Stabroek News

APNU and AFC strike 2020 elections deal

-Ramjattan to have PM spot, AFC for five ministeria­l portfolios

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A meeting yesterday between the two members of the governing APNU+AFC coalition ended with bright smiles and declaratio­ns of “excellent” as sources say the terms of a revised Cummingsbu­rg Accord have been agreed for the 2020 general elections.

Sources tell Stabroek News that the AFC’s candidate Khemraj Ramjattan will hold the post of Prime Minister but will not become the President were that position to become vacant.

Ramjattan who was present at the meeting said that following the “excellent meeting” the parties will go to the polls as a coalition since “together is better”

“You ain’t see me smiling,” a beaming Ramjattan told reporters.

Also present was President David Granger, APNU negotiator Volda

Lawrence and AFC negotiator David Patterson.

The PM post had been one of several areas of contention with the AFC at one point declaring that negotiatio­ns had stalled due to APNU’s failure to accept Ramjattan as the coalition’s PM candidate.

However, a meeting between the two party leaders the next week appeared to settle the matter and negotiatio­ns continued until last Friday when the AFC declared that it would attend one more meeting on Monday November 18 to settle the formula for Ministeria­l appointmen­ts.

There was no meeting on that day, instead the APNU executive met and decided on a formula for the distributi­on of seats within that coalition. They also decided on the way forward in their negotiatio­ns with the AFC with President Granger continuing to declare that any terms agreed must comply with the constituti­on.

Sources have explained that following yesterday’s meeting it was decided that the AFC will be allotted five ministeria­l positions, less than the six they currently hold. The Agricultur­e portfolio currently held by the AFC’s Noel Holder appears to have been retained by the APNU.

Additional­ly it was agreed that President Granger would decide on the list of MPs.

Minister Lawrence though reticent to answer questions told reporters yesterday that the “coalition has always been strong”.

Patterson said “no comment”.

Asked for specifics of the meeting held at the Ministry of the Presidency, Lawrence said a press statement would soon be released. However up to press time none had been received.

In August the two partners indicated that they would revise the Accord claiming that the process should take approximat­ely four weeks. The process instead dragged on for nearly three times that amount of time

Documents on the proposed terms were exchanged on August 27 but by September APNU insiders were declaring that AFC could not receive the same terms while the AFC maintained that the party is in a strong position to ask for the same or even better terms

“It is unrealisti­c, even to a political novice that the AFC could get the same terms as the last accord. Quite frankly, I believe that they will have to be prepared to give up a number of their current ministeria­l positions in exchange for that prime minister post that they so desperatel­y are pushing,” an APNU source close to the process had told Stabroek News.

At the same time one AFC source said “We are going into the discussion­s in good faith, regardless of what you hear. We in the AFC still believe that we can get the same terms as the last accord. Many persons say that we don’t have bargaining power because of our performanc­e at the LGE [local government elections], but the LGE and the general elections are not the same. Is APNU willing to risk our numbers and go it alone? Look at the margin at the last elections and tell me if APNU can win alone?”

Sunset

Seen as the key factor in the defeat of the PPP/C at the May 2015 general elections, th accord is a sunset agreemen with a lifespan of a minimum of three years and a maximum of five years.

The key features were tha the AFC would have the PM position in the governmen and 12 seats in Parliament.

Expecting similar benefit in any new agreement, th AFC in June selecte Ramjattan, the Minister o Public Security, as its PM can didate following a bruisin internal battle. However, i was later made clear by APNU that this was not a done deal.

Grumblings from hardliner within APNU – particular­ly it main component, the PNCR that the AFC had gotten dis proportion­ately high benefit from the accord had begu since 2015 and the renegotia tion was seen as an opportuni ty to reel this in.

Meanwhile, the AFC ha also been unhappy with it allocation of seats at the 201 Local Government Election (LGE) and had pressed at var ious points for an adjustmen in this area.

APNU threw down th gauntlet and had the AFC con test the November 2018 LGE on its own in an apparent bi to have it show its real wort ahead of negotiatio­ns for 2020 accord.

The poor showing of th AFC in those elections and it stance on a range of matter have been seen as diminishin its national standing an APNU hardliners calculate that since the AFC woul bring no electoral advantag to the coalition in 2020 th coalition should look else where for a PM candidate.

It has been suggested tha Minister of State Daw Hastings-Williams, wh would appeal to both femal and indigenous voters wa among the candidates bein considered.

AFC Vice Chairma Catherine Hughes howeve maintained that while man have declared the party dead

they are confident that the people of Guyana who have supported the AFC in the past, remain committed to their principles and the national developmen­t of Guyana.

“The Alliance for Change is a party of principle committed to the fundamenta­l transforma­tion of Guyanese society which includes healing and reconcilia­tion, an end to racial voting, winner takes all politics and constituti­onal reform which we have preached since 2006,” she declared, adding that none of these issues were the subjects of the contest in the LGEs, which suffered from low voter turnout.

“In the absence of a discussion on these major issues, the AFC does not take the results of local government elections as indicative of where the party stands or its standing on major issues of national developmen­t,” Hughes argued, while Chairman Raphael Trotman posited that the 2018 results showed the population is not satisfied in seeing the coalition members “separate and apart.”

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Khemraj Ramjattan
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