As the country enters another election cycle, aspects of T&T-style political campaigning are already coming to the fore.
The main event, the general election, might still be more than a year away but the fight for power between the PNM and the UNC, with occasional interjections from a handful of smaller political players, has been underway for some time.
There is no need for official party manifestos when a steady flow of day-to-day challenges—water shortages, dilapidated roads, broken bridges and that wet season staple, floods—provide easily available talking points for politicians eager to remain relevant and attractive to the electorate.
The problem with these low-hanging fruits is that they distract voters and trap the nation into a cycle of politically motivated complaints, protests and responses that hamper genuine development.
The latest example is Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar and Public Utilities Minister Marvin squabbling over the water supply situation in Morne Diablo, a rural community where the campaign for a local government by-election is in full swing.
Residents are just days away from voting for a new councillor to replace the late Diptee Ramnath in Quinam/Morne Diablo.
Ideally, this by-election, taking place just months after local government elections, should be an opportunity to test the effectiveness of the new system implemented after those polls last year.
However, an examination of how goods and services are being delivered to burgesses at the local government level when properly explored in all its dimensions, does not provide sufficient occasions for the picong and bacchanal that dominates platform politics in this country.
On the other hand, water, a precious commodity too often in short supply and an available trigger for public discontent, is an easy way to throw shade at political opponents.
On this occasion, however, Mrs Persad-Bissessar didn’t score the expected political points. Residents say there has been an improvement in their water supply, so her dig at Minister Gonzales and attempt to highlight failures in the water improvement programme in that community fell flat.
The problem is that the political tit-for-tat that has ensued between these two parliamentarians since then is distracting from other matters affecting that rural community, the types of issues that need to be carefully weighed by the residents before they go into the voting booth on June 17.
And so it is with many of the topics that dominate the political dialogue across this country.
Citizens are continually being assailed and distracted by emotive issues, crime being a major one of course, and are not encouraged to deeply examine and challenge the quality of representation they are receiving compared to what is being promised.
If this is an indication of the quality of the campaigning that will intensify as general election time draws closer, the electorate doesn’t have much to look forward to.
The trouble with road, water and flood politics is that it is influenced by three-year and five-year electoral cycles and dominated by fleeting, usually unkept, promises that retard the country’s advancement and drain already dwindling resources.
Political entities of every hue—red, yellow, green and whatever else exists—are lured by it and unwilling to look at the more difficult alternatives. The political stakes are too high.
The biggest losers are citizens who are left with limited choices.