Government ministers have expressed differing opinions on recent polls which show that the People's Partnership Government's ratings have declined over the last year. At an interfaith service at Rienzi Complex, Couva, yesterday, to mark the party's first year in office, several Government ministers offered another take on the results of the polls. Agriculture Minister Vasant Bharath said he did not think that the Government or the citizenry should put too much credence on the polls. "I think everyone says we cannot put too much credence in polls," he said. "At the end of the day, we have a job to do and I think most people can look back and say that their lives are better off than they were a year ago. "We have come into a situation where there has been a sad degree of neglect, not only in agriculture, but also in health and education."
Despite criticisms, Bharath said people must appreciate that things took time. "Clearly, when coming into new government it takes you time to find your feet...It natural that you cannot attend to every single thing," he added. However, he said he was proud of what the Government had achieved in one year. "I was proud of the achievements published in the report...It will take the PNM 50 or 60 years to do what we have done in one year," Bharath said. "There will always be people who will not be totally happy, but the Government has been in office in one short year, and we have to look at what we achieve and start looking at the future and implement our own policies."Local Government Minister Chandresh Sharma said the drop in ratings arose out of the high expectations people had in Government. "There is nothing wrong with that but you must realise that prior to going in government one would not have known the quantum of money that was available to government," he said.
"As you know there is a global money crisis and we have found ourselves in a challenging position because of the bills run up by the previous administration." He added, however, that the poll results should be instructive and should serve as a lesson. "The polls are a snapshot and have taught us a lesson...The polls tell us we need to revisit and take stock and also tells us what we are doing right," he said. "We are building early childhood centres, police officers have more money...In terms of delivery, we are way ahead but there is much more to do." Minister of the People Dr Glenn Ramadharsingh who spent $3 billion in social service delivery for the past year, said anywhere the PM went throughout the country, people were elated. "That would have been a snapshot in time, but the feeling of the people on the ground is an elation over the amount of work that we did in past year," he said.
"That is just one poll, there is a lot that needs to be done, we know where we have to put emphasis. "We are gaining a lot of ground...There were things we had to deal with and it is all in good stead for the next four years." Meanwhile, Energy Minister Carolyn Seepersad-Bachan said that whatever was said, the poll showed that the Prime Minister was still the most popular Prime Minister in the country today. "It showed, too, that the People's Partnership is still the most popular Government, whatever you say," she said. "Over time, we will always have these ups and down, but despite this, the People's Partnership and the Prime Minister are still the most popular, so I don't think there is anything to be concerned about." Like her Cabinet colleagues, she also said that the country had a lot of hope in the party, and the people were still confident in the abilities of the Prime Minister.