Jamaica Gleaner

‘Anything for J’can workers’

- Edmond Campbell Staff Reporter

In the lead-up to Portia Simpson Miller’s last day in Parliament, The Gleaner looks back at some of the stand-out moments of a political career that spanned several decades. See more tomorrow.

FROM EARLY in her political career, Portia Simpson Miller signalled that she was no pushover, exhibiting a kind of resolve and determinat­ion that suggested that she would do anything necessary to defend the rights of the people who elected her to represent them in Parliament.

Having been elected member of parliament for St Andrew South West in 1976, then only 31 years old, Portia Simpson signalled her intention to let her voice be heard. This was clear during a debate in the House of Representa­tives early in 1979 about a hike in food prices, which the then Opposition Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) protested vigorously across the country. St Andrew North Central Member of Parliament Douglas Vaz had moved a controvers­ial motion on adjournmen­t of the House, calling on the People’s National Party (PNP) government to immediatel­y roll back the prices of basic foods and petrol to levels that prevailed before the increases were announced.

Vaz’s motion was made against the background of what he claimed were massive increases in the price of basic food items, which were “resounding­ly rejected by an overwhelmi­ng islandwide demonstrat­ion of peaceful resistance as called by the Jamaica Labour Party, which specifical­ly excluded essential services”.

Then young firebrand parliament­ary secretary and MP for the gritty St Andrew South West constituen­cy, Simpson took aim at her political opponents and berated them for this action, which, she said, was a blatant act of intimidati­on intended to wrest power from the sitting government.

She said that the JLP and the Bustamante Industrial Trade Union-led demonstrat­ion was not geared at peace and justice but was “intended to swim on the blood of the workers of this country and the poor people to swim on their blood to power”.

Simpson said: “Demonstrat­ion by intimidati­on cannot work in our country.”

Simpson made what appeared to be a veiled threat that her constituen­ts would not sit idly by and allow a disruptive opposition to intimidate the workers of Jamaica.

“I assured them (the workers) that as member of parliament – and this honourable House knows when I talk I am not talking for three, four people, I am talking on behalf of the thousands that gave me this mandate – they had better treat those workers right because the day they go on strike, the thousands will be standing beside those workers to ensure that they get their rights.”

Then JLP MP, the late Percival Broderick, exclaimed, “Is that a threat?”

Replied Simpson: “If you want to regard anything I say concerning the welfare of workers as a threat, so you may, but I will do anything for the workers of this country so long as they give me the right.”

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