ANGELO JEDIDIAH
angelo.jedidiah@guardian.co.tt
One month into the United National Congress (UNC) Government’s term, political scientist Dr Indira Rampersad and former People’s National Movement minister Karen Nunez-Tesheira have praised Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar for her ‘no-nonsense’ leadership style in her second stint in office.
Speaking on CNC3’s The Morning Brew yesterday, Rampersad said there was a stark difference between Persad-Bissessar now and during her 2010-2015 tenure.
“She’s laid her rules down, both for her party and for the nation, in a way of what to expect. She’s very strong. Of course, she’s older, but now she seems much stronger,” Rampersad said.
With the UNC’s election promise to revitalise and diversify this country’s economy and the Government’s projection of a $11 billion deficit for this fiscal year, Rampersad said Persad-Bissessar must be firm and strategic to address T&T’s economic concerns.
“She’s been trying to trim the fat … she’s been identifying places where she thinks there’s been excessive spending or wastage. And she’s very firm that she’s going to deal with that.”
In praising T&T for having women in national leadership roles, former PNM finance minister Karen Nunez-Tesheira lauded Persad-Bissessar for her ability to lead the nation, after years of internal party challenges.
“You have to respect Kamla [Persad-Bissessar], the prime minister. You have to. To come back as a woman, to come back after there was that cabal around her and all the things that were said. I mean, you can’t but say she is resilient,” Nunez-Tesheira said during an interview on CNC3.
Nunez-Tesheira also likened Persad-Bissessar to former US president Theodore Roosevelt and his ‘big stick’ policy, which she believes the Prime Minister has adopted in her second term.
“I think she really has learned to let’s see what happens, because it’s too early, but she did say the right things, and she came across as sincere,” Nunez-Tesheira added.
“I think she’s letting those men understand, you see how I’m pleasant and Auntie Kamla and all of that … There’s an African saying, ‘walk softly and carry a big stick’. She’s doing that. She’s walking softly, but she’s carrying that big stick.”