It is a shameless budget and things are going to get worse and not better, Opposition Leader Basdeo Panday has said. He said Finance Minister Karen Tesheira rehashed statements from last year's budget and other previous budget presentations before the House of Representatives yesterday.
"I am afraid things are going to get worse, not better, from what I have heard here this evening," Panday said. "All they say (are) empty, wishful promises, and have been making for the last seven years...It is a shameful budget. "It was the most shameless budget that I have ever heard. She regurgitated everything that they have been regurgitating for the last seven years and at the end of it all you think anybody believes that they are going to get water next year? You think that anybody believes that their roads are going to be fixed?"
Panday expressed disappointment about increases in the penalties and fees to the Motor Vehicles and Road Traffic Act to generate revenue.
"You are now raising the fines for offences committed on the highway as means of raising money, which is such a foolish thing to depend on for a budget because you first need policemen who will be on the highway to charge people, but the policemen are themselves busy doing their own thing so how can you have any hope that they will realise this money in the budget," he said.
"You ever see any police on the highway? First, you have to catch them (people who break the law). First, you have to arrest them. How many policemen are there on the highway? Have you ever seen the highway patrol?" Panday also criticised the Government's plans and projects to address the rising crime rate in the country. "No, I am not disappointed about (their crime plan) because they cannot do anything about it," he said.
"Why should they talk about it? She was smart not to talk about it and that's why I say it was a shameful budget. "But the most important thing was about crime and they are talking about business development and so on when there are businessmen leaving this country and so on because of crime and she spend, what? Two minutes, five minutes on crime of her three hour speech on crime." Panday said nothing in the budget impressed him. "Nothing is going to be implemented...That has been their history," he said.