Jamaica Gleaner

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all 63 candidates in place,” said Robinson.

“Our candidates have been in place for a while and are working. The campaign leadership is finalising our policy platform and communicat­ions strategy,” he added.

And Horace Dalley, member of parliament for Clarendon Northern, said that the party was prepared to face either the general or local government elections separately but also relished the groundbrea­king prospect of a two-in-one poll.

“The prime minister wants to have both elections on the same day. There are some constituti­onal issues and some legal issues that have to be cleared up, but we are prepared for anything the prime minister comes with,” Dalley told The Gleaner.

“The PNP has been preparing for elections from last year. Whether it be two-in-one or onein-one, we are prepared to run the elections.”

Dalley also said that he had been advised that the prime minister had written to the Electoral Office of Jamaica or Electoral Commission of Jamaica for an opinion on a collapsed poll.

Attempts by The Gleaner to contact Director of Elections Glasspole Brown or Chang, the

JLP’s general secretary, were unsuccessf­ul, as calls to their mobile phones went unanswered.

The SOEs mark an important weathervan­e because Holness had said, in April, while seeking a 90-day extension of the special security measures, that he would not call an election while emergency powers were in effect.

And recently, his counterpar­t, Dr Peter Phillips, the president of the People’s National Party, insisted that he intends to hold Holness to that promise.

COUNTERINT­UITIVE DECISION

Chang revealed on Tuesday that the Government was willing to call time on SOEs, which the Holness administra­tion has been using to fight back against gangs. The decision appears counterint­uitive to the Government’s vigorous defence of SOEs’ effectiven­ess.

“There will be no request for extension beyond the 25th of [July]. The idea is to syncronise the existing state of emergency in the Corporate Area and everything come to an end the 25th,” the minister told Parliament.

Chang’s announceme­nt has set tongues wagging, and at least for political commentato­r Kevin O’Brien Chang, the possibilit­y that the prime minister could be setting the stage for an election is logical.

A general election is not constituti­onally due until early 2021 and local government elections by November this year.

“It is quite a possibilit­y you would think. It has always been expected that the prime minister would call and election as soon as possible. Because logics say he has handled the COVID-19 crisis good so far and they want to get the bounce,” said Chang, a pharmacy tycoon.

“Plus, the economic hardships are going to start biting. Until the US sorts itself out, we are going to suffer,” he said on Tuesday evening.

But a senior JLP politician told The Gleaner last night that many pundits have not been interpreti­ng the signals correctly that the election could be called in August.

“He recently made some announceme­nts, including naming Leslie [Campbell] to the Cabinet. You really expect that within two months he is going to be able to do the work that is necessary to achieve the desired outcome? No!” the politician, who did not want to be identified in this story, said as he shared his own prediction with The Gleaner.

“I don’t want to go out there and say my prediction and everybody runs with it and it causes problems like what Peter Phillips did with Portia [Simpson Miller]. That is not my style, but, to me, it seems the election will be after September when there is a clearer picture of what the situation is across the country,” he reasoned.

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