Shastri Boodan
With just a week left before voters head to the polls, two United National Congress (UNC) candidates are accusing the People’s National Movement (PNM) of using “desperate tactics” to distract from what they called its record on crime, infrastructure, and public sector neglect.
UNC Deputy Political Leader and Caroni Central candidate David Lee said recent government announcements such as salary increases for nurses and teachers were little more than “election gimmicks.”
“At the 99 hour, just eleven days before the election, this is another election gimmick,” Lee told Guardian Media during a walkabout at Calcutta Road #1 over the weekend. He argued that if Prime Minister Stuart Young genuinely valued healthcare and education workers, those increases would have come years ago, especially during the height of the COVID‑19 pandemic.
Lee also pointed to the closure of the El Dorado nursing academy as a sign of what he called misplaced priorities. “If you were truly empathetic to the development of nurses, you wouldn’t have shut down that facility,” he said.
He further claimed that the Prime Minister had been echoing UNC proposals throughout the campaign. “He is copying every policy the UNC talks about on the hustings,” Lee said.
Security and infrastructure were also top issues for the Caroni Central candidate. Lee cited a recent fatal shooting outside the airport shortly after the state of emergency was lifted as proof that crime remains unchecked. He also said Caroni Central residents are receiving piped water just two days a month. “Under the People’s Partnership government, these communities did not face this level of hardship,” he added.
Couva South candidate Barry Padarath struck a similar tone during a walkabout on Calcutta Road #2, accusing the PNM of failing to tackle violent crime.
He referenced the fatal shooting of 33-year-old fisherman Arkim Quashie at Piarco International Airport last Thursday, less than an hour after Quashie returned from Panama. “The airport is supposed to be the most secure facility in Trinidad and Tobago,” Padarath said. “It’s mind-boggling that something like that could happen.”
He said the incident exposed a broader pattern of government inaction, arguing that T&T had fallen behind international security standards put in place after the 9/11 attacks. “Statistics show that when the PNM is in power, crime goes up,” he said.
Padarath criticised Young’s plan to unveil a national crime plan just days before the election. “You’ve had 10 years. You were even the Minister of National Security. What stopped you from implementing this plan years ago?”
Calling the current crime situation untenable, Padarath said voters want practical details: “They want to know how many more police officers will be deployed, how many police stations will be open 24/7, what resources will be given to the TTPS—updated bulletproof vests, proper equipment, and modern technology not just for detection, but for prosecution.”
He also called for urgent reform of the country’s firearm licensing system, which he described as “archaic.”
“It’s 10 years too late,” Padarath said. “What you didn’t do in 10 years, you’re not going to fix in 10 days. The country is waiting to exhale.”