PNCR should be applauded for choosing the democratic path

Dear Editor,

Mr. Aubrey Norton utilized his inaugural address to the General Council of the PNCR at Sophia, Georgetown, by declarating, among other things, the creation of a new image for the PNCR mainly through the embrace of democracy. He cited the recent PNCR internal elections where he boasted that it was free and fair, but he could not say the same for the PPP/C internal elections. If this is the PNCR’s new approach to politics, they should be applauded for choosing to walk on the democratic path. But what lesson(s) could one draw from PNCR’s history?

 Norton’s presentation was also aimed “to restore the party to the glorious days of Forbes Burnham….” He lamented the condition of the PNCR party under David Granger’s leadership: “I have inherited a party that has four categories of workers: guards, drivers, clerks and handymen.” (Demerara Waves (3/11/2022). The urgent need for image building is also suggested by former PNCR leader, Mr. David Granger, who had earlier called for the establishment of a new political culture. He stated: “Some persons [PNCR operatives] ….were elected to office not to satisfy their private hunger for wealth or their personal passion for power but to serve the people who they represented. The Party has a sad record of revolt.”  (Demerara Waves 12/18/2021).

Notwithstanding this perspective, a more plausible motive for creating a new image of the PNCR, lies in the post-2020 election saga when PNCR-aligned GECOM executive staff attempted to stage an electoral heist; a process that was elegantly described by the Head of the OAS observer mission, former Jamaican Prime Minister Bruce Golding: “I have never seen a more transparent effort to alter the results of an election.” (SN: 3/14/2020). Not receiving support for their claim of electoral irregularities from any country during the 5 months’ election fiasco and after, PNCR’s operatives became belligerent and began a campaign to vilify the GECOM Chair, diplomats, Caribbean Leaders including Mia Mottley of Barbados and Dr. Ralph Gonsalves of St Vincent and the Grenadines. This action led to the isolation of the PNCR. Norton, therefore, had no choice but to engage in damage control and to present a new image of his party, as well as, to reach out to diplomats and regional leaders. In trying to create a new image, however, Mr. Norton believes that his first building block is to blast the PPP/C government with allegations of corruption, race discrimination, rigging, incompetence, all of which are not verifiable empirically.

Further undermining his image building drive, was his astonishing claim that the 2020 elections were rigged by the PPP/C. But he failed to say how an election machinery that was conducted by a PNCR-aligned GECOM executive body could have allowed the opposition PPP/C to rig the election? How were the PPP/C operatives able to avoid the “eagle” eyes of the PNCR’s polling staff and the numerous observer teams’ scrutiny? The political landscape has become extremely competitive. No one ethnic group is dominant. All political parties know that the grip of race, which has historically played a huge role on determining voting preference, is gradually fading and is being replaced with issues defined by logic, reason, and evidence.  In the circumstances, political parties that articulate a clear vision and generate better policy and program choices will correspondingly increase their chance of electoral success.

Sincerely,

Dr. Tara Singh