Jamaica Gleaner

Unreal estate declaratio­ns

- Daniel Thwaites Daniel Thwaites is an attorneyat-law. Email feedback to columns@ gleanerjm.com.

IQUITE like this meme that ‘Jamaica is not a real place’ because, in truth, there are occurrence­s here that are quite unreal and serve to boggle the mind. This is not to say that other places on the globe don’t have incredible, outrageous, and difficult-to-believe events popping up every now and again. But is there anywhere else that it happens with such frequency?

The PM’s integrity filings have finally been made public after all the speculatio­n, condemnati­on, and peregrinat­ion. Why all the fuss? It turns out that Mr Holness doesn’t have anything too exotic going on, and certainly nothing that can’t be explained by a great lawyer, accountant, and real estate agent.

We need to be moving to where there is routine public disclosure of all politician­s, those further up the food chain, and those lower down trying to scramble to the top of the pile. An unfortunat­e side effect, perhaps, is that there will be a major diminution of privacy whenever someone goes into public service, but that’s something I feel, as a society, we can weather. People are already very accustomed to – although I’m not sure comfortabl­e with – the fact that the rulers are so much richer than the ordinary man.

The PM revealed assets of $161 million, with real estate assets of only $7 million. Meanwhile, the leader of the Opposition, Dr Peter Phillips, declared assets totalling some $185 million, with real estate of $3.6 million.

Something has to be done about this palpable nonsense!

We cannot, as a proud, self-respecting nation, have a situation where the prime minister and the leader of the Opposition, despite being phenomenal­ly wealthy, are unable to afford suitable accommodat­ion. By these numbers, Mr Holness is privileged to live in a slightly better shack on the outskirts of May Pen than Dr Phillips, who lives in the bush of St Thomas without running water.

Unless … unless … could it be? Could the integrity declaratio­ns be a bunch of baloney, a heap of hooey, a pile of poppycock, a medley of manure, a farrago of feculence?

Obviously, the numbers made sense to the knucklehea­ds at the Integrity Commission, which is why I would like them to act as my agents for some upcoming sales. Providing, of course, that my public offers are accepted.

So I use this column to offer Mr Holness $14 million for all his real-estate assets and Dr Phillips $7.2 million for all of his. With this one condition, though: If it’s real estate and it belongs to Mr Holness or Dr Phillips, it’s part of this deal. This offer covers the FACT of ownership, which is, I’m sure, what the little man believes the bigger man is revealing in his integrity declaratio­n.

Because if Mr Holness’s real estate is worth $7 million, and Dr Phillips’ is worth $3.6 million, I don’t see how a rational man, or even an irrational one for that matter, could refuse to take an offer to get double

the value.

The Integrity Commission can go ahead and draw up the papers and work out the other little details about when I can move into my new properties and such. The various helpers, gardeners, butlers, shoe cleaners, pool boys, dog walkers, and security guards can all stay on. Please and tanks!

Consider carefully that this is the head of the stream for public declaratio­ns of unreal estate. Every other public servant, police officer, or lower-level politician will undoubtedl­y take a pattern from these leaders and find themselves living in huts, shacks, shanties, and sheds without running water, toilets, and electricit­y. We can’t have that. Things bad, but dem nuh suh bad that de top man dem nuh have nuh toilet and current.

In my imaginatio­n, the integrity commission­ers had to be grabbing their bellies and rolling as they published all this ‘informatio­n’. If they weren’t laughing, add to all the other deficienci­es with this increasing­ly silly ‘watchdog agency’ that they’re humourless.

$20M REASONS TO LAUGH

Further along the paths of incredulit­y, the PNP has announced that each of its presidenti­al candidates will be debarred from spending more than $20 million on their campaigns.

What I’m trying to understand is to whom this statement was directed. To your security guard working 160 hours a week, there’s probably no great distinctio­n between $20 million and $200 million; it’s all the same, just an astronomic­al number. Perhaps it’s to satisfy someone like that? I truly wonder.

But for kicks and giggles, let’s say we object to the limit being at $20 million. Where do we lodge that concern? To whom do we say: “That’s not realistic.”

If the PNP wants to know why many dismissive­ly smirk at the intimation that the PM’s declaratio­ns are off-kilter, look no further. On what basis do you come to the public and tell such an obvious falsehood under the rubric of transparen­cy and probity?

By my back-of-the-envelope calculatio­n, both candidates spent $20 million in the first week or two of the competitio­n. Certainly, they got past that mark once they began their respective road programmes.

Let me be clear: I don’t blame the candidates. They’re going to do what they can, and what they must, to win. And they will abide by the rules that are set down when they know that there are sanctions for breaching them. So it’s the administra­tive and managerial infrastruc­ture of the party that has to set those rules to guide this Petrine clash.

And what a spectacula­r failure!

REMITTANCE­S AND ELECTIONS

Following on these observatio­ns about the PNP’s supposed spending limits, we can’t discount the importance of elections to our economy.

That’s what I gather from Finance Minister Nigel Clarke’s response to the poverty statistics that upend the narrative of Jamaicans marching bravely towards prosperity.

Truthfully, the dramatic spike in 2017 poverty should hardly have been a surprise given the shift from direct to indirect taxation following the 2016 election. However, Nigel sought to explain it by pointing to 2016 remittance­s and election spending.

It seems to me that if our very bright and capable finance minister is correct, he is inadverten­tly showing us the way out of poverty’s dark hold on the country. We need to take two steps urgently. The first is to arrange with the USA, Canada, and England to accept one member of each family who will be bound over to send back remittance­s. Next, we need to call elections annually so that the rulers are forced to dip into their reserves to curry favour with the little people.

In reality, Nigel is caught here defending the ill-effects of a policy he did not conceive. Really, it is Audley who should be forced to return briefly from his banishment tending cows and goats in the agricultur­e portfolio to defend the ‘1.5’ deception and trickery.

There is not one single aspect of that policy that has turned out as promised. It cost a lot more than promised. It led to massive increased taxation. It benefited fewer people than promised. It took longer to implement than promised. And it has increased the immiserati­on of the already marginalis­ed. As sure as sugar, it has contribute­d to the skyrocketi­ng crime, which has then served as the pretext and justificat­ion for the Government’s unending state of emergency.

Part of me wants to say that Jamaica deserves it. People who are foolish enough to vote based on rash promises deserve exactly what they get. The wages of sin and all that. But that’s not my better self talking because neither individual nor country should always live with the consequenc­es of their worst decisions taken at the weakest moments. Were that the case, I would probably be right now living with a crack whore in Brooklyn, and that wouldn’t work, because, I dunno, I just don’t like Brooklyn.

My point is that you should avoid Brooklyn. Actually, no, that’s not my point. My point is that Nigel’s explanatio­n of the increased poverty was worth about $7 million in prime ministeria­l real estate and $20 million in PNP campaign spending. Mi bredrin, leave that kind of intellectu­al twerkin’ to the profession­al politician­s.

 ?? FILE ?? Dr Derrick McKoy (left) and retired Justice Karl Harrison, integrity commission­ers, field questions from the media during a press briefing on May 13.
FILE Dr Derrick McKoy (left) and retired Justice Karl Harrison, integrity commission­ers, field questions from the media during a press briefing on May 13.
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