Prime Minister Patrick Manning and Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar will both be in Tobago today for screening of PNM candidates and cementing of UNC Tobago allies, respectively. And both the ruling party and the Opposition UNC hit the road on Monday night in north and south Trinidad, respectively, each with the first of their election meetings.
Leaders, MPs and party officials of each party will be speaking on the two respective platforms. Manning is going to Tobago today for screening of PNM's Tobago East and West nominees.
Screening begins at PNM's Tobago office at 9.30 am, PNM's Tobago Council confirmed.
UNC leader Persad-Bissessar will be in Tobago from 4.30 pm to meet with leader of the Tobago Organisation of People (TOP) Ashworth Jack to discuss TOP candidates to fight the two Tobago seats on behalf of the UNC. Persad-Bissessar yesterday reiterated that UNC would not be contesting the two Tobago seats, but was in discussions with TOP to have an arrangement for election. The PNM, which has put its cottage meetings and walkabouts on hold pending completion of screening, will hold the first of its public campaign meetings on Monday night in the heart of the East-West Corridor in St Augustine (near Hi-Lo car park). The UNC's executive on Thursday night also agreed to kick off that party's election campaign with a public meeting at Gopaul Lands (near Hi-Lo) in Marabella on Monday night, according to Persad-Bissessar.
She said statements which UNC MPs had prepared for the aborted no-confidence motion debate yesterday would be issued at UNC meetings. She alleged that the UNC had obtained "information" regarding the PNM Government, the controversial Guanapo church and the Shanghai Corporation. Yesterday, the PNM screened nominees for several more East-West Corridor seats, including D'Abadie/O'Meara, Caroni East, Chaguanas West, St Augustine (Esau Mohammed, who had unsuccessfully contested the seat), Arima (incumbent MP Pennelope Beckles and Senator Laurel Lezama), and St Ann's East (incumbent Anthony Roberts).
Among the Arima nominees, Beckles was nominated by 19 party groups and Lezama by three, according to Bobby Charles, assistant secretary of PNM's Arima constituency executive, yesterday.
Today, Manning who heads PNM's screening team will interview Tobago East incumbent MP Rennie Dumas who has been nominated by party groups for the seat again. The Tobago West nominee is banker Terrence Williams, of Canaan/Bon Accord, who is tipped to replace incumbent MP Standford Callendar. The latter did not sign a consent letter to be renominated and was therefore out of the running. On Wednesday, Callendar said in an interview that he had won the seat in general elections of 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2007, and had decided that he would not contest again and this would have been his last term. He said Manning's decision to call an election had only shortened his term. Thanking his constituents and the ruling party "for the faith and confidence in me over the years," Callendar added: "I have absolutely no problems with the election being called.
"I'll be a big part of PNM's upcoming campaign platform and together with PNM's Tobago Council, I'll also be helping the new Tobago West candidate," he said. "I think the party is making an excellent nomination in Terrence Williams, a young man who is very intelligent and who, in my experience, seems committed to service and the interests of the people and party.
"I have every confidence he'll be an excellent replacement for me in Tobago West." After Tobago screening is completed this morning, the Screening team returns to screening at Balisier House in Port-of-Spain where nominees for seats, including Mayaro, will be interviewed this afternoon. Mayaro nominees include Clifford Campbell and Arvind Moonan. The PNM continues screening nominees next Tuesday, after Monday's public meeting.
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