On the days that political meetings aren't firing verbally, the battle is now being fought in sound. While calypsonian Crazy initiated that musical fight for the UNC, urging that "Patrick Have To Go," Terri Lyons and various other singers have been co-opted for PNM rebuttals including "Manning Coming Back." After conserving firepower in the last two weeks–sticking to short jabs at each other–the ruling PNM began shedding its gloves in Tabaquite on Wednesday as several miles away in Fyzabad a united opposition charge was launched that night. The battleground for their May 24 political face-off will involve several marginal seats including some newly marginal, due to recent boundary and polling station shifts and internal movements.
Not the least of which is institution of housing developments in the east-west corridor and southern Trinidad. Pointe-a-Pierre, for instance, lost 860 seats to San Fernando West while several hundred districts were transferred to Cumuto-Manzanilla and St Joseph lost two Bamboo divisions to St Augustine. Laserfocus on issues is expected to zero in after May 2 when both parties launch candidates and manifestos. From then on–if not already–T&T's 1.038 million electorate will have four weeks of nightly bombardment in which to try to distinguish reality from rhetoric, prevarication within promises and make judgments based on proven act as opposed to verbal claim.
Aranguez for UNC launch?
Although the UNC turns 22 years next Friday, the party is yet to decide if to use its birthplace–Aranguez Savannah–for the upcoming launch of its candidates and manifesto expected next Sunday. Debate on a venue for the big event was taking place yesterday with another front-runner being the Queen's Park Savannah–where the NAR launched its historic 1986 campaign which walloped the PNM. UNC officials said no decision was made yet. However, they were discussing whether Mid Centre Mall, for instance, would be big enough to accommodate the "thousands expected," after Wednesday's Fyzabad turnout, they added.
The large crowds of the unity meetings have ignited enough confidence in the party for supporters to proclaim the "momentum is building." If the party opts for a northern venue–to match its all-inclusive reimaging–it would complete an on-going rebranding which has seen a shift away not only from the UNC's original colours but also away from the stylings of founder Basdeo Panday to new leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar's personal stamp. Platform speakers' shirts featuring UNC's trademark orange (of the rising sun) have been traded in for yellow (of the shining sun). And responses from supporters to questions about their party of choice or who they're voting for is more usually answered with "Kamla..." rather than "UNC..."
The new leader of three months, with reinvigorated diction, is now replete with a complement of full-bodied "rs" in her platformspeak.
While Persad-Bissessar recently began increasing campaign shots by previewing election promises, she has not yet lugged out the ammunition which she said the UNC intended to launch against Manning in the aborted April 9 no-confidence debate. Persad-Bissessar claimed the UNC had information linking Manning to the controversial Guanapo church and Shanghai construction company.
McLeod's PM ambitions in 1998
Bidding to change and widen UNC's base and national image–after ousting the 75-year-old Panday–the UNC's frontline partners now include COP leader Winston Dookeran, 67; retired OWTU president general Errol Mcleod, 66, and ex-Black Power leader Makandal Daaga, whose NJAC unsuccessfully contested elections since 1981. (Daaga is "in his 70s," UNC officials said.) Holding forth in Fyzabad on Wednesday, Daaga appeared to have lost little of his 1970s fire-and-brimstone intensity. While Persad-Bissessar stuck to symbolic statements regarding the event, McLeod, getting down to business, jumped ahead to reveal manifesto plans for securing workers' rights.
UNC chairman Jack Warner and MPs Roodal Moonilal and Chandresh Sharma were shifted lower than the seating at Fyzabad's meeting to give the newcomers pride of place on the platform. However, the presence of McLeod's MSJ and a pledge by unions not to support the PNM for elections has seen a coming together of the labour movement–benefiting the UNC–when a year ago the labour sector was split. Still it is yet another of the ironies of the post-Panday UNC that the party which the sugar union leader founded 22 years ago (next Friday) has in his absence assumed more of a labour alignment. McLeod, who has had to deny being a PNMite at least twice in his career as OWTU head, had clashed with Panday over the years when Natuc was being born and when the UNC was in office. McLeod had said when he retired in 2008 that he did not intend to enter politics.
In July 1998, however, in a TG article, reporter Louis Homer reported at that time that McLeod made "clear his ambition to become Prime Minister." McLeod was quoted as telling union members that he did "not want to be no ordinary parliamentarian (sic) "since he had been an MP from 1976 to 1981. "If I have to have the power of the Prime Minister to solve the country's problems, I am about that too," McLeod is quoted as saying, adding that neither the PNM nor UNC had done anything for the working class. "I shall continue to stand in opposition to all the discrimination taking place and if I am to bulldoze my way into Parliament I am prepared to go that way," McLeod was also quoted as saying.
The group McLeod has partnered with–the UNC–is yet to finalise candidates for 18 seats where nominees are awaiting word after screening and where screening is yet to take place. Persad-Bissessar said Monday she did not want information leaking out to political "enemies" (sic). However, UNC's "friends" believe the silence where some borderline nominees are concerned and planned announcement close to Nomination Day are being employed to curb any who might seek to contest independently–or otherwise–if not chosen.
Vasant aggrieved
St Augustine MP Vasant Bharath, still awaiting word on his fate–outside of the seat being given to COP's Prakash Ramadhar –is wondering whether he has indeed paid the ultimate price for failing to sign the letter of support for Persad-Bissessar to become Opposition Leader. Bharath was not among the eight signatories, but attended Persad-Bissessar's investiture and pledged support. After constituency members threatened to protest his removal, Bharath said yesterday: "The fact that the seat was given to the COP came to me via newspaper reports, not the party. So of course residents are concerned because they have come to trust the work I've done. I've had a lot of calls from agitated members saying the situation is unfair since the party has not made a statement on the issue.
"A new candidate would have about three weeks to meet the people, walk the seat, campaign and implement the necessary mechanism–this is not an overnight thing." Former UNC leader Basdeo Panday's brother, MP Subhas Panday, is also awaiting the outcome of his recent screening. Panday's daughter, MP Mikela Panday, MP Hamza Rafeeq and Couva South incumbent Kelvin Ramnath are still to be screened. Ex-leader Panday said: "I believe the screening team is being vindictive. Look at what has happened with Bharath. It appears people who contested against the leader are regarded as an enemy and ought not to be on their slate. Their focus seems to be power and therefore there must be no 'dissidents' around.
"I don't think she wants any Panday on the slate as she knows a Panday would hold great sway over the rank and file and she probably believes this will detract from her power." Panday also has concerns about the party he founded: "It's fast disappearing. A lot of it is being broken down with their reimaging. If you look well the people we represented are nowhere around. People should be concerned, but we shall only get the real picture when the hype is over," he added.
Tabaquite MP Ramesh Lawrence Maharaj, also awaiting his fate as his constituents lobby for him, warned: "Tabaquite is not a safe seat since we had a bitter fight in 2007. The PNM has a large constituency now. If you have any fall-out it could easily become marginal." Ex-ULF member Ramnath, yet to become part of UNC's new labour partners, added: "The support for the united force is clear. It is the UNC's best chance at Government but any foolish mistake could make a difference."
PNM poll out
Ruling party strategists, meeting nightly, have started configuring around a poll done on the party's position over April 15 which has spurred activity on, PNM sources said. The party is yet to unleash Diego Martin West MP Keith Rowley, whose leisurely return from overseas–after he was approved as candidate–sends enough of a signal that he does not intend to be manipulated. Rowley's offering of himself to contest left the choice to Manning's screening team to retain or remove him.
However the team's approval tossed the ball back to Rowley, placing him on PNM's team which will, in battle, have to defend the ruling party against allegations of corruption including against ex- Udecott head Calder Hart. With such compromise of his position, little wonder Rowley, out of T&T, did not hustle back to the hustings as PNM launched meetings. Rowley's constituency executive confirmed he only returned from his week-long trip on Thursday, but could not say why he remained away for so long in the election season. Constituency chairman Sigler Jack said the unit is waiting to be contacted by the party regarding appearances.
Following the dropping of MPs Pennelope Beckles and Anthony Roberts and MP Stanford Callendar's decision to stand down, Rowley is now the last man standing from the final few old-guard MPs on Manning's team. Up to yesterday's PNM's campaign team had no indication when Rowley would speak at a meeting. A PNM source said Rowley's appearance will be a strategy decision "since he holds the key to the swing vote."