Notwithstanding assurances given to Prime Minister Stuart Young by US Secretary of State Marco Rubio that the US will not do anything to harm Trinidad and Tobago’s economic future, the determination by US President, Donald Trump to institute a 25 per cent tariff against Chinese trade coming into the region can add to T&T’s difficulties in the processing of Venezuela’s natural gas.
The latter possible evolving scenario is not one which T&T can easily emerge from unscathed. To align itself with the US against Venezuela leaves T&T without that country’s raw materials to process; to hold fast to its agreements with Venezuela means a loss of US support and a 25 per cent tariff against any products to be exported into the United States from the Dragon agreement.
All of this adds to the heated political environment even before election campaign 2025 is fully into a pell-mell race to April 28th. With only the ruling People’s National Movement (PNM) having declared all its candidates, and the Opposition United National Congress still contemplating and or waiting on the best moment to make known final decisions, conflict, doubt and confusion are occupying the national space.
Amongst the small parties in Trinidad, there is disintegration and fragile alliances.
Not so in Tobago. THA Chief Secretary Farley Augustine is fully cognizant of the determining role he and his Tobago People’s Party can potentially play in the election if it were to win the two parliamentary seats on the island and if the electoral scores in Trinidad are very close, which he expects will place him in a position to decide which party will become the next government. On this possibility, Augustine has made known his intention that to the “highest bidder,” much like in an auction sale, is where his hammer will fall.
His former colleague, Watson Duke, has indicated he will only settle in exchange for his support, what he considers the four most important ministerial positions in the cabinet.
Thankfully, with the odd number of seats in the national Parliament, one party will have a majority in Trinidad; whether it will be a working majority is a different issue. However, given the nature of politics, the capacity politicians have for “by any means possible” horse-trading remains a possibility to settle problems which may arise.
The hope on this occasion is for the national electorate to make a clear decision by voting a party into office with something of a workable majority for it to form the government and be able to make critical decisions, without the possibility of the Opposition making life difficult. At least with one party in office, that can eliminate the need for intra-party alliances, which, as history has shown, are like “jumbie umbrellas” that collapse into the soil the morning after.
Nonetheless, if the electorate cannot make a clear decision, or chooses to show a state of uncertainty between and amongst the parties contesting for governorship, or if voters decide to tell the parties they have to cooperate in the national interest, then it will be over to the leaders and their parties to decide on how government will become fully functional.
With the above-listed geo-political and economic possibilities threatening, post-election confusion will be the last thing those seeking to govern T&T would want to face going forward.