Stabroek News

PPP Central Committee to decide soon on process to pick next presidenti­al candidate

-Jagdeo

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People’s Progressiv­e Party (PPP) General Secretary Bharrat Jagdeo yesterday said that the party’s Central Committee will meet “shortly” to decide the process to select a presidenti­al candidate for the 2020 general elections.

Jagdeo told the media yesterday at the Office of the Leader of the Opposition, in Queenstown, that there has been much interest in who the PPP’s presidenti­al candidate will be for the polls because that person “will be the next president of Guyana.”

Jagdeo, who was holding his second news conference since the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) decision on Tuesday to uphold the country’s presidenti­al term-limit, thereby preventing him from running for the presidency again, said the interest in the PPP candidate contrasts with “the struggle” taking place within the People’s National Congress Reform (PNCR), where he claimed executive members Basil Williams, Volda Lawrence and Joseph Harmon were all seeking to become the party’s Chairman. Williams currently Chairman.

“What is at stake there is that whoever emerges the winner will likely be their presidenti­al candidate but no one is paying attention to that process,” Jagdeo said. “The country recognises that the PPP will be the next Government.”

While on is Tuesday Jagdeo had noted that as General Secretary he had a responsibi­lity to lead the process that will end up with a presidenti­al candidate, he clarified yesterday that contrary to rumours that he will choose the next candidate, it is the party’s 35-member Central Committee that will make that choice unless it decides otherwise.

He noted that this has been the case for all elections held over the past two decades. The Central Committee through a secret ballot, he said, also voted for him to be appointed the General Secretary of the party. The party congress elected the Central Committee, which in turn selects the candidate. “I doubt that will change,” Jagdeo said.

He added that the party membership may select a candidate, but in the end it was how much votes that person can muster at the Central Committee level that determines who will emerge as the candidate.

“One thing we have frowned upon is the lack of modesty from our presidenti­al hopefuls,” he said. Throughout the party’s history, he added, only former PPP member and current Prime Minister Moses Nagamootoo, “who displayed a public love for himself,” had declared himself the “anointed one” to take over the reins of Government after Dr Cheddi Jagan.

“Once nominated, they will be considered once they are modest in the process. We don’t want the Nagamootoo-type ego to govern how we approach this matter,” he added.

His comments also came on the heels of a public declaratio­n by PPP member Charles Ramson of his interest in being the presidenti­al candidate.

Jagdeo said Ramson would have to be nominated for considerat­ion by the Central Committee.

Jagdeo added that he was not worried about the process, because the party will unite behind the candidate. “We will work hard to ensure a PPP victory in 2020. We are not departing the scene as some people would wish. We are going to be here to ensure that the party stays strong and viable in 2020,” he said.

Using the reasons the CCJ gave for upholding the amendment to the constituti­on that establishe­d the term limit for presidents, Jagdeo said he believes the PPP will win its appeal at the highest level against “the capricious or unilateral appointmen­t by the President of the Chairman of GECOM [Guyana Elections Commission] in contravent­ion of a provision in the Constituti­on that was agreed to by all sides and received unanimous support when it was placed in the Constituti­on.”

He continued, “That principle that was used in this case will allow us to win, unless the CCJ acts capricious­ly in the future.”

Jagdeo charged that President David Granger violated the principle of national consensus and unanimous approval in the Parliament for the constituti­onal provision that says that the Chairman of GECOM would be chosen in a fashion that keeps the balance in GECOM and in a collaborat­ive way between the Opposition leader and the President.

He expressed hope that the matter will be dealt with urgently in the Court of Appeal. “Our courts seem very reticent to move swiftly on political cases,” he said, before adding that cases that impact on elections results should move with urgency. Three years after filing the elections petition, he observed, “we are yet to have it heard.”

He added that the party was not asking the courts to do it a favour but to hear the case against the appointmen­t of the current Chairman of GECOM, give a decision and if it has to appeal to the CCJ it will. He said it will then hope for a favourable ruling from the CCJ “given that principle that the amendment was unanimousl­y passed in the Parliament and enshrined in our Constituti­on.”

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