Thursday, October 20, 2011

Branville McCartney - Democratic National Alliance (DNA) leader fails at convincing me that he truly understands the challenges and limits imposed on those who are governing The Bahamas... or worse yet, he doesn’t care about reality; he wants to sell us fantasies

Branville McCartney DNA Leader

Gone Green? Part 2

By Ian G. Strachan

“The DNA is here to create the same paradise for Bahamians that only tourists and foreigners seem to enjoy. The DNA is here to encourage you to dream beyond your wildest imagination; we are here to dare you to think the unthinkable, to do the impossible.”  -Branville McCartney’s address at the launch of the Democratic National Alliance, May 12, 2011

 
This week we continue our discussion of the career of  Branville McCartney, Member for Bamboo Town and leader of the Democratic National Alliance.

McCartney’s departure from Ingraham’s Cabinet seemed impulsive to me, poorly thought out.  His explanations weren’t very convincing.  I wasn’t convinced that he had a serious philosophical difficulty with the FNM (Free National Movement) and I wasn’t clear what he meant when he said he wasn’t being utilized fully.

His promise to challenge for the leadership of the FNM was bold and refreshing, yes, but ultimately foolish, since you ought never to tell a man like Ingraham that you are coming for him.  You just come for him.  Even if he had the opportunity he wanted to challenge Ingraham at convention, I seriously doubt he would have met a fate that was any different from the one meted out to Paul Moss, someone with a better political mind in my opinion than McCartney.

Since launching the DNA, McCartney’s remarks have simply confirmed my impression that he is playing a game and if he wins, we may lose.  What really is the difference, in terms of philosophy and vision, between the FNM and the DNA?  The PLP and the DNA?  Why does the DNA exist—outside of the fact that Ingraham refuses to leave the FNM and let McCartney lead?

And the DNA leader fails at convincing me that he truly understands the challenges and limits imposed on those who are governing this country—or worse yet, he doesn’t care about reality; he wants to sell us fantasies.  Witness these remarks from his maiden speech as DNA leader: “Imagine sidewalk cafes, well-lit streets, rows of theaters especially designed for young Bahamian playwrights, and a downtown that is world renowned and envied by the rest of the world, with Bahamian art and craft galore! . . . Imagine a Bahamas where citizens are no longer prisoners in their homes; where burglar bars are not a necessity . . .  Imagine a tertiary institution that attracts students from around the world and joins the top ranks of colleges and universities around the world. Imagine a Bahamian Harvard. Imagine these possibilities! . . . If we put people first, then perhaps we would no longer boast a national grade point average of a D that has made the outside world question our brilliance and our intelligence.  If we put people first, perhaps it will move to an A that will once again make us the respected and competitive, intellectually brilliant nation that we were meant to be and that many expect us to be; not only regionally but globally.”

I’ve said this before: the language, the tool of the “lotioner” is hyperbole.  PLP leader Perry Christie and McCartney specialize in exaggeration and overblown rhetoric.  Ingraham, the bulldog, specializes in red herrings, the tactic of distraction.  COB a Bahamian Harvard?  Harvard has a $32 billion endowment.  The Bahamas’ budgeted expenditure this year is $1.9 billion.  No more burglar bars in Nassau?  Really? The DNA will deliver that?  The city of Nassau will be envied by the world?  A model city, sure, but envied?  By the world?  The Bahamas will have an A average in its schools?  Really?  Every student will have an A average?  Christie couldn’t have done a better job at painting pies in the sky.

Then McCartney proposed that the country deny children born to illegals the right to apply for citizenship—ever.  This is a reckless and foolhardy proposition.  Rather than ensure the nation’s security it would undoubtedly endanger it.  McCartney is gambling here: demagoguing really.  Trying to capitalize on fear and paranoia.  Dividing us instead of uniting us.  All Bahamians of Haitian descent, Jamaican descent, all Bahamians whose parents or grandparents, out of desperation, came here illegally should note well and vote accordingly.  I for one will not vote for a party that proposes something so destructive and inhumane.  Yes, we must guard our borders, yes we must work toward a system of legal Haitian migration for purposes of employment, but I don’t see how dooming children to statelessness creates a better Bahamas.

McCartney then accused the FNM of being in the pocket of the Chinese and challenged them to reveal who financed them.  He himself refused to reveal who was financing the DNA. How does that make sense?  How is that a new political approach?  If you are going to demand that people be transparent, shouldn’t you first be transparent yourself?  Otherwise you are just like all the rest – playing the game.

And recently, he criticized Ingraham for not running in Bamboo Town and sending Cassius Stuart instead.  Was he serious or was this a bad joke?  Why on earth should Ingraham run in Bamboo Town?  Will McCartney run in North Abaco?  Does he imagine he will win in North Abaco?

I am not convinced that McCartney is experienced enough, thoughtful enough, skilled enough to lead this country at this time.  What I see is someone who too often is shallow, a “lotioner”, someone posing as firm, determined, and possessing a vision.

When I mention McCartney’s weaknesses to DNA insiders they tell me it’s a team effort.  But McCartney wants to be prime minister, the most powerful office in the land and I just don’t trust his judgment.  I have some serious doubts about the competence of some of the people he has entrusted with major responsibilities in his party.

And I think he moved too soon.  And moving too soon tells me one of two things: either you really don’t understand how politics works in this country or you have a monumentally over blown sense of your political capital.

He has certain qualities that make him an excellent candidate--until he actually speaks. And when he speaks he either utters facile nothings or he reveals a willingness to say anything to gain an advantage.  That makes him at best reckless and at worst desperate.

But I may be wrong.  I probably don’t speak for the majority of Bahamians.  We know what an empty talking PM looks like.  We also know what headstrong leadership without vision looks like.  We want better.  I know there is a yearning for change in Bahamians of all generations.  We want and need inspiring leadership.  Strong, innovative, competent leadership.  I just don’t think McCartney and the DNA are what we want them so desperately to be.  Nonetheless, the DNA will probably gain more votes than any third party in the last 20 years.

People have to choose the better of three unpalatable options in this election.  And it ain’t gonna be pretty.  Is it better to go with the devil you know or the one you don’t?  Certainly, the PLP and FNM have themselves to blame for a lot of what they will suffer in 2012, because they refuse to renew themselves, despite the people’s yearning for rebirth.

Now, there’s another possibility: I may be dead wrong in accusing McCartney of delusions of grandeur.  McCartney may well know the DNA can’t win it all (I don’t think he’ll even win his seat in Bamboo Town). But he may be gaining immense pleasure from knowing he’s going to give Christie and Ingraham fits.  He may also have concluded that he has nothing to lose and that by losing in 2012 as head of the DNA he sets himself ahead of anyone else who may be aspiring to lead the PLP or FNM in 2017. And that would make him a lot more savvy a politician than I have given him credit for being.

Oct 17, 2011

Gone Green? - Part 1

thenassauguardian

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

Branville McCartney's Contribution to the Government’s Package of Crime Bills - Tuesday October 18, 2011 - House of Assembly - The Bahamas

Contribution by

The Honourable W. A. Branville McCartney,

M.P. for Bamboo Town

Leader, Democratic National Alliance

At

The Honorable House of Assembly

On Government’s Package of Crime Bills

Tuesday, October 18, 2011


Mr. Speaker, I am indeed humble to stand before you today on behalf of the good constituents of Bamboo Town.

Mr. Speaker, the past 4½ years have been quite interesting regarding the representation of Bamboo Town. I have had the great honour of meeting many persons, young and old and have made lifetime friendships. Many programs were developed from day one, such as the “Precious Jewels” senior citizens program, the youth program, after-school homework center, adult computer classes, Thy Brothers Keeper program and free legal clinics were offered. Community meetings were held especially when there were pressing national issues, such as the BTC sale.

It is truly amazing the attention Bamboo Town has gotten recently.

The Member for North Abaco said last week that Bamboo Town is his “tings.”

That he is coming to get his “tings.”

It was said that Bamboo Town would be a “test case.”

It was further said that persons running in Bamboo Town are in a certain league and not in the league of the Member for North Abaco and Farm Road.

Indeed, the Member for North Abaco said that if the FNM is not successful in Bamboo Town, his most worthy opponent the official leader of the Opposition Party, the PLP, will be successful and the Member for North Abaco seems very satisfied and content with that.

What is most striking to me, however, is the fact that the Member for North Abaco, a few days before the commencement of this debate said he does not want Bamboo Town to be eliminated as a constituency by the Constituencies Commission. Of note, the Member for North Abaco said that if the Constituencies Commission comes back and report that they have eliminated the constituency of Bamboo Town, he would not accept it! The good member just informed Parliament on the formation of the Constituencies Commission and made such a comment, declaration, command before the Commission meets—that he, the PM, would not accept a particular decision if made by them. With regard Sir, the Member for North Abaco is wrong, wrong, wrong!! AND out of order! The member assertion is unconstitutional! It goes contrary to Article 69 and Article 70 of the Constitution.

For the record, in May of this year when the Member of Parliament for North Abaco and his cabinet came to Bamboo Town to apologize for sending me, it was stated, Bamboo Town was FNM. At that time, I told the good Member, if Bamboo Town is FNM, I challenge him to run against me—leader against leader. I subsequently said that if Bamboo Town is eliminated, as the leader of the DNA, I could determine which constituency to contest and that the North Abaco constituency has not been ratified as yet by the DNA.

A Crisis of Leadership and Survival Mode

Mr. Speaker, at this very moment The Bahamas and the majority of Bahamian people are in survival mode. They have given up on the government of The Bahamas to fulfill its primary obligation to them, which is to look out for their security and welfare and provide them with the means and opportunities by which they can be first class citizens in their own country. As a result of the failure of successive governments to fulfill its primary obligation to the people, many have now resorted, by whatever means necessary, to taking care of “their own” safety and welfare needs; what we are now experiencing is the ensuing chaos.

You see Mr. Speaker, no matter how some may feel about the flaws and failings of leadership during the late 70s and 80s, many still have an unwavering respect and appreciation for that era of leadership, because their perception is that the leadership was working tirelessly as a voice of the people to champion Bahamian right—rights that have us, as a people, now enjoying majority rule and independence. And even though there are those who, in looking at the root cause of our present state of societal affairs, say that what we see today fed off of and grew from “the rampant drug trafficking and “gangsterism,” which ran wild in the 70s and 80s,” there are those who also credit that era with producing a kind of leadership that was visionary enough to architect and begin the process and promise of Bahamian ownership. If one were to read Sir Lynden’s letters and speeches in his text, The Vision of Sir Lynden, one would gain a greater appreciation of Sir Lynden, the visionary, and see how his vision for The Bahamas, if enacted, would probably have us listed as a developing nation, like Barbados, our neighbor to the south, or by now, a developed nation.

However, the reality is that that era did produce a crisis in leadership and there were those who felt the leader had to go. Visionary or not, Sir Lynden, because of his perceived misgivings, was deemed no longer suitable or credible enough to govern. For some, he was a national embarrassment and, as such, ill-suited to be a role model. According to some sitting right here in the House today, he had to go, Mr. Speaker. I think North Abaco made his position on this matter and Sir Lynden quite clear in his ranting in the House last week.

But since that era, Mr. Speaker, both the members from North Abaco and Farm Road have been given the opportunity by the Bahamian people to reverse the plague of rampant materialism that North Abaco said in his national address has “laid waste to our long-held values and positive social morals.” And for almost 20 years, we as a people have placed our lives in their hands, because they told us that we could trust that they had a vision to get us back on course to the promise that majority rule and independence held for us—ownership and a first world status.

And despite all the speechifying by both in the past 20 years, uncontrolled national debt, out of control violence and crime, a dysfunctional educational system, excessive land and property asset give-away, record unemployment, mounting poverty, a decrepit health system, rampant materialism and did I say out of control violence and crime?—all illustrate to Bahamian people that history is now repeating itself. We are once again having a crisis in meaningful leadership and as a result, we are now reaping another bad harvest.

Mr. Speaker, our purpose here today and for the rest of the week is to discuss the proposed changes to a package of Crime Bills, hoping to enact them as to get our out of control people under control and back in line. As leaders, we distract attention from our own inabilities, inattentiveness, incompetence and lack of self-discipline by blaming the criminal offenders for all of our societal woes.

Now, Mr. Speaker, as many of you know, I for one am a believer that if someone breaks the law, then justice must ensue. So, I hope that what I will say is not misconstrued as me taking a soft stance on the administration of justice for violent and criminal acts, or any act, as a matter of fact, that is in contravention of our stated laws. In no way am I implying that at all.

What I am implying, however, is that we cannot sit back in righteous indignation and simply blame the criminals and the criminally minded, the delinquents and the dejected for our state of affairs without taking into consideration, first, the role that we play as national leaders and public figures in the destruction that we now see in our society.

Right now, Mr. Speaker, as we debate this issue of crime and criminality, the member for North Abaco may himself have failed to comply with certain laws under the Public Disclosure Act. In a public statement sometime last year, the Member said he has not disclosed his assets, as required by law, since 2007. Mr. Speaker, I think you are well aware that for Ministers of the Government, failure to publicly disclose their and their immediate family’s assets, interests and income is an offense punishable by a $10,000 fine, up to two years in jail or both. Additionally, the MP can have his property forfeited to the crown. In making his statement last year, the Member said he was “too busy” to come into compliance with the law at the time. You see, Sir, we have persons who flaunt non-compliance in people’s face, while creating laws that do not apply to them to punish everyone else. But, these young people, who see what’s going on, Mr. Speaker, develop the mentality that if these officials can get away with non-compliance, then why can’t they. They do not know that justice does not work the same way for them until it is too late. They do not understand that the same law that some are above is the same law that will come crashing down on them. In survival mode, however, Mr. Speaker, most do not care anymore.

The average Bahamian sees government officials getting rich while they get poorer; they see foreigners coming to The Bahamas, prospering, while they struggle to live above the poverty line with many not making it. Everyone seems to be making a living off of them, but they have no one who can provide them with ways and opportunities to make a meaningful living for themselves—outside of those that have been in place for almost half a century. Barely able to make ends meet, a number of people have this perception that government has “stop checking” for them.

They feel as if the promise of Bahamians as owners and builders of their own land and destinies—a promise started with Sir Lynden and majority rule and independence—has been lost with North Abaco and Farm Road, and that “everything for Bahamian people are backing up.” Ask the average Bahamian on the street Mr Speaker if they see any real solution to this violent crime epidemic and almost all will tell you, No! They say that unless government “check for the people again, crime is not going to go anywhere no matter what the government does.” What pessimism coming from our people, Mr. Speaker.

But their pessimism, I guess Mr. Speaker, is tied to the words of one writer who says, when [people] are stuck in survival mode, [Their hearts are] not open. [Their] rational mind is disengaged. Making clear choices and recognizing the consequences of those choices is unfeasible. [They] are focused on short-term survival, not the long-term consequences of [their] beliefs and choices,” and as a result, “it is almost impossible to cultivate positive attitudes and beliefs,” particularly in the periods of leadership crisis.

I now turn to examine the Proposed Bills:

The Penal Code (Amendment) Bill, 2011

1. This Bill is long overdue. From 2006 when the Privy Council set aside the mandatory sentence of death for murder there was a need for this legislation. In 2008 in the Court of Appeal case of Maxo Tido v Regina, Dame Joan Sawyer the then President of the Court of Appeal in the judgment of the Court pointed to the need for legislation. The Bar Council called for legislation from 2006 and continued that call up to today.

2. The major error that is made is that the framers of the amendments fail to appreciate that, right now, the sentence of life imprisonment presently means imprisonment for the rest of the life of the convict. It is the Advisory Committee on the Prerogative of Mercy (ACPM) that advise persons who have been sentenced to life to be released early. The Minister of National Security, the Attorney General and at least three government appointees chair this Committee. Life presently means natural life. This was the ruling of the Court of Appeal in the case of Forrester Bowe on his re-sentencing.

3. The Bill does not do away with the ACPM’s ability to release persons early and so is really a game by defining life in the exact same way it is now defined. If they wanted you not to be able to be released there would have to be a section like the new section 33A in the Dangerous Drugs (Amendment) Bill to rule out the ability of the ACPM to release someone early. That is not included in the Bill and so persons will still be able to be released. If they want to mean what they say they need to say that you cannot be release by the ACPM.

4. This position of someone being sentenced to prison for the rest of their life where, at the time of sentencing it is known that they will not be released is actually contrary to the death penalty jurisprudence. Contrary to what the Member for Cat Island says in his contribution, it is recognized that if someone is so bad and/or their offence is so bad that they ought to never be released from prison and this convict should be sentenced to death. This is the actual definition of someone who should be sentenced to death. There should be, therefore, only two classes of persons: 1) persons who are sentenced to death and 2) persons who are sentenced to a sentence that will result in their eventually being released from prison.

5. In the categories of persons whose murder makes you death eligible does not include the representatives of parties in civil cases or defence counsel in criminal matters whose murder is motivated by their representation. This is not consistent.

6. In the categories of death eligible murders the bill does not seek to define what will be considered to be a murder committed “in the course of or furtherance of” one of the named offences. There have been a number of cases in Caribbean jurisdictions where there have been difficulties in making the determination.

7. The sadistic murder of a child for sexual gratification where no other felony is committed (Bowe and Davis v R-Privy Council para 21); is not included.

8. A planned cold-blooded killing (see Tido v R-Privy Council para 36); is not included.

9. A killing accompanied by unusual violence more than is required to accomplish the killing (see Tido v R-Privy Council para 36); is not included.

It also does not cover some categories of murder that it appears from anecdotal evidence the public considers to be amongst the worse of the worse even when public opinion is stripped of it subjective elements, i.e.:

a). The deliberate killing of a child whether planned or unplanned;

b). The deliberate killing of the handicap whether planned or unplanned;

c) The deliberate killing of a woman known to be pregnant whether planned or unplanned;

d). The deliberate killing of a priest while that priest discharge his vocation or where the killing is motivated by the priest discharging his vocation;

e) A killing where the killing is motivated by the race, gender or sexual preference of the victim (the hate crime category).

The government by not consulting at all before releasing this wave of legislation on the Bahamian people did a great disservice to jurisprudence of this country and the people as demonstrated by the glaring omissions in this legislation that all would agree is already overdue. A mere period of consultation that could have been conducted over the period that the Prime Minister first indicated that this legislation would be forthcoming and now would have resulted in a better product than the product presently before Parliament.

10. Section 3(5) of the Bill in seeking to introduce a 20-year period before there is a review of the release of a minor convicted of murder may well be unconstitutional as it introduces the penal portion of a indefinite sentence being introduced by the Legislature instead of by the Courts.

11. The attempt to reintroduce mandatory minimum sentences by stating a range of sentence by section 4 of the Bill will run into the same issues of whether the specifying of mandatory minimum sentences are constitutionally possible. This sentence will apply to someone who commits a robbery armed with a stick or any other instrument, which need not be deadly. It will also apply to a robbery where the convict intended to simply punch someone or pull the item from the victim.

The Dangerous Drugs (Amendment) Bill

1. The same issue of constitutionality arises with regard the range of sentences introduced by this Bill for drug offences.

2. There is also an additional issue that it is clear that Magistrates are being recognized as trying serious cases. Article 20 of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of The Bahamas provides that the citizen has the right to be tried before an independent and impartial court when charged with a criminal offence. There are a number of recent cases that hold that in order for a court to qualify as independent and impartial the judicial offence has to have security of tenure. Our Magistrates have no security of tenure. It is, therefore, recommended that given that these bills make it clear that Magistrates are dealing with serious cases and will reopen that line of challenge and that the government immediately legislate to provide security of tenure for Magistrates to avoid a potential successful challenge to the ability of Magistrates to hear any criminal matter.

Customs Management Bill and Pawnbrokers Bill

1. Both Bills are necessary and are long overdue. The government has reacted very slowly to regulate these industries that boomed during the economic downturn in circumstances where schemes of regulation exist in many other countries. We are not reinventing the wheel here. We are simply adapting it to meet our circumstances.

Bail (Amendment) Bill

1. The legislature cannot dictate what is a reasonable time to the courts. There are a number of cases that indicate this.

2. This Bill highlights the need to give Magistrates security of tenure in order to avoid challenges to Magistrates pursuant to Article 20 the Constitution (see above).

3. This Bill highlights the admission by the government that it cannot try serious cases in less than three years, notwithstanding the current waste of judicial time occasioned when cases collapse or do not come off. The focus should be on trying persons in a truly reasonable time.

Sexual Offences (Amendment) Bill

1. The same comment on mandatory minimum by a range applies here.

2. The same comment on the meaning of life imprisonment applies here.

Court of Appeal Bill

1. It is questionable whether Clause 2 of the Bill is constitutional. In the UK, this is the process of the Attorney General’s reference that permits the Court of Appeal to state the law, but does not permit it to set aside an acquittal. Clause 3 is already the law now and this adds nothing new.

Criminal Procedure Code Bill

1. The increase in the Magistrates sentencing power reinforces the need to give them security of tenure.

2. Clause 5 is good, in that, it means that the firearms licensing officer need not waste time coming to court, but can state the fact of the license in a report.

Evidence Bill

1. The Bill accomplishes something that is inoffensive. There is a potential of cost saving, but a danger that overuse risks a potential of losing the quality of the human presence.

2. There is a need for care in controlling the environment on the other end of the video link.

3. This Bill can be supported, but it is not a game changer in terms of transforming the procedure in criminal trials to reduce the time taken and increase the efficiency of the process. It is a disappointment in this sense. It is not the sort of game changer we advocate like legislating to enable judges to have evidential hearings ahead of the empaneling of jury and the beginning of trials.

Firearms Bill

1. The mandatory minimum raises the same issues of constitutional of minimum sentences and the need for security of tenure of Magistrates raised earlier in this paper.

2. The mandatory minimum sentence of four years applies to persons, who had a license for a revolver, shotgun, rifle or ammunition, but didn’t license it in the six months grace period.

3. Clause 11 creates an offence of possession with intent to supply firearms, but unlike the similar provision of the Dangerous Drugs Act there is no greater punishment for possession with intent of firearms than there for simply possessing firearms. This is wrong in principle; the supplier should attract greater punishment than the possessor.

Suggestions:

Illegal Immigration

Mr. Speaker, I was extremely disappointed that there was no mention in the Package of Crime Bills by the government that spoke to illegal immigration. There is no doubt Sir that the influx of illegal immigration contributes to a certain extent to the crime problem. Indeed Sir, some of the illegals that are here were criminals in their own country.

I would have thought that the Government would have amended the laws to include the offence of “Harboring of Illegals.” An offence of this nature would ensure that persons who rent, lease or allow illegals on their property will be held liable to a fine and/or imprisonment or both. It is also a known fact that shantytowns are throughout New Providence and The Bahamas. Nothing is being done by the Government to eradicate these shantytowns. Many of the shantytowns are known to harbor criminals; they are breeding grounds for crime and illegal activity. What is the Government doing about this?

Responsibility of Parents

Drastic times require drastic measures. Sir, there are many crimes committed by persons under the age of 18. Many parents are “donors” rather than real parents. They do not know whether their children are in school, they do not participate in their children’s’ education and at night, they do not know where their children are. In other words, the children are left to their own devices. There is no guidance by the parents! Harden criminals usually start young, with petty crimes. The government should have given serious consideration to making parents responsible by way of fines for criminal acts committed by their under-aged children.

National Services

For the life of me, I do not know why the Government did not consider the introduction of a national service. This, Sir, in my view would have an immediate everlasting effect on many of our young men who are not presently employed.

National service should apply to persons who are unemployed and those who are not able or willing to further their education.

National service would serve two purposes: those men, in particular those on the blocks and idle, would be put in a program that would teach them a trade, transforming them into productive members of their society. They would learn how to respect other people and other people’s property.

Secondly, Sir, in my view, this is a necessary step that this country must take to reduce crime and improve young Bahamians’ way of life!

Laws Relating to Dead Beat Dads

Single mothers in this Bahamas are at a disadvantage in the courts. They are in a position where, more often than not, children are with them and the fathers neglect and/or refuse to support the children. This is a disadvantage to the children, who suffer because of lack of support by the father. The Government should look at the laws relating to child support and put more teeth in them.

Hand Guns

It is my view, that the Government should consider, after consultation with the relevant persons, authorities and the public at large, whether handguns should be issued to certain people. Indeed, Sir, today there are certain people (i.e. businessmen) who have handguns. Sir, there should be regulations that allow certain people to carry handguns and this should be considered by the government. Today, the Prime Minister makes the decisions as to whether people can carry a handgun.

Education

Sir, I heard nothing from the Government, which I thought was fundamental to crime prevention, that certain principles be taught from young in the schools. We need to bend the tree while it’s young Mr. Speaker. It must be mandated that children be taught right from wrong, children should be taught to love your neighbour as yourself, respect, courtesy and how to be your brother’s keeper. This Sir is necessary.

In addition Sir, truant officers should be reintroduced immediately.

Management of the Administration of Justice

Management of the Administration of Justice is perhaps the main reason why there are delays in the Court system. The Government has not informed us how the Management of the Administration of Justice will be improved. You see Sir, you can amend, appeal, revoke, legislate in relation of crime all you want, but if the management of the Administration of Justice is not dealt with (and left in the same position) I find it difficult to see how the implementation of these amendments will be effective if we still have poor management of the system.

Leadership

Political Leadership has a pivotal role to play in the way young men, in particular, react in their day-to-day life.

When men watch our Parliamentary Channel and see the disrespect displayed towards members, it is not a good example. You must lead by example! When you carry on like a bully what do you expect from the young men watching? When you try to intimidate others, what do you expect from the young men watching? When you display anger, what do you expect from the young men watching? When you show disrespect, what do you expect from the young men watching? The fact of the matter is that some political leaders are bad examples and that transcends into the community.

Indeed Sir, I would encourage political leaders to be good examples for our young men to emulate. But Sir, I also realize that you cannot teach old dogs new tricks!

Part IV: Crime Fighter - Renewing the Vision

My good friend, the Member for Mt. Moriah, constantly tells us that many of these crimes, particularly killings, are committed by people who have problems controlling their anger; so we put in place measures to control the anger for them, but we do nothing to find out why they are angry. Even now, we go to great efforts to enact laws and measures so that we can control the criminal characteristics of our people, but we do not put in the same effort, as governments, to finding out the root cause of these negative characteristics. Despite law on top of law on top of law, nothing changes. WE keep doing the same thing over, and over and over again, expecting to get a different result. And when these things do not work, we say, don’t ask us, we are not doing the killing and the stealing. We say, if you want answers ask the sociologists and psychiatrists.

The Member for Carmichael said in the conclusion to his presentation, “the problems being experienced today did not suddenly come upon us and they were not thrust upon us from outside The Bahamas. We are, today, reaping the rewards of our own inabilities, inattentiveness, incompetence and indiscipline—the seeds of which were sown many years ago.” But not only were they sown during the drug years of the 70s and 80s, they were also sown in the 90s and the 2000s.

I will paraphrase Martin Luther King and say that as a result of long years of oppression and feelings that everything is backing up, because leaders have stop checking for them. A good number of Bahamians have become so drained of self-respect and a sense of “somebodiness” that they have given up on their dreams, become complacent and settled for almost anything; the resulting bitterness and hatred for having to settle, nourished by their frustration over continued discrimination and disenfranchisement have caused many to turn their anger against society.”

Mr. Speaker, I can safely say that over the past nine months, many of us have watched our country and our lives slowly slip into chaos and disarray. From the disastrous street-work mess that has turned our island into a maze of confusion to the, somewhat, embarrassing devaluation of our country’s economic worth and standing, it would appear that we, as a people and a nation, are sailing in stormy seas on a rudderless and captain-less ship. Abandoned by leadership, society as a whole is left on its own to fend for itself.

Frustrated on all levels, thrown into chaotic disarray with no one to turn to for help, for guidance and for protection, the people, it seems, are now taking matters into their own hands, trying to survive.

For many of us, as law abiding, good citizens, we no longer feel safe and secure inside or outside our homes and our streets, and our neighbourhoods have become like the Wild, Wild West—taken over by unfeeling criminals and people carrying out vigilante justice.

Again, Mr. Speaker, the Democratic National Alliance holds firm to its belief and its position that neither the Free National Movement (FNM) nor the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) has any practical solution to our crime problem. The plans that we have gotten from them both, for the most part, amount to miserably misguided, unimaginative and uninformed attempts at rewording or rebranding past failed policies, with none truly seeking to address the root of the issue.

The turn around for our nation, Mr. Speaker, is not going to come as a result of the number of penal codes we put in place, you know. Sad to say, it may not even come with national calls to volunteerism. The turn around will only come with proper and effective administration and management of the country’s systems of social protection and job creation initiatives that will empower people to take care of their own personal needs.

And even this Mr. Speaker, for all we may wish, will not come as long as we have the present leadership that we have in place. For too long they have been in cahoots, playing a terribly divisive game of politics that have divided us as a nation and as a people.

I say to you today, Mr. Speaker, for us to see any turnaround in this crime issue the people must get the feeling that we are once again on the road to progress and for progress to continue in The Bahamas, there is going to be a need for real change from the petty partisan politics that was on full display last week by the Member for North Abaco.

Sir, I am in this position today, because I recognized that there was a void in visionary leadership, I recognized that there was a crisis in leadership, so I took up the charge. I did not enter this race to become the next Prime Minister of The Bahamas so that I could come in the people’s house of business to squawk, cackle and play around like one would expect of leaders in a banana republic. I came into this race, because I wanted to present the Bahamian people with a new kind of leadership, a new 21st Century progressive kind of leader and leadership that would seek to unite rather than to divide; one who recognizes that the scourge that we are here discussing and debating today is primarily the result of a nation left to fend for itself.

In closing Mr. Speaker, I say the Bahamian people need new leadership, because like in the late 70s and 80s, we now have a crisis in leadership and we must be guided through these tumultuous times. The world is changing around us, Mr. Speaker, and in order for the Commonwealth of The Bahamas to keep up with what is taking place globally, we need a new kind of leadership who can help us compete on the global stage.

Like I said several times earlier, the push for majority rule and independence promised us that we would be owners—owners of our lands and owners of our destinies. However, this progress has been hindered because successive leaders, since Sir Lynden, have disregarded good ideas from that era and good ideas from each other. But Mr. Speaker when good ideas, compete against good ideas, great ideas lose!

When I moved into Bamboo Town as that constituency’s representative, I intentionally used the color olive green on the sign at my headquarters and whereas some may have perceived this to be my beginning push to move away from the FNM, I saw this as my beginning push to unite Bamboo Town. I relied on my early childhood values to give me the wisdom to recognize that before I was an FNM, I was a Bahamian. I wanted the residents to know that I was not only the representative for the FNMs, but I was also the representative for the PLPs, NDP, BDM and any other resident of Bamboo Town. My aim was to create a community, not a constituency.

Again, Mr. Speaker, our efforts in fighting crime and criminality will call for this same kind of leadership, one who recognizes that we are not islands made up of FNMs, PLPs, DNAs or NDPs, but that we are islands of Bahamians who make up the great Commonwealth of The Bahamas.

No longer should we or can we continue to allow partisanship—encouraged by disingenuous leadership—to drive a wedge between us as we try to get back to creating ONE BAHAMAS, a 21st century, 1st world Bahamas, where people are the most precious resource, where prosperity is measured by the quality of the health, education and the social environment, and the self-esteem of the people; where individual and corporate productivity are synonymous with self-worth and where the love of work is esteemed as a national obligation; a Bahamas where economic diversity creates a broad spectrum of opportunities to challenge all the rich, creative talents, gifts, abilities and ingenuity of the people.

Embedded in these ideas left unfinished by Sir Lynden, Mr. Speaker, are the solution to our crime problems. Embedded in them are the solution to our educational problems, Mr. Speaker. Embedded in these ideas, are the solutions to our health and economic problems. In these ideas, Mr. Speaker, are the vision for creating a ONE BAHAMAS, where people are first again. ONE BAHAMAS, Mr. Speaker, this is the meaning of real change, change we can believe in.

I thank you Mr. Speaker, and unless something pressing comes up, I hope that I will not have to mention my worthy opponents North Abaco and Farm Road again. In my effort to become a more self-disciplined leader, I constantly remind myself that this election is not about North Abaco and Farm Road, but about the Bahamas and Bahamians, particularly our children, their children, and their children’s children.

DNA Facebook

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Most Bahamian voters do not view Branville McCartney as a credible prime minister... not to mention his announced Democratic National Alliance (DNA) party candidates... Voters know too that the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) and Free National Movement (FNM) are bigger than Perry Christie and Hubert Ingraham

McCartney’s Vanity Fair


Front Porch

By Simon



Halloween arrived early at the House of Assembly last week.  It made a sneak preview during the debate on establishing a Straw Market Authority.  In his debate wrap-up, Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham spooked Branville McCartney by lobbing a few political ‘trick-or-treats’ at the DNA leader.

They were offered in a trademark Ingraham jest, often crafted to rattle opponents by delivering a serious message guised as humor.  So effective were the barbs that McCartney’s tough-guy mask slipped, sending him into a dizzying array of costume changes.

The MP for Bamboo Town reacted as a cry-baby and as a victim and martyr before trying to steady himself and regain his tough-guy persona.  He even donned his maximum leader costume by imperially declaring: “The good thing about being leader of this party is that I can determine where I can run.”

For his reference, Sir Lynden Pindling, who enjoyed a safe seat in New Providence prior to the 1967 general election, was persuaded by some of his colleagues to run in South Andros.  It proved pivotal in ushering in majority rule.

McCartney made no mention of a selection process for candidates at the branch or national level of the DNA. Instead he flatly stated that he will run wherever he pleases, possibly leaving Bamboo Town for North Abaco to teach Hubert Ingraham a lesson.

 

Singular

He floated the possibility with little respect for the people of either constituency. He also did not seem to consult with his party. Not even Sir Lynden, much less Hubert Ingraham, would claim such a singular privilege.

One must presume that McCartney is also prepared to remove an already nominated candidate from a constituency and run there if it suits his fancy.  If this is how McCartney thinks based on the power he has in the DNA, one can imagine how he might behave given real power.

Both Sir Lynden and Ingraham understood that ours is a parliamentary democracy where the party and cabinet take precedence.  We do not have a presidential system, which McCartney still seems not to understand despite his pretensions of collegiality.

When the current heads of the PLP and FNM are no longer the leaders of their parties, there will be others waiting to succeed them, who their respective party colleagues view as possible prime ministers.  McCartney confirmed this by noting that he sees potential successors to the major party leaders within their respective parties.

The same cannot be said of the DNA.  Most voters do not view McCartney as a credible prime minister, not to mention his announced candidates.  Voters know too that the PLP and FNM are bigger than Christie and Ingraham.

Smarting from a bruised ego and piqued at Ingraham’s playful ribbing, McCartney, in his martyr costume, issued a highly unlikely and amateurish bluff.  All laughing aside, he suggested he might risk his political career by switching to North Abaco to teach Hubert Ingraham a lesson.

In saying that he is prepared to lose there to deny Ingraham a victory and tilt it to the PLP, McCartney confirmed the gist of what the prime minister stated in the House, riling the DNA in the first place.

 

Judgement

It is that in Bamboo Town, as across the country, the DNA is unlikely to win against the major parties.  Whatever his capacity for irony, the paucity of the DNA leader’s judgement is remarkable.  Leadership is not mostly about skill-sets.  It is about good judgement.

In even floating the idea that he might out of animus run against the Member for North Abaco is not the type of poor judgement a more seasoned leader would make.   Essentially it is vanity, not good judgement, that led the DNA leader to brag that “as leader of this party” he can run wherever he wants.

It is this unquenchable vanity that provoked the Member for Bamboo Town to overreact to the prime minister’s jocularity in the House, which drew thunderous laughter.

The over-the-top response to Ingraham’s mild tap-up speaks volumes about how the DNA and its leader must see themselves: They are special and precious and should be treated with kid gloves.  How dare anyone criticize them seeing how special they are?

Never mind that month after month, McCartney and his party have relentlessly attacked Hubert Ingraham in even more pointed and barbed language, eliciting no response from Ingraham despite the constant attacks.

McCartney suggested that Ingraham is uncaring and lacks compassion.  He accused a man who dedicated his life to improving the quality of life for Bahamians as basically being unpatriotic, unconcerned about protecting Bahamian interests.  McCartney continues to question the prime minister’s integrity and the DNA has called him all manner of things – child of God is not one of them.

Apparently it is perfectly okay for Ingraham to be the DNA’s punching bag.  Yet when he ever so slightly slapped back, which was much milder than a punch, the DNA and its leader doubled-over playing the wounded victims.  Rather than the rough and tumble nature of politics, they may consider competing in ballroom dancing.

Politics is not a Vanity Fair for those who believe that the world should recognize and reward the supposed brilliance they see when they look in the mirror every morning and tell themselves how wonderful they are among other mortals.

 

Privilege

Politics is a noble art and vocation.  It is an arena where those who dare to compete for the privilege of office, do so through the ideas, character and skills they may bring to the tough task of governance, as individuals and as a party.

Among the tests for being afforded such a privilege are those of resilience, imagination, and organizational prowess.  Luck and timing are often pivotal for political success.  But, as the saying reminds, “Chance favors the prepared mind”.

Patronage too plays a role.  Ingraham convinced the FNM constituency association of Bamboo Town to accept McCartney as the candidate for the traditionally safe seat for that party.  He also appointed the freshman MP a junior minister in the two high-profile areas of tourism and immigration.

Clearly, this was not enough for the preternaturally ambitious politician who seemed miffed that other junior ministers were given substantive posts ahead of him.  In exiting the Ingraham administration he bemoaned that he felt stifled, that his gifts were not fully utilized.  This, after only approximately three years in cabinet.

Suppose Ingraham had appointed McCartney to a substantive ministerial post?  Suppose that Ingraham indicated to the junior minister that he saw him as a potential successor?  What is the likelihood that he would have left so abruptly?

Others in leadership in the DNA might ponder those questions.  And, this:  Did Branville McCartney launch the DNA to bring about change in the political process or primarily as a vehicle to accommodate his overweening ambition?

Moreover, if the FNM is re-elected and Ingraham invites McCartney back to a substantive cabinet post and indicates that he may be a possible successor, what is the likelihood that he would remain in a defeated DNA?

 

Obsession

Vanity is a blinding obsession.  The real test of one’s genetic make-up as a politician is how one reacts in the face of real power.  How McCartney might react if he eyed a rapid path to the top of the FNM in its last term or possible next term is where his artifice and profiling would likely give way to realpolitik.

Since the launch of his DNA, McCartney has tried his hand at the classic strategy of triangulation.  It was clever to do so given voter frustration over various issues, including the persistent global economic crisis and the resulting desire to blame and punish someone or some group for their woes.

The DNA also tapped into the ever-present hunger of voters as consumers for the next new thing or personality.  Bahamians also like a good show.  But, most independent voters, critical in the next election, require more substance than the DNA has provided in terms of leadership and policy.

The DNA leader’s meager contribution to the Straw Market Authority debate was the latest example of his preference for profiling given his seeming discomfort with substantive policy discussions.

With his trademark studied gestures and little room for triangulation, McCartney spoke during the debate as if he were a reporter and not a parliamentarian.  He commented on what the FNM and PLP said about the bill in question but, as usual, added little by way of insight or substance to the debate.

Sensing an opportunity for scoring a cheap political point, McCartney regurgitated the manufactured news item about a regulation concerning hygiene in the straw market.  The underlying premise of the story was subsequently shot down by the prime minister.

The halls of Parliament are where political careers advance, stagnate or flounder.  Given a prepared text or a staged-event, McCartney performs adequately.  Yet given the opportunity to think on his feet and demonstrate his political mettle on the floor of the House, he failed to rise to the occasion.  Worse, he proved unready, not prepared for the big leagues.

It proved Ingraham’s point about McCartney still being in the junior leagues.  The contest in Bamboo Town thrusts three young men who led their own parties into a contest to see who may someday have the opportunity to contest for the chairs in which both Hubert Ingraham and Perry Christie have sat.  But first, they have to win in Bamboo Town.

frontporchguardian@gmail.com

www.bahamapundit.com

Oct 18, 2011

thenassauguardian

If we are going to be serious about deterring crime -- particularly murders -- then we can't get soft on punishment... Already this timidity in enforcing the law has broken down law and order on every level in The Bahamas

Considering crime and punishment

tribune242 editorial


SPEAKING in the House of Assembly last week Cat Island MP Philip "Brave" Davis criticised Government's proposed crime Bills as falling "short" of what is needed to eliminate violent crime.

He wondered if any thought had been given to the rate of recidivism and what would be the average length of time to rehabilitate an offender when defining life imprisonment.

"There is jurisprudence," he said, "to suggest natural life without an opportunity to review with a view of release is cruel and unusual punishment."

One never hears of the "cruel and unusual punishment" suffered by a victim's family -- a victim who has not had a second chance at life. And a family that has lost their main breadwinner.

With capital punishment virtually removed from the scene, there has to be a penalty, not only to punish, but to deter. True, there are degrees of murder -- the planned, vicious murders spawned from a psychotic brain, and the impulsive anger, where death was not intended, but was the result. There might be some hope of rehabilitating the latter, but none for the former.

The society's complaint today is that the laws are too soft, so soft that the criminal is making a fool of our judicial system. It is felt that with automatic hanging removed, the criminal is willing to play Russian roulette with his life, knowing that he can commit his crime and in all probability avoid the hangman's noose. It might give him second thoughts if he had to contemplate a lifetime in prison - when he and the undertaker leave together.

However, if he knows that he can again trick his way out by good behaviour, where is the deterrent to his crime?

A police officer told us that what many of them do is "get religion" while in prison to impress their jailers. Some, released for good behaviour before completing their sentence, turn their collars backwards and quietly continue their misdeeds, while others shed their religion and openly revert to type.

If we are going to be serious about deterring crime -- particularly murders -- then we can't get soft on punishment. Already this timidity in enforcing the law has broken down law and order on every level in this country.

Mr Davis said that legislators have to think of the cost of housing a convict for the rest of his natural life -- particularly if the offender has youth on his side. They also have to think of the increased burden on taxpayers.

Mr Davis told House members that it costs $14,000 a year to house a prisoner. He said that if a person were sentenced to life at the age of 30 - life expectancy for the average Bahamian male being 70 years - the state would have to support him for at least 40 years.

"Do the math," he told legislators, "there are at least 400 persons to be tried -- millions of dollars it will be costing taxpayers!"

These convicts become burdens only if the government lacks the imagination to put them to good use and make them pay their way by their daily labour.

Already in this column we have suggested setting aside a large acreage of Crown land for cultivation. These prisoners -- composed of lifers and those with shorter sentences -- could feed the nation.

Of course, for those with a life sentence this would be a life time job. At least they can turn a misspent life into a useful one and remember -- if the laws had not been changed -- they could have been hanged, buried and forgotten about, instead of breathing God's fresh air, and growing a field of tomatoes.

This production could be a tremendous savings to government by reducing the cost of imports. If done on a large enough scale and managed like a business, it could even increase our foreign reserves through exports.

In the woodwork department, men with this ability could be taught to turn out first class cabinetry that could be sold from various furniture stores. Again if it were handled as a proper business, the prison could open its own furniture store and attract a market. They could even go into the business of making toys for children.

With a little imagination, these men need not become as heavy a burden as some predict. What must be remembered is that outside of prison walls they will be a constant menace.

Society has to decide whether they prefer to pay for their upkeep knowing that they can have a good night's sleep in the safety of their homes, or save the expense and sleep with one eye open, and an ear cocked listening for the thief at the window.

However, these prisoners could possibly earn enough that restitution also could be made to some of the victims of their evil deeds.

Who knows but that it might encourage pride in some of these men in the knowledge that in the end their lives were not a complete waste.

But with the criminal playing hardball with society, society cannot now go soft on punishment.

October 17, 2011

tribune242 editorial

Monday, October 17, 2011

Branville McCartney - Democratic National Alliance (DNA) leader says Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham is a bully, and Progressive Liberal Party leader Perry Christie a wimp

McCartney lashes out at Christie, Ingraham

By Candia Dames
Guardian News Editor
candia@nasguard.com



Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham’s recent comments on Bamboo Town and Democratic National Alliance (DNA) leader Branville McCartney last week might have been a sure sign that election season is heating up.

At a recent reception at Workers House for DNA candidate Alfred Poitier — the DNA’s candidate for Kennedy — McCartney called Ingraham a bully and Progressive Liberal Party leader Perry Christie a wimp.

“I don’t want my children to watch my prime minister any more,” McCartney told DNA supporters.

“Can you imagine?  Shame on you, prime minister.  The game is over.”

Speaking in the House of Assembly last week, Ingraham said McCartney was not in his or Christie’s league and that if the Free National Movement does not win Bamboo Town then the Progressive Liberal Party would.

Ingraham also said that when he was a young MP, he was arrogant and had hard mouth, but was able to back up everything he told then Prime Minister Sir Lynden Pindling about taking on the Progressive Liberal Party.

At his political meeting, McCartney said, “At the end of the day he talks about backing up.  He called Mr. Pindling out and said this and said that.  But I don’t care what he said to Mr. Pindling 20 odd years ago.

“...He could not back up the crime problem, reduce the crime problem, he could not back up the illegal immigration problem and he could not back up what we have with this economy today.

“He has no answers.  He is void of answer.  He could not back up at the end of the day our broken education system.  He could not back up the issues.  He could back up his mouth.

“All he is is a big bully and Mr. Perry Christie sat back and took it like a little wimp.”

McCartney has previously suggested that he might not run in Bamboo Town, a seat he won as an FNM candidate in 2007.

He said last week that the good thing about being leader of the DNA is he could decide which constituency he runs in.

The PLP did not contest the Bamboo Town seat in 2002 or 2007, but will be running Renward Wells in that constituency in the next general election.  Wells is a former executive of the National Development Party.

Former Bahamas Democratic Movement leader Cassius Stuart is expected to be the FNM’s candidate for Bamboo Town.

Ingraham has suggested that McCartney would be competing in his league with those two candidates as his competitors.

The prime minister also referred to Bamboo Town as “my things” and said McCartney was not going anywhere with it.


Oct 17, 2011

thenassauguardian

Sunday, October 16, 2011

I used to love and admire the PM with an unbridled affection... Time however, alters many, if not all delusions and cases of infatuation... It is always painful to realize that the object of one's passion is yet another individual made of brittle clay... Realistic decisions are not being made in my perspective and not enough, if anything, is being done to heal the national wounds

Decision points and healing the wounds


By Staff Writer For the Guardian




It is a given that the nation is in a polarized state.  The art of class warfare is alive and well.

Divisions abound among our people and The Bahamas is lurching from pillar to post.  All however, is not yet lost and we need not at this time, write the obituary of our beautiful country.  Yes, there are a number of serious challenges and more than enough societal and economic 'barbarians' at the proverbial gates.

It is my humble submission however, that if we take a less politically tribal approach, most of what ails us can be cured.  Let us take a close look at crime, its alleged causes and suggested solutions.  While we are at it, let us not neglect to figure out why our infrastructural work in New Providence is in such shambles.  Of course, we must also ask the hard question: Is the prime minister up to the daunting tasks which confront him?

Crime and the fear of crime are literally killing The Bahamas.  Far too many misguided persons have lambasted the current minister of national security and sought to blame him for the state of crime in our nation.  Is this fair?  Crime begins within the inner mind of an individual.  It is absolutely impossible for the minister or police to enter the mind of an individual and determine, in advance, if he will commit or is considering committing a crime.

We must find the ways and means to encourage rehabilitation and the literal transformation of the thought processes of recalcitrant anti-social individuals, especially the youthful ones.  A dedicated form or system of 'urban renewal' must be implemented in short order, by whatever name you wish.  All of this unnecessary politically charged 'in your face' must cease and desist.

The state of our major roads in New Providence is poor.  The permanent secretary and the substantive minister of works are, apparently, oblivious to the gridlock which the road builder has created by the disjointed schedule of work.  Traffic congestion is extremely frustrating and has led to a massive decrease in productivity.

Why not fix or rehabilitate one road at a time?  Why not deploy the traffic and other police officers in the known hot spots instead of having large numbers of them hanging around, looking pretty and doing absolutely nothing?  What is the commissioner of police saying or doing about this?  In fact, where is he?

The prime minister used to have the fire in his belly, so to speak, but, I postulate that he has long ago lost it.  He seems to be on cruise control as is, apparently, the nation at large.  A slew of potentially bogus bills were recently presented in the House of Assembly.  The PM is well aware that these are not going anywhere any time soon.

No doubt, the right honorable gentleman and his hapless colleagues on the front bench mean well, but the road to hell, historically, has always been paved with good intentions and a massive dose of shaving cream.  Nothing has changed.

To attempt, perhaps unconstitutionally, to impose minimum and maximum punishment guidelines and to agree to a parliamentary inquiry into the effectiveness of the Royal Bahamas Police Force due to public hysterics is not progressive or conducive to nation-building.

What will such attempts do to the independence and effectiveness of the judiciary?  What will they do to the overall morale of the police force?  Is the veil between the separation of the three branches of government being lifted and if so, what will the lasting repercussions be?  Talking what might appear, or be designed to appear as 'a good talk' is one thing.  To drag the judiciary and the police into the harsh and glaring arena of politics is another.

The PM's shelf life may well be at an ignoble end.  Like he would have shouted at his greatest benefactor and mentor, publicly in the honorable House of Assembly not too many years ago: “It is time to go.”  Does that same unwarranted outburst now apply to him?

I used to love and admire the PM with an unbridled affection.  Time however, alters many, if not all delusions and cases of infatuation.  It is always painful to realize that the object of one's passion is yet another individual made of brittle clay.  Realistic decisions are not being made in my perspective and not enough, if anything, is being done to heal the national wounds.

To God then, in all of these mundane things be the glory.

Oct 10, 2011

thenassauguardian

Saturday, October 15, 2011

...five years after the May 02, 2007 general election, Bahamians face a new round with a decisive man at the top... It is now up to the electorate to decide whether they are going to entrust their future to a leader of indecision, or one of decision

FNM and PLP prepare for an election

tribune242 editorial


ON MONDAY, Prime Minister Ingraham announced the appointment of the Constituencies (Boundaries) Commission, which is expected to make its recommendations to Parliament by the end of this year with voters' cards ready for issue by early in the New Year.

By October 7, 134,000 voters had already registered in the 41 electoral constituencies for the 2012 election. They are still registering. However, the Boundaries Commission now has sufficient numbers to study the shifts in population in the various constituencies, and make recommendations to government on how the boundaries should be drawn for this election.

The Constitution provides for a minimum of 38 House members. Presently there are 41 (one extra seat added by the PLP in 2007), and so, if the population shifts warrant it, at least three constituencies can be eliminated and merged.

What a difference five years can make with a decisive prime minister at the helm.

At this time five years ago, then Prime Minister Perry Christie was still dithering. He had not yet announced the close of the register, because of the poor turnout of citizens. By November 2006 just over 63,000 voters had registered in New Providence out of a projected 120,000 voters.

According to Mr Christie, he could not close the register because Bahamians were not registering fast enough, which resulted in him not being able to appoint a Boundaries Commission to decide electoral boundaries.

On March 22, 2007 Mr Christie said that there were compelling reasons why the work of the commission had to be delayed, which had nothing to do with inaction by the commission or the government.

"Instead," he said, "the delay, regrettably as it was, was the direct result of the very slow process of Bahamians registering to vote."

By comparison, Mr Ingraham announced this week that by the first week in January 2012 the Parliamentary Registration Department is expected to start the distribution of voters' cards. By the same time five years ago Mr Christie was still begging Bahamians to register so that the Commission could make a decision on the boundaries.

Apparently, Mr Christie refused to recognise that many Bahamians are very much like him -- slow to decide and even slower to act. Although Mr Christie was advised to announce a closure date early in 2006 for the 2007 election -- as Mr Ingraham had done earlier this year for the 2012 election -- he refused to do so. He was told that the only way to get Bahamians to move was to fix a date -- the floodgates would open, and registration offices would be filled. This seemed to take an extra long time for Mr Christie to compute and so three months before the 2007 election the Boundaries Commissioners were still floundering -- still nothing to report. It was only on the morning of March 19, 2007 - two months before the election - that Mr Christie presented the House with the Boundaries report.

It did not take a genius to predict that the 2007 election was going to be one of confusion. Up to that point political candidates were not even certain of their districts. First Bahamians were blamed because they were too slow to register. And naturally at the end of the day, someone else had to be blamed for the inevitable confusion that was to follow when voting did start. Naturally, the poor Parliamentary Commissioner, through no fault of his own, had to be the fall guy for the indecision at the top.

Here it was March 19, 2007 with Mr Christie standing before the House with the Boundaries Commissions report to be presented. One of the Commissioner's signatures was missing -- that of Brent Symonette, the only Opposition member on the committee. Mr Symonette had refused to sign because the PLP members had shunted him aside, treating his opinion with complete contempt. This will not happen this year as Mr Symonette, again appointed to the Commission, is one of the two members representing the government.

At this point in 2007, the Constitution was closing in on Mr Christie. If he didn't do his famous two-step shuffle quickly, on May 22 Parliament would automatically dissolve itself without him.

It was a huffing and a puffing to the finish line, which was eventually announced for May 2. The results were inevitable - the FNM won 23 of the 41 seats with the PLP winning the other 18. And now five years later Bahamians face a new election with a decisive man at the top. It is now up to the electorate to decide whether they are going to entrust their future to a leader of indecision, or one of decision.

It is only a matter of months before Bahamians are called upon to make that decision.

October 12, 2011

tribune242 editorial