Senior Investigative Reporter
shaliza.hassanali@guardian.co.tt
From the controversial use of a government credit card to questions surrounding the source of a $143,800 bank transaction, the political career of Camille Robinson-Regis has been marked by scrutiny.
Now her elevation to a key ministerial role in the Cabinet of Prime Minister Stuart Young has brought her further into the spotlight.
Soon after he was sworn in as Prime Minister last Monday, Young appointed Robinson-Regis as Attorney General and Minister of Legal Affairs. After taking her oath, Robinson-Regis said she was “shocked” when she was told she would become the next AG but promised to do her best on the job.
Under then-prime minister Patrick Manning and Dr Keith Rowley, Robinson-Regis acted as AG several times.
She replaced Reginald Armour who recently resigned to take up a job in the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court abroad.
Young said he believed Robinson-Regis was the “perfect Attorney General for the current period” but declined to say what specific consideration was given in choosing the Arouca/Maloney MP for that portfolio.
Robinson-Regis is T&T’s 18th AG and the fourth woman to hold the position of primary legal advisor to the Government.
Within hours of her appointment, president of the Criminal Bar Association Israel Khan, SC, expressed concern that Robinson-Regis lacked legal experience as she was not a practising attorney and her whole career was vested in politics.
Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar also felt Robinson-Regis was not qualified for the position.
Addressing UNC supporters at the Brazil Secondary School last Monday, Persad-Bissessar said records from the 8, 10, 11 and 12th Parliaments showed that 319 bills had been brought to the House but Robinson-Regis has only debated 54 bills.
“Let’s see as AG if she would speak. I don’t know if you can remember, I can’t remember a single case this woman fight in any courthouse,” the Opposition Leader said, noting that the AG’s job is to present and defend bills.
Oropouche East MP Dr Roodal Moonilal, who also spoke at the meeting, said the biggest question people have been asking is if Robinson-Regis is a real lawyer.
“Everybody asking ... nobody knows,” he said
In response to queries about whether she has a current practising certificate, Robinson-Regis said this did not affect her appointment as AG under the Constitution.
In a statement in a daily newspaper on Wednesday, Robinson-Regis said she was admitted to the Bar in T&T as a practitioner member of the Law Association and her name was added to the roll of attorneys in accordance with the Legal Profession Act.
She admitted after 2001 she stopped paying the subscription to the Law Association and the last time she engaged in active practice was around that time.
The role of AG does not necessarily require practising as an advocate, she said.
Robinson-Regis explained that when people sue the State, the AG is not required to appear in court as an advocate and the usual course is that law officers from the relevant department of the Ministry of the AG’s office appear as advocates and instructing attorneys.
Section 24 (2) of the Legal Profession Act makes provisions for non-practising members to obtain a practising certificate once their circumstances have changed.
Late last year, Robinson-Regis acted as AG when a controversial issue made headlines—the planned introduction of legislation that would have disqualified pensioners from accessing the senior citizens’ pension.
On December 9, the Miscellaneous Provisions (Senior Citizens’ Pension and Public Assistance) Bill 2024 was laid in Parliament. A major amendment was proposed in the bill to disqualify people with savings exceeding $25,000 from accessing the old pension.
When the issue was brought to the fore by Persad-Bissessar it created an uproar among the population with many of the view that the savings cap was too low and would unfairly disenfranchise people who genuinely needed the $3,500 grant.
The controversial amendment was later described as an error by then AG Armour, who claimed a public servant was responsible for inserting the amendment.
When the bill came to the attention of Parliament on November 21, Armour was out of the country and Robinson-Regis was acting as AG.
Armour took full responsibility for the error and promised to withdraw the amendment from the bill.
Robinson-Regis found herself mired in controversy in 2016 when she was asked to explain a $143,800 bank transaction at First Citizens.
The transactions raised red flags, causing the bank to call on the minister to account for how the cash was obtained. Robinson-Regis eventually closed her account with the bank citing a breach of confidentiality.
A 2006 Comptroller of Accounts report stated that Robinson-Regis had an unauthorised credit card overdraft of $174,000.
The card, given to her as a minister was used for personal items such as fertility services, a wig and clothing. Robinson-Regis eventually apologised for using the card.
Guardian Media sent a WhatsApp message to Robinson-Regis on Tuesday requesting an interview but she did not respond.
About Robinson-Regis
Robinson-Regis first entered Parliament in 1992 as a senator and held the portfolio of Minister of Information from 1992 to 1994.
In 1995, she was elected MP for Arouca South (now Arouca/Maloney).
Over the last three decades, she has served as an Opposition and Government MP. Her appointment as Leader of the House in 2015 made her the first woman in the history of T&T to assume that role.
Robinson-Regis has worked in several ministries, including Social Development and Family Services, Legal Affairs, Housing and Planning and Development.
She is currently the PNM’s lady vice chairman.