Senior Political Reporter
UNC frontliner Jack Warner says he will be responding “fully, firmly and completely” tonight to claims made by Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley about him at a PNM meeting in Sangre Grande on Tuesday.
Warner said yesterday that his stinging response will be coming as he campaigned with the UNC in Moruga.
While he held back on the bulk of his response, Warner accused the PNM political leader of being desperate. “What the Prime Minister has claimed simply shows the level of desperation on his part and by extension his PNM party in this Local Government Elections—but more on that in Arima. He had his say yesterday, I’m entitled to mine (today),” Warner said.
Prime Minister Rowley had claimed that Warner was back with the UNC in a bid to make a deal to prevent his extradition from T&T.
Speaking during a “Conversations with the Prime Minister” segment in Sangre Grande, Rowley said it was a tradition that in election week, the PNM must be in Sangre Grande and the party was proud to represent Sangre Grande in the Parliament and would be even prouder to have majority control of its corporation on Monday (for Local Government Elections).
Isha Ali, of North West Sangre Grande, noting that UNC political leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar had brought back Warner, asked how someone with extradition issues could be in politics.
Rowley urged the PNM faithful not to be worried by Warner’s return.
“Let’s not be troubled by the resurrection of Jack Warner. All you’re seeing is the shocking reversal of positions between Mr Warner, the UNC and its leader boils down to one simple thing—Jack Warner has some serious extradition difficulties, he wants to be with people who’d make a deal that he wouldn’t be extradited.”
In fact, Rowley said if his suspicions were correct, the situation could be even worse than the Section 34 fiasco.
“So, from the time he’s able to make that deal—‘Section 35’ you could call it—as you know what the (PP Government’s) Section 34 was: Mrs Kamla Persad-Bissessar using the Parliament to amend a clause in a law so people with extradition problems would escape court in the US. So, Jack Warner has the same problem. So, who you’ll expect him to run to, who’ll strike a deal with him ... they’ve done it before and what you seeing there is them attempting to do it again,” he said.
“Ignore Jack Warner but keep your eye on the UNC that’s prepared to make that kind of deal,” Rowley added.
Rowley alleged that among the outgoing Sangre Grande UNC councillors, one had been arrested and two others are of interest to police for “skullduggery with the little money you have in Sangre Grande ... what you want dem (back) for? To go back and hide their tracks to continue their misconduct and shameless behaviour?”
Rowley was also asked by Shelton Lewis how he was coping with the slew of attacks and statements against him.
Rowley said he is blessed with a supportive family he is proud of. He said he had been in public life for many decades and it seems to be getting worse. He said he has worked with politicians like Hochoy Charles, Basdeo Panday, Selby Wilson, Kelvin Ramnath—people he was on the opposite side of, “But we’d at least have had a drink and talked together.”
“But what’s happening today,” he added, “is the poisonous hatred that replaced camaraderie in the Parliament. You see it in the nastiest of personal attacks as the current population of these people believe this ‘knock-out punch’, slander of people and mark-bussing will destroy people.”
He added none of his ministers were under police probe for fraud and he believed this left some people bothered.
Rowley urged the area to do in the Local Government Elections what it did in the 2020 general election.
Warner is expected to be among the speakers at a UNC meeting tonight in Arima.