PORT OF SPAIN, (Reuters) – Trinidad and Tobago’s Prime Minister-elect Kamla Persad-Bissessar promised yesterday to rebuild a nation fractured by allegations of fiscal mismanagement and corruption under the defeated People’s National Movement.
Her swearing in is set for today.
“Our nation has been in crisis,” Persad-Bissessar, who will be the Caribbean country’s first woman prime minister, told jubilant supporters after her party’s victory at the polls.
“Because of you we now stand on the cusp of a great moment in our history, one in which we begin the task of bringing people together to rebuild Trinidad and Tobago to make it safer, cleaner, more truly progressive than it has ever been before,” Persad-Bissessar said.
Her United National Congress coalition swept a number of marginal and PNM stronghold areas to win 29 out of the 41 parliamentary seats in Monday’s elections, according to preliminary results from the Elections and Boundaries Commission.
As the vote tallies showed a broad victory, her supporters formed a convoy to congregate at the UNC headquarters in the industrial center in Couva. The headquarters was transformed into a sea of yellow — the UNC’s color — and the bar was open free to everyone.
Persad-Bissessar, a 58-year-old former attorney general, pledged to bring transparency and accountability to all areas of government, while maintaining critical policies to ensure economic stability in the energy-rich nation.
“There will not be the old politics of dismantling programs and projects and plastering of new names just to stake a political claim,” Persad-Bissessar said. “Rather, there will be responsible, collaborative and proactive governance to provide the equitable representation and administration that every citizen, regardless of affiliation or persuasion deserves.”
Trinidad and Tobago is the biggest exporter of liquefied natural gas to the United States and no major changes were expected in the energy sector.
BAFFLING DECISION
The PNM’s leader and former Prime Minister Patrick Manning, who retained his parliamentary seat, conceded early defeat.
The PNM, which won a comfortable 26-seat majority in the 2007 elections, was reduced to 12 seats in Monday’s elections.
Manning, 64, called snap general elections midway in his administration’s five-year term to thwart an opposition motion of no confidence against him.
The move baffled political analysts because the motion was guaranteed to fail, given his party’s majority in Parliament.
Manning’s administration was hurt by high crime, fallout from the global financial crisis and accusations that he squandered energy revenues on regional summits and other projects that did not benefit most Trinidadians.