Arrangements within the People's Partnership grouping do not mean the Prime Minister will rotate the leaders of the various parties in the PP to act as Prime Minister when she is overseas, PP press secretary Garvin Nicholas said yesterday. Nicholas made the point while speaking to reporters on the issue of the decision for Works Minister to act as PM while Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar is overseas over the next week. Speaking during a tour of the Prime Minister's residence at St Ann's, Nicholas said there were different roles for different people, but it didn't mean that the top position would be rotated when Persad-Bissessar was overseas.
"The PP agreement was to fight the general election in a particular way and govern in a another way," he said. "The Prime Minister chose her Cabinet and she runs the Government on the best way she sees fit." Nicholas said there was no issue as to whether Finance Minister Winston Dookeran should have been selected. Dookeran, a senior frontline minister with years of political experience and as COP's leader, had been tipped by many in UNC to be acting PM. Nicholas, however, said: "Mr Warner got the most votes in the last general elections, he is chairman of UNC and it is the Prime Minister's prerogative and she decided to choose someone able and capable of carrying out the job in her absence.
"It is noted that it is the first time in a long time that a Prime Minister has chosen an elected MP to act in her absence which shows she feels comfortable in her role as Prime Minister," he added. Asked if everyone in the Cabinet had agreed on Warner's acting, Nicholas said: "I have heard no dissenting voices...many people speculated who would be chosen and they're free to do that...the Prime Minister decided the best choice is Jack Warner and she chose him." He admitted that this was Warner's first stint in government. Asked how long Dookeran had served in governments, Nicholas said: "You tell me..." On the perception that the UNC was domineering the partnership, Nicholas said: "There is no group domineering." He asked why the COP might feel slighted if Dookeran was not chosen to act.
Nicholas said: "There are some very experienced people in Cabinet at varying levels...the Prime Minister luckily had a wide choice and I think she has made a very wise choice," Nicholas said. Saying that allegations against Warner were not an issue, Nicholas denied that other strong people might be running the Government. He said: "That's not true, she's firmly in charge of her Government, she made the point by making this appointment. "There is absolutely no doubt in her mind that she is in charge and comfortable and she does not have to put a senator in the post, fearing her power would be usurped," he added. Nicholas said he did not share the perception that Warner might be receiving "payback" for his work with the UNC. He said the same might be said of an appointment of Dookeran.