Dear Editor,
The People’s Progressive Party/ Civic (PPP/C) is in no way seeking to obstruct the work of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) or to prevent scrutiny of Government’s spending.
The PAC is currently examining the years 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019. A period during which Mr. Patterson, a minister of the then APNU/AFU Government, was part of the Cabinet that authorized spending. The machinations, maneuvers, spin doctoring and deflecting will not change the reality that the APNU/AFC are spinning and deflecting the reality of the squandermania.
Mismanagement and the lack of accountability is what is being exposed and will continue to be exposed as we examine the era of the APNU/AFC 2015 to 2020 at the PAC.
Why would the PPP/C want to obstruct such exposure? The arguments to suggest otherwise are hilarious.
Secondly, the PPP/C Members of the PAC are not seeking to remove Mr. David Patterson as a member of the PAC. We have fully accepted that through the process of the committee of selection, the Opposition is entitled, just like the Government, to name its members to any committee. Mr. Patterson has been so named a member of the PAC.
However, our contention is that he cannot and should not preside over meetings of the PAC that is examining spending by APNU/AFC of which he was a part of, and which based upon evidence, he himself is embroiled in acts of questionable spending, including the acceptance of expensive gifts. This was compounded by the fact that when the matter was first exposed, he tried to cover his acts and only accepted when inconvertible evidence was presented in the media. At which time he attempted to make such a preposterous violation trivial.
The refusal by any other member of the Opposition to preside over the meeting must be seen for what it is, dubious, deceptive, and set in a mode of trickery. All should be aware that Mr. Patterson presided over the debate, a clear conflict of interest since he was the subject and the party that would have been affected by the successful passage of the motion. He used his office as Chairman to attempt to block the debate a clear abuse of privilege. He presided over a debate where he allowed opposition members to hurl personal insults at Government Members of the PAC. He allowed it because it served his own personal interest.
Once clarification was given by the Clerk of the National Assembly that the Motion was properly put and should be proceeded with, the next logical step was a vote.
At that stage, Mr. Patterson vacated the chair, knowing fully well, that the game plan was to leave the PAC without a Presiding Officer. A clear diabolical plot.
The actions of the APNU/AFC and Mr. Patterson and his colleague members of the PAC place public scrutiny and accountability in jeopardy since apart from the task of scrutinizing the Public Accounts, for the year 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019, that is currently before the Public Accounts Committee we have the task of the approval of the Auditor General’s Budget for 2021, which must be presented to the Parliament by the Chairman of the PAC and adding to that that so important task of the reconstituting of the Public Procurement Commission (PPC). The above-mentioned agenda items are of great national importance and should they not be done will seriously affect transparency, accountability, and good governance.
Our motion was to have Mr. Patterson remove himself from being the Chairman of the Public Accounts Committee (explicitly stating that he can remain a member) and if he does not remove himself, the Committee should determine and take necessary action for his removal.
The fact remains Mr. David Patterson while functioning as Minister of Public Infrastructure during the period 2015 June to 2020 July received expensive gifts totaling millions of dollars. He is yet to give an account for his actions.
Can a person who practiced such recklessness head a committee which will examine Government spending while he was a part of the Government and responsible for the Agency which has been cited for multiple breaches, under his tenure? The case is clear.
Yours faithfully,
Bishop Juan A. Edghill,
Minister of Public Works