Daily Observer (Jamaica)

PM identifies growth, prosperity and social progress as main issues facing his Government

- BY BALFORD HENRY Senior staff reporter balfordh@jamaicaobs­erver.com

Prime minister Andrew Holness has indicated that the most serious challenge facing his Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) Administra­tion is securing growth, prosperity and social progress within its political context.

According to Holness, having ensured the establishm­ent of a competitiv­e democratic political tradition by contesting the first general election under universal adult suffrage in 1944, establishi­ng the independen­ce of the state in 1962 and reaffirmin­g Jamaica as “a free, independen­t, market-oriented and liberal democratic state in 1980”, the challenge is now to secure economic growth, prosperity and social progress, within this political context of being free, independen­t and being a market-based and liberal democracy.

Holness told JLP members and guests, who joined in celebratin­g the party’s 78th anniversar­y, “it is now the challenge and the focus for those political parties that have wrestled with trying to secure economic progress and economic growth within this context”.

He said that the primary success that the JLP Government has achieved so far, within this context, is the establishm­ent of fiscal discipline within the economic space.

“The history books have not yet been written on this and, indeed, it is going to be contested, ‘When did it start?’ This push towards recognisin­g that the management of our public financing were not aligned with proper economic policies,” said Holness.

The prime minister said that in 2009, while he was a member of the JLP Administra­tion led by former Prime Minister Bruce Golding, the party wrestled with getting the economy on the right track.

“We started with the first debt exchange, which literally started the recognitio­n that we could not continue with high interest rate policies. It started off with what we called the introducti­on of fiscal discipline. It didn’t end up how we wanted it to, and we went through a period from 2011 to 2016, where the country was engaged with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and establishe­d the fiscal rules,” declared Holness.

“We took over again in 2016. I took over as prime minister at that time and, since then, we have made as a primary focus of this Government for fiscal discipline; good fiscal management of the affairs of the country,” he said.

Holness also reminded the audience that this year marks his 10th anniversar­y of his elevation to leadership of the JLP, following the resignatio­n of Golding in 2011.

He lost a general election he had called in December 2011, but after four years — 2012 to 2016 — as leader of the Opposition, he was returned to Jamaica House in 2016, and won with a widened majority of 49-14 in the most recent general election on September 3, 2020 for his third term as prime minister.

In terms of reshaping the party to meet the new challenges of Government, Holness explained that, after his loss in 2011, he was forced into introspect­ion as to what the JLP really stood for, and what it needed to do when it was returned to Government.

“I commission­ed a report on the party and did a very extensive study of the party and the issues affecting the party, and how we should correct them. What came across very clear from that study, was that the people were not so much concerned about ideology. People were more concerned about the results, so they were looking for a political party that understood their issues and would bring practical solutions to those concerns,” declared Holness.

He said that since then he has been involved in re-crafting the party’s message to the people, to deal with the issue which was not about just about the presence of poverty, but how the Government would bring an end to poverty in Jamaica.

Other speakers at the function at the Spanish Court Hotel in New Kingston last week, included the party’s chairman, Robert Montague; General Secretary Dr Horace Chang, and Trelawny Northern Member of Parliament Tova Hamilton.

Six stalwarts of the party were honoured for serving. They included 95 year-old former Cabinet minister and Member of Parliament for St Andrew West Rural (19761989), Dr Mavis Gwendolyn Gilmour-petersen, a medical practition­er who served as minister of education from 1980 to 1986, and minister of social security and consumer affairs (1986-1989) in the Administra­tion led by then Prime Minister Edward Seaga.

The others were former Cabinet ministers Edwin Allen, Douglas Vaz and Anthony Johnson, former president of the Senate, Jeanette Grant Woodham; and former mayor of Kingston and Member of Parliament for Kingston Central, Ryan Peralto, who also served as general secretary and chairman of the JLP.

The function was also marked by the launch of a National Scholarshi­p Fund which will be awarded to Jamaican students attending The University of the West Indies, the University of Technology, and Northern Caribbean University .

 ?? (Photos: Joseph Wellington) ?? Minister of Labour and Social Security Karl Samuda admires a picture the late Douglas Vaz, a former Cabinet colleague, who was among those honoured at a function marking the 78th anniversar­y of the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) recently
(Photos: Joseph Wellington) Minister of Labour and Social Security Karl Samuda admires a picture the late Douglas Vaz, a former Cabinet colleague, who was among those honoured at a function marking the 78th anniversar­y of the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) recently
 ??  ?? Prime Minister Andrew Holness (right) greets former Jamaica Labour Party MP, a 95-year-old Dr Mavis Gilmour at the JLP’S 78th anniversar­y celebratio­n at Spanish Court Hotel, New Kingston, on Thursday.
Prime Minister Andrew Holness (right) greets former Jamaica Labour Party MP, a 95-year-old Dr Mavis Gilmour at the JLP’S 78th anniversar­y celebratio­n at Spanish Court Hotel, New Kingston, on Thursday.

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