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Monday, May 5, 2025

President hits ‘kicksing’ parliamentarians

by

Gail Alexander
2120 days ago
20190715
Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley chats with President Paula-Mae Weekes during the opening ceremony of the 44th annual conference of the Caribbean, Americas and the Atlantic Region of the Commonwealth Parliament Association held at Hyatt Regency, yesterday. At right is, Senate President, Kristine Kangaloo.

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley chats with President Paula-Mae Weekes during the opening ceremony of the 44th annual conference of the Caribbean, Americas and the Atlantic Region of the Commonwealth Parliament Association held at Hyatt Regency, yesterday. At right is, Senate President, Kristine Kangaloo.

SHIRLEY BAHADUR

Stop the “kicks­ing” in Par­lia­ment!

That mes­sage was telegraphed by Pres­i­dent Paula-Mae Weekes yes­ter­day as she de­liv­ered the fea­ture ad­dress at the 44th Con­fer­ence of the Caribbean, Amer­i­c­as and At­lantic (CAA) Re­gion of the Com­mon­wealth Par­lia­men­tary As­so­ci­a­tion (CPA).

The Theme was Glob­al­i­sa­tion and Na­tion­al­ism: Quo Vadis - Im­pacts on Com­mon­wealth Par­lia­ments.

Ref­er­enc­ing var­i­ous de­vel­op­ments which have oc­curred in TT’s Par­lia­ment, Weekes gave a spe­cial nudge to lo­cal par­lia­men­tar­i­ans — to the point that she em­ployed Ex­plain­er’s 1979 ca­lyp­so “Dey Kicksin’ in Par­lia­ment” to stress con­cerns.

Weekes opened her ad­dress not­ing con­duct in T&T’s Par­lia­ment, “Even the most ca­su­al ob­serv­er of the pro­ceed­ings in our Par­lia­ment would be con­cerned about how the peo­ple’s busi­ness is be­ing con­duct­ed, and those who fol­low avid­ly might well be alarmed.

“Walk­outs, ‘put-outs’, dis­trust, thin­ly-veiled in­sults, in­abil­i­ty to ar­rive at a con­sen­sus quick­ly, if at all, on the sim­plest of is­sues, re­fer­rals to the Priv­i­leges Com­mit­tee, whether apolo­gies are to be of­fered; all seem to take prece­dence over for­mu­lat­ing laws for the good of our cit­i­zens.”

She added: The core func­tion of our dis­tin­guished Hous­es is es­sen­tial and pur­pose­ful, but what does the av­er­age man on the street think about what goes on there? Forty years ago, one of our ca­lyp­so­ni­ans, Ex­plain­er, ex­pressed it this way; re­fer­ring to our law­mak­ers, he com­posed a song en­ti­tled ‘They Kicksin’ in Par­lia­ment.’ The bad news is, pub­lic opin­ion hasn’t changed for the bet­ter since then. Around much of the world, this re­gion in­clud­ed, peo­ple are los­ing faith in the elect­ed/ap­point­ed of­fi­cials en­trust­ed with mak­ing laws.”

To the av­er­age cit­i­zen, Weekes said Par­lia­ment can ap­pear to be a glo­ri­fied “talk shop” gov­erned by self-in­ter­est and par­ti­san­ship. She not­ed the view of Har­vey At­wa­ter, Amer­i­can po­lit­i­cal con­sul­tant dur­ing the Rea­gan years, who said, “Per­cep­tion is re­al­i­ty.”

Chal­leng­ing par­lia­men­tar­i­ans to con­front the crit­i­cism and pro­vide a cred­i­ble, com­pre­hen­sive re­sponse, she said the ques­tion of “Whey we goin’?’ has al­so to be asked gen­er­al­ly of par­lia­men­tar­i­ans’ stew­ard­ship.

She not­ed con­tro­ver­sy and con­sti­tu­tion­al cri­sis have erupt­ed in Guyana.

She said, And in T&T we ap­proach the 29th an­niver­sary of an at­tempt­ed coup d’état which played out in our Par­lia­ment and shook the na­tion to its core; we in the Caribbean are no strangers to po­lit­i­cal cri­sis and in­trigue and we can rea­son­ably ex­pect more of the same.”

Not un­like the ca­lyp­son­ian, she said, par­lia­men­tar­i­ans are the peo­ple’s mouth­piece, con­vey­ing con­cerns and per­spec­tives.

“Ac­cord­ing to the Unit­ed Na­tions, peo­ple in the Caribbean want rep­re­sen­ta­tives to ad­dress two main con­cerns: job op­por­tu­ni­ty cre­ation and as­sis­tance in get­ting jobs. Sim­ple re­quire­ments, but sat­is­fy­ing them can call for com­plex so­lu­tions. And that’s where the par­lia­men­tar­i­an comes in,” she said.

“Mem­bers of Par­lia­ment must be un­afraid and un­fazed when it comes to deal­ing with mat­ters which af­fect the man on the street, mak­ing hard de­ci­sions and leg­is­lat­ing ac­cord­ing­ly. Once elec­toral and ap­point­ment process­es have run their course, rep­re­sen­ta­tives have the para­mount du­ty to hold the in­ter­ests of their con­stituents above their po­lit­i­cal selves,”

Weekes al­so not­ed that where par­lia­ments con­duct ef­fec­tive scruti­ny of pub­lic spend­ing, there’s a low­er in­ci­dence of cor­rup­tion. She cit­ed Trans­paren­cy In­ter­na­tion­al’s rank­ing of Bar­ba­dos with the low­est lev­el of per­ceived cor­rup­tion in the Caribbean, plac­ing 25th glob­al­ly and Ba­hamas, 29th.

“T&T’s a dis­ap­point­ing 78th on the Cor­rup­tion Per­cep­tions In­dex (2018). While we have room for im­prove­ment when it comes to the per­cep­tion of cor­rup­tion, there’s an­oth­er con­cern: how se­ri­ous­ly those who sit in par­lia­ment view their re­spon­si­bil­i­ties,” she said.

Weekes again quot­ed part of Ex­plain­er’s ca­lyp­so:

“I feel the gov­ern­ment in this coun­try

Should treat the peo­ple more se­ri­ous­ly;

When they have they Par­lia­ment meet­ing

Some­thing con­struc­tive should be hap­pen­ing;

They kicksin’, kicksin’ all the time, they blow­ing every­body mind,

Food­stuffs have a short­age dai­ly, busi­ness places burn­ing in the city,

Be­fore they watch these things se­ri­ous­ly, the whole meet­ing is a com­e­dy;

Ridicule, fa­tigue giv­ing, and all of the mem­bers laugh­ing

While they hav­ing a good time, we caching we roy­al be­hind.”

Weekes said it was “a sting­ing in­dict­ment and we must ask whether it’s as cur­rent now as it was then.”

“While there ‘s cer­tain­ly room for pi­cong and jol­li­ty, there has to be align­ment be­tween the dis­tin­guished and im­por­tant na­ture of the work and the con­duct ex­hib­it­ed by those who sit in par­lia­ment. De­bates will be­come pas­sion­ate, even heat­ed, but our rep­re­sen­ta­tives must mod­el the high­est stan­dards of dig­ni­ty, re­spect and ci­vil­i­ty while in the Cham­bers.”

“With the ad­vent of the Par­lia­ment Chan­nel on lo­cal tele­vi­sion, our na­tion gets to wit­ness the be­hav­iour, and some­times, the mis­be­hav­iour, of its rep­re­sen­ta­tives. Our young peo­ple, in the spir­it of the old Malian proverb, ‘mon­key see, mon­key do’, will con­sid­er what they see us do, to be ap­pro­pri­ate, and so mim­ic and per­pet­u­ate the stan­dards we set.” See Page A8


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