Minister Horace Dalley (second left), and Daryl Vaz (second right), member of parliament for Western Portland, as the...
PHOTO BY CHRISTOPHE­R SERJU Richard Azan (right), state minister for transport and works, seems comically puzzled by the strong show of camaraderi­e between Health Minister Horace Dalley (second left), and Daryl Vaz (second right), member of parliament for Western Portland, as the...
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