The People’s National Movement (PNM) Women’s League has condemned a comment made by Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar during Friday’s sitting of the House of Representatives, describing her words as “highly inappropriate” and “wholly unbecoming” of the country’s leader.
The statement from the League followed a brief but tense exchange between Persad-Bissessar and Member of Parliament Colm Imbert. After Imbert reportedly pointed in her direction during debate, the Prime Minister fired back: “Don’t point at me, because I’ll cuff you down.”
The Women’s League said it was “deeply concerned” by the remark, insisting that the Parliament—the nation’s highest forum for democratic engagement—should never be a place where “violent expressions, whether literal or implied, are normalised, encouraged, or trivialised.”
“At a time when our society is battling increased violence, indiscipline, and disrespect, leaders must set a higher standard of conduct,” the League said. “Words matter, especially the words of the Prime Minister.”
The organisation argued that any suggestion of a physical, retaliatory act—even out of frustration—undercuts efforts to promote respect, non-violence, and conflict resolution, particularly among the country’s youth.
Posing direct questions to the Prime Minister, the Women’s League asked how she expects young people to reject violence “when your own language in Parliament promotes the opposite,” and how citizens can be urged to uphold civility “when your own conduct falls short of the dignity and responsibility of your office.”
The League said it “expects far better” from the nation’s leader, stressing that Trinidad and Tobago deserves a Prime Minister who demonstrates restraint, discipline, and maturity.
“We strongly urge the Prime Minister to reflect on the gravity of her words and the example they set for the thousands who look to the nation’s leadership for guidance,” the statement concluded. “The Office of Prime Minister demands behaviour that elevates our democracy, not language that undermines it.”
