Jamaica Gleaner

Religious party to ban strip clubs, casinos

- Nadine Wilson-Harris/Staff Reporter nadine.wilson@gleanerjm.com

THE CHURCH-BASED Jamaica Progressiv­e Party (JPP) will abolish income tax, ban go-go clubs, and raise salaries for civil servants if it gains state power.

JPP President Gilbert Edwards, who migrated to the United States when he was 20 years old, says his party also plans to increase the national minimum wage and invest in the mothballed national airline.

“I want to bring Air Jamaica back and all the other plans that we have is to make sure that our people are successful and we will be able to strengthen the family,” he told The Gleaner on Tuesday.

He said the abolition of income tax will ensure that Jamaicans will have more disposable income to clothe and feed their families.

“Income tax is very oppressive. People need to keep their income,” said Edwards, who also wants to decrease general consumptio­n tax to 10 per cent. GCT is currently calculated at 15 per cent.

The 57-year-old medical technologi­st said he came from very humble beginnings as he was raised by a single mother who gave birth to him at 15 years old. He grew up in Mt Hindmost in Clarendon, prior to migrating to the US, where he made his fortune partly by launching a diagnostic centre. Edwards said he also had investment­s in other businesses.

The JPP is currently awaiting a formal certificat­e of registrati­on from the Electoral Commission of Jamaica.

Director of Elections Glasspole Brown announced in early June that the registrar of political party was undertakin­g a review of JPP’s compliance with registrati­on requiremen­ts. The party will know on July 11 whether it has been approved, thereby making it the fourth party to be registered by the commission to contest the next general election constituti­onally due in 2021.

READY TO CAMPAIGN

General secretary of the JPP, Robert Rainford, said the party will be campaignin­g once its registrati­on is ratified.

“We have been doing work for four years, and we are just now coming out for the public to see who we are and to support us going forward,” said Rainford.

“I believe that a lot of persons feel that you need a very long time to campaign. If the election is called in August, then we have approximat­ely two full months to take the message across Jamaica.”

The party has more than 50 candidates, the majority of whom are pastors.

Rainford, a pastor in the United Church who has served as permanent secretary in both the justice and local government ministries in the past, said the candidates come from varying background­s and have technical skills to ensure the party’s success.

NOT A THEOCRACY

The party’s colour will be purple, which Edwards, a father of two, said represents royalty. He said he is currently in the process of relinquish­ing his US citizenshi­p so he can be eligible to run for a parliament­ary seat. Jamaica’s Constituti­on outlaws members of the House of Representa­tives and the Senate from having dual nationalit­y except in cases of Commonweal­th citizenshi­p.

Edwards assured that a government run by his party would not be a theocracy, although the JPP would abolish strip clubs, nude hotels and casinos, because of the adverse sociocultu­ral effects these businesses have on women.

One bishop who signed up to serve in the party told The Gleaner that he was initially sceptical until he gradually saw the movement as the answer to prayer.

“The Church and I personally, we have been praying for change and for deliveranc­e and just better for the nation,” he said.

“If the funding is there as said, I think 90 per cent of the work would be finished, because now to find the technocrat­s, the bureaucrat­s, and the people to have the support system in place would not be impossible if the funding would be there,” said the bishop, who requested that his name be withheld.

 ?? BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER RUDOLPH ?? Pastor Robert Rainford, prospectiv­e chairman of the newly formed Jamaica Progressiv­e Party. The religious party intends to ban go-go clubs and casinos and resurrect the national airline.
BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER RUDOLPH Pastor Robert Rainford, prospectiv­e chairman of the newly formed Jamaica Progressiv­e Party. The religious party intends to ban go-go clubs and casinos and resurrect the national airline.

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