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Saturday, May 24, 2025

Kangaloo extends olive branch to detractors

Let’s forget spites and grudges

by

Ryan Bachoo
795 days ago
20230320
Former independent senator Ian Roach is greeted by Kerwyn Garcia, centre, and his wife President Christine Kangaloo following a cocktail reception at NAPA, after the President’s Inauguration Ceremony, yesterday.

Former independent senator Ian Roach is greeted by Kerwyn Garcia, centre, and his wife President Christine Kangaloo following a cocktail reception at NAPA, after the President’s Inauguration Ceremony, yesterday.

ABRAHAM DIAZ

As Pres­i­dent Chris­tine Kan­ga­loo took her oath of of­fice yes­ter­day un­der the Grand Stand of the Queen’s Park Sa­van­nah, Port-of-Spain, she used her maid­en ad­dress to an­swer the crit­ics who were against her as­sum­ing the role and ex­tend­ed a prover­bial olive branch.

“I am not at all un­mind­ful of the fact that there are those that ex­press dis­qui­et with my oc­cu­py­ing this new role, and for who, for one rea­son or an­oth­er, might not cur­rent­ly be ful­ly on board with as­sist­ing me to achieve these goals. I know that there have been voic­es from cer­tain quar­ters that have giv­en the im­pres­sion that such col­lab­o­ra­tion might not as eas­i­ly be forth­com­ing as one might have hoped,” Pres­i­dent Kan­ga­loo said.

“To any and every such voice, I re­peat Mer­chant’s in­vi­ta­tion in song so beau­ti­ful­ly sung this morn­ing by my beloved South­er­naires choir to ‘let us for­get spites and grudges and con­cen­trate’ and to ‘come let us sit and try to re­late’.” (Pres­i­dent’s full speech on page 18)

Her com­ment, which drew ap­plause from the au­di­ence, seemed an ob­vi­ous ref­er­ence to the Op­po­si­tion Unit­ed Na­tion­al Con­gress, which was fer­vent­ly against Kan­ga­loo’s nom­i­na­tion for the post in Jan­u­ary due to her af­fil­i­a­tion with the Peo­ple’s Na­tion­al Move­ment for over two decades.

Op­po­si­tion mem­bers were vis­i­bly ab­sent from yes­ter­day’s in­au­gu­ra­tion but still main­tained there was no boy­cott of the event (See oth­er sto­ry)

She al­so sig­nalled her in­ten­tion to press oth­er of­fice hold­ers on fix­ing is­sues cur­rent­ly af­flict­ing the coun­try, al­though she said she did not in­tend to do so in the man­ner now cur­rent­ly used by some of them. Rather, the Pres­i­dent said she aims to achieve these goals through ad­vo­ca­cy.

“My way is to be your Diplo­mat-in-Chief mak­ing the case for a bet­ter Trinidad and To­ba­go firm­ly but with­out ac­ri­mo­ny or bit­ter­ness. My words do not need to be shout­ed in the pub­lic square. There is al­ready too much shout­ing go­ing on in our coun­try to­day. I be­lieve we all need to be calmer and more re­flec­tive, and I pro­pose to lead in that re­gard by ex­am­ple.”

The open­ing state­ments of her ad­dress had a strik­ing­ly sim­i­lar nar­ra­tive to that of her im­me­di­ate pre­de­ces­sor, Paula-Mae Weekes.

“Dur­ing my term, I would like to con­tin­ue the work done by my pre­de­ces­sors in try­ing to de­mys­ti­fy the role,” Kan­ga­loo said.

She said her quest to make more cit­i­zens knowl­edge­able about the roles and func­tions of the Pres­i­dent will start at the grass­roots lev­el.

“As our democ­ra­cy and our so­ci­ety ma­ture, there is an in­creas­ing de­mand for our lead­ers to be­come more and more ac­ces­si­ble. The Of­fice of Pres­i­dent is no ex­cep­tion,” Kan­ga­loo said.

The Pres­i­dent added, “I think that a good place to start is at the lev­el of our pri­ma­ry school chil­dren, many of whom are here to­day... I be­lieve that height­en­ing aware­ness at the pri­ma­ry school lev­el about the role of the Pres­i­dent will help pro­mote a bet­ter un­der­stand­ing of the pres­i­den­cy... This is one of the things that I hope the pres­i­den­tial fu­ture that we are start­ing to write to­day will look like - a fu­ture in which there is a pop­u­la­tion that is bet­ter in­formed about the pres­i­den­cy, and that is there­fore, bet­ter able to hold it to ac­count.”

Kan­ga­loo said she would al­so like to see the pub­lic ar­eas at Pres­i­dent’s House be­come “a cra­dle for in­tel­lec­tu­al, cul­tur­al, and artis­tic ex­plo­ration” among the youth of the coun­try.

The new­ly in­stalled Pres­i­dent added, “I would like to see the Band­stand put to reg­u­lar use as a plat­form for new and emerg­ing young artistes. I would like to see the main ball­room and the grounds of Pres­i­dent’s House used to host dis­plays such as art ex­hi­bi­tions by pri­ma­ry and sec­ondary school stu­dents and I would like to see the pub­lic ar­eas at Pres­i­dent’s House opened up to fa­cil­i­tate en­deav­ours such as book club meet­ings and pro­grammes to in­tro­duce young peo­ple to mu­sic.”

It’s all part of her plans to mod­ernise the Of­fice of the Pres­i­dent, which she said will en­tail an archive of pres­i­den­tial his­to­ry that will not on­ly aid those in of­fice but al­so the pub­lic.

Kan­ga­loo al­so tout­ed the mod­el pro­vid­ed by the steel­band move­ment in its prepa­ra­tions for Car­ni­val. She said the dis­ci­pline and struc­ture the pa­n­yard brings in­to the lives of the na­tion’s young peo­ple in the build-up to Car­ni­val is one of the most ef­fec­tive youth delin­quen­cy pre­ven­tion pro­grammes, and she will aim to have dis­cus­sions with those stake­hold­ers to try to repli­cate such a mod­el year-round.

Pres­i­dent Kan­ga­loo’s in­au­gu­ra­tion was at­tend­ed by scores of am­bas­sadors and diplo­mats, in­clud­ing US Am­bas­sador to T&T Can­dace Bond and Chi­nese Am­bas­sador Fang Qiu. Among the many guests was Pres­i­dent Kan­ga­loo’s 94-year-old moth­er Bar­bara, who saw her daugh­ter sworn-in as this coun­try’s sec­ond fe­male and sev­enth Pres­i­dent.

Ear­li­er, as the armed forces with their sax­o­phones and drums closed the Paula-Mae Weekes era, they ush­ered in a new one un­der over­cast skies and cool con­di­tions. They al­so wel­comed in a new com­man­der-in-chief.

In rit­u­al­is­tic fash­ion and timed to mil­i­tary pre­ci­sion, the then Pres­i­dent-elect and her hus­band Ker­wyn Gar­cia ar­rived, fol­lowed by Chief Jus­tice Ivor Archie, Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley and out­go­ing Pres­i­dent Paula-Mae Weekes.

South­er­naires choir ser­e­nad­ed their new Pres­i­dent, who is from San Fer­nan­do, with Pres­i­dent Kan­ga­loo en­joy­ing their ren­di­tion of Melanie Hud­son’s I Will Al­ways Be There For You. By 10.20 am, she was tak­ing her oath of of­fice and then in­spect­ing the guard.

Kan­ga­loo will serve her first term as pres­i­dent un­til 2028.


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