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Monday, March 31, 2025

Nunez-Tesheira ready for battle: Rowley has failed T&T, PNM

by

Shaliza Hassanali
905 days ago
20221009

Shal­iza Has­sanali

In an un­ex­pect­ed move a week ago, for­mer fi­nance min­is­ter Karen Nunez-Tesheira threw her hat in­to the po­lit­i­cal ring to chal­lenge Peo­ple’s Na­tion­al Move­ment (PNM) leader and the coun­try’s Prime Min­is­ter, Dr Kei­th Row­ley, for the lead­er­ship post in the par­ty’s De­cem­ber 4 in­ter­nal elec­tions.

Her de­ci­sion to vie for the top po­si­tion has caused some con­cerns with her fam­i­ly, but Nunez-Tesheira, who de­scribed her­self as a po­lit­i­cal an­i­mal, ad­mit­ted that the PNM de­serves a breath of fresh air and the coun­try yearns for bet­ter gov­er­nance giv­en that PM Row­ley is "out of touch" and dis­plays a harsh, in­sen­si­tive and crude lead­er­ship style. She said he has failed to de­liv­er and stay true to the tenets and ba­sic prin­ci­ples of the PNM.

Nunez-Tesheira in an in­ter­view with Sun­day Guardian last week said thou­sands of peo­ple have been prais­ing her for hav­ing the courage to tack­le Row­ley head-on. "They not say­ing I win­ning, you know, but they are thank­ing me for stand­ing for­ward, hav­ing the courage, and do­ing this for T&T," she added.

In 2009 al­le­ga­tions of in­sid­er trad­ing were levied against Nunez-Tesheira, who was ac­cused by then-op­po­si­tion leader Kam­la Per­sad-Bisses­sar of with­draw­ing mon­ey from the Cli­co In­vest­ment Bank (CIB) af­ter re­ceiv­ing in­for­ma­tion that it was in fi­nan­cial trou­ble and was about to fall. Would this come back to haunt her as she gets ready to bat­tle for the lead­er­ship post?

Nunez-Tesheira has de­nied she was in­volved in in­sid­er trad­ing and plead­ed with any­one who has ev­i­dence that she knew the bank was go­ing to liq­ui­date and with­drew her mon­ey as a re­sult, to re­port it to the me­dia.

Q: What do you think will give you the edge over Dr Row­ley?

A: I would not phrase it as an edge. What you are al­lud­ing to is my suit­abil­i­ty over the cur­rent leader of the par­ty. We can­not sep­a­rate, un­for­tu­nate­ly, his (Row­ley's) per­for­mance as the leader of the coun­try from that of the lead­er­ship of the par­ty. And if we have to use that as a lit­mus test, I am quite con­fi­dent that he has failed to de­liv­er, he has failed to stay true to the tenets and ba­sic prin­ci­ples of the PNM. We def­i­nite­ly need a change in lead­er­ship.

What were some of the tough de­ci­sions you had to make be­fore you tossed your hat in­to the po­lit­i­cal ring?

 I do think the ar­ti­cles (re­lat­ing to the so­cio-eco­nom­ic cli­mate) that I wrote over a pe­ri­od of time had an im­pact on my de­ci­sion. The more I did re­search, the more I recog­nised there was a need for me to not be the arm­chair crit­ic but to step for­ward. All my fam­i­ly knows that I am a po­lit­i­cal an­i­mal. Some­times it an­noys them. But they all sup­port me. My chil­dren are my great­est con­cern. They are con­cerned be­cause of the crim­i­nal cli­mate in T&T. They fear for my life, which is re­al­ly alarm­ing, and that should be a ma­jor con­sid­er­a­tion for them and oth­er mem­bers of the na­tion­al com­mu­ni­ty. To think that we have reached that point in Trinidad, where peo­ple have to be told that, it tells you there is a need for change…we need a breath of fresh air. Peo­ple have been thank­ing me for do­ing this. They not say­ing I win­ning, you know, but they are thank­ing me for stand­ing for­ward, hav­ing the courage, and do­ing this for T&T.

What is your chil­dren's view on you con­test­ing the PNM lead­er­ship, did they try to dis­suade you?

My chil­dren al­ways said to me, 'Mum­my, we know you have the best in­ter­est of the coun­try.' They be­lieve that I am...based on what they could see be­cause I have no co­coa in the sun. They know what I stand for and who I am. But as my chil­dren, their con­cern is for my per­son­al safe­ty. They do wor­ry about that. Oth­er than that con­cern, they sup­port me.

Giv­en the coun­try's crime sit­u­a­tion, are you fear­ful for your life?

Well, oth­er peo­ple seem to be fear­ful for my life. From that point of view, I sup­pose it would be fool­hardy on my part with the crime lev­el. And what every­one seems to know, whether from the in­side or what­ev­er, I would be fool­hardy not to take that in­to ac­count.

Karen Nunez-Tesheira in St Ann’s on Thursday.

Karen Nunez-Tesheira in St Ann’s on Thursday.

ROBERTO CODALLO

Do you think the coun­try is bet­ter off un­der this ad­min­is­tra­tion?

I want to make it clear that I nev­er strayed from the PNM. I be­lieve in what the PNM stands for.

I would an­swer you by say­ing that the record speaks for it­self. Every time they (the gov­ern­ment) say some­thing to you, what do you be­lieve? What has been the most dis­ap­point­ing part of his (Row­ley's) lead­er­ship is al­most as if he has no re­spect for women and him­self. He has no self-con­straint. You are the Gov­ern­ment. The peo­ple vot­ed you in with their fin­gers. They did not ex­pect that you would take this in­sen­si­tive ap­proach to them and ap­pear to be at the beck and call of the wealthy. The Gov­ern­ment can­not put in place on­ly poli­cies and pro­ce­dures that on­ly the wealthy can ben­e­fit from.

What are the PNM's biggest mis­takes since as­sum­ing of­fice?

A dis­con­nect and al­most con­tempt for the very peo­ple who de­pend on them for as­sis­tance. And hold­ing on to the use of sub­si­dies as a panacea which on­ly makes them two things–stay in a cy­cle of pover­ty and have lit­tle or no self-worth and make them open to par­tic­i­pat­ing in the un­der­ground econ­o­my. This Gov­ern­ment in its eighth year has shown it does not im­ple­ment, and it has a leader that makes state­ments that are in­sen­si­tive, harsh, crude, and out of touch.

How do you in­tend to sway the PNM mem­ber­ship to vote for you?

They must un­der­stand that I have the same love for the PNM as they do. They have to re­call that this cur­rent leader (Row­ley) went up against his own prime min­is­ter and po­lit­i­cal leader (Patrick Man­ning) when he was in his Cab­i­net and even­tu­al­ly as a back­bencher. Did he do that just be­cause he was con­cerned about him­self? I can't an­swer that ques­tion. What I could tell the pub­lic is they have not found any­thing against me. I am at­tached to no one. I take noth­ing from any­one. It is not be­ing dis­loy­al. I look at it as tak­ing a brave and loy­al step to en­sure that what the PNM stands for is not go­ing to be de­ter­mined by one per­son.

 There are as­cend­ing voic­es re­gard­ing how the coun­try is be­ing man­aged. Do you think that Row­ley is good lead­er­ship ma­te­r­i­al?

The ques­tion you are ask­ing, you gave the facts. The peo­ple feel ne­glect­ed be­cause they can­not come out of pover­ty. Those in the par­ty who are an­gry that I am do­ing this, then they have to un­der­stand that I am do­ing it for the love of the coun­try. If they are hon­est with them­selves, they would look, in my view, at the be­tray­al of this Gov­ern­ment to them in not do­ing any­thing to make them en­tre­pre­neurs and giv­ing them the op­por­tu­ni­ties that were giv­en to them through the late Dr Er­ic Williams.

Are you con­test­ing this elec­tion alone or will you present a slate?

I am not chal­leng­ing any oth­er po­si­tion. And there­fore, it is on­ly one po­si­tion that I am in­ter­est­ed in be­cause we know the im­por­tance of lead­er­ship. I have a team work­ing with me and they con­vinced me to do it. My cred­i­bil­i­ty is of crit­i­cal im­por­tance to me. And if we are go­ing to have any fund­ing, I don't want any fund­ing from sources that I have my con­cerns about be­cause I do not want at any time for it to be said with any lev­el of truth that she was just like the rest of them, talk­ing the talk but not walk­ing the walk. A leader is sup­posed to em­brace every­one. When we look at it, it shows we are deal­ing with in­equal­i­ty which is caus­ing dis­af­fec­tion and hope­less­ness even among the rank and file of the PNM who are afraid to say any­thing. They are afraid of los­ing their chair­man­ship, po­si­tions on boards, con­tracts, and be­ing re­moved as a sen­a­tor, cab­i­net mem­ber, and even a back­bencher. But this Prime Min­is­ter has an im­pact on peo­ple, the fear is even more en­trenched.

Who are the mem­bers of this team?

I don't want to re­veal it be­cause they did not give me the au­thor­i­ty to do that. My team is work­ing in a way that is strate­gic and is well-ex­pe­ri­enced in pol­i­tics and sup­port­ing par­ties. I do not have neo­phytes sup­port­ing me.

 So there will be no team con­test­ing with Karen Nunez-Tesheira in the elec­tions?

No. I am laser fo­cused. To me, that is what I am go­ing for, lead­er­ship.

Are you brac­ing for the mud­sling­ing?

 I would like to see what the mud­sling­ing would be. It will be very in­ter­est­ing to see. All I could say is the on­ly thing they have been able to come up with in the last 12 years is CIB and I have asked the Prime Min­is­ter time and time again to re­lease the Col­man Com­mis­sion of In­quiry re­port in­to Cli­co and CL Fi­nan­cial and he did not do it. You can't see it right to clear my name. That would help peo­ple to come to their own con­clu­sion with­out the bac­cha­na­lia. Even if you don't want to re­lease the en­tire re­port just say what it stat­ed about me that was neg­a­tive. If any­one had an in­cen­tive to de­stroy me they would have. They had 12 long years to do it. And the on­ly rea­son that no one has come for­ward, al­though there were for­mer CEOs, chair­men etcetera of CIB who did not ben­e­fit from the Gov­ern­ment's tax­pay­er pay­out for third par­ties, they have every mo­ti­va­tion to ex­pose me for be­ing a liar and a hyp­ocrite.

In 2009 al­le­ga­tions of in­sid­er trad­ing were levied against you, do you think this may come back to haunt you now?

What they want to say is that some­body...and it would have to be some­body high up in CIB who would have whis­pered to me or some­one who knew me to tell me that the com­pa­ny is about to fall and there is go­ing to be a run on the com­pa­ny, take out your mon­ey. By the way, I had the In­tegri­ty Com­mis­sion apol­o­gised to me af­ter we asked what crime I had com­mit­ted, and even­tu­al­ly when we said we go­ing for ju­di­cial re­view, sud­den­ly they had a mo­ment of epiphany and dropped it. I took out my own mon­ey on a fam­i­ly-owned com­pa­ny. My hus­band had been de­ceased for over three years. The way they treat­ed him so bad­ly I want­ed noth­ing to do with them. So, I was dis­af­fect­ed by Cli­co and CL Fi­nan­cial. When it came to the end of the year, re­mem­ber it was the glob­al fi­nan­cial cri­sis, it just dawned on me why you leav­ing your mon­ey in­side of there. So, the whole idea of Cli­co and their whole ques­tion­able way of deal­ing was some­thing that was known for at least ten years, it just fell on my lap. Why weren't all the boards of Re­pub­lic Bank, CIB, CL Fi­nan­cial, In­spec­tor of Fi­nan­cial In­sti­tu­tions and Gov­er­nor of the Cen­tral Bank un­aware that the com­pa­ny was now go­ing in­to a po­si­tion where there was go­ing to be a run on the com­pa­ny? Why they did not know? I am plead­ing with any mem­ber of any gov­ern­ment that could say that they sent a mes­sage to me, how­ev­er it came to me, whether di­rect­ly or in­di­rect­ly, to tell me that CIB was about to go in­to liq­ui­da­tion or about to have a run on the com­pa­ny and take out the mon­ey, don't go to the po­lice, come to the me­dia.

How many Cab­i­net min­is­ters ap­proached you to con­test the lead­er­ship of the par­ty? Is there a break­away fac­tion with­in the PNM that wants to oust Row­ley?

No min­is­ters ap­proached and I would be very sur­prised if they did. I have de­lib­er­ate­ly kept away or said any­thing to them be­cause I do not want to com­pro­mise them in any way. And based on my as­sess­ment of Dr Row­ley, I feel they will be pun­ished. I am pret­ty con­fi­dent there are quite a few of them who would love to see him out. If he be­haves how he be­haves in pub­lic, I could on­ly imag­ine what goes on in that Cab­i­net.

So the sup­port you have been re­ceiv­ing is out­side of Cab­i­net?

 If I were in the Cab­i­net, I would not send What­sApp mes­sages, make calls, or be seen talk­ing to me be­cause I know from be­ing in the for­mer cab­i­net that when per­sons were seen to be close to cer­tain peo­ple, they paid a price.

In 2015, you won quite pos­si­bly the high­est-ever pay­out in a med­ical neg­li­gence case in T&T’s his­to­ry, do you think the PNM grass­roots would see you as a hum­ble per­son and a cham­pi­on of the poor and op­pressed?

The mat­ter has not yet been set­tled. It has gone to the Privy Coun­cil. I can't say too much be­cause it is sub ju­dice. But what I have gone through with that I would wish it on no one. I just want to say that the man I mar­ried, his name is Rus­sel Tesheira. Where did I meet him? On Nel­son Street. Why did I mar­ry him? Be­cause I see be­yond the cir­cum­stances in which he was liv­ing to the man he was. He had done so much in foot­ball and com­mu­ni­ty ser­vice which I ad­mired tremen­dous­ly.

If you are suc­cess­ful in the up­com­ing elec­tions how would you im­prove the PNM and will there be a clean-up ex­er­cise in the par­ty?

 I am not go­ing down that road. There would be no clean-up ex­er­cise. I would have to ob­serve, make an as­sess­ment and then make de­ci­sions. I am there to hope­ful­ly in­spire con­fi­dence in my lead­er­ship if I were to win.

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley at the opening of the Mahaica Sports Complex in Point Fortin yesterday.

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley at the opening of the Mahaica Sports Complex in Point Fortin yesterday.

RISHI RAGOONATH

PM Row­ley gives tongue-in-cheek re­sponse about chal­lengers: 'It's a life-and-death sit­u­a­tion'

Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley has de­clined to com­ment on the de­ci­sion by Karen Nunez- Teshiera to con­test the De­cem­ber 4 in­ter­nal elec­tions.

Jour­nal­ists re­quest­ed a com­ment from Dr Row­ley as he opened the Ma­haica Oval in Point Fortin, yes­ter­day, but be­fore tak­ing ques­tions he in­di­cat­ed he will on­ly be re­spond­ing to mat­ters per­tain­ing to sports.

When asked when he in­tend­ed to speak about his chal­lengers, Dr Row­ley re­spond­ed with a smile: "You have a prob­lem with the Eng­lish lan­guage, eh?"

In a tongue-in-cheek re­sponse, he added, "That is not a sport. That is a life-and-death sit­u­a­tion." When asked if he has filed, he walked away.

Nunez-Tesheira, in an in­ter­view with Sun­day Guardian, said T&T yearns for bet­ter gov­er­nance. She said Dr Row­ley was "out of touch" and dis­plays a harsh, in­sen­si­tive and crude lead­er­ship style.–RAD­HI­CA DE SIL­VA

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