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Tuesday, July 8, 2025

PM Kamla gets praise for ‘no-nonsense leadership’

by

Angelo Jedidiah
34 days ago
20250604

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.”


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