Watson - judge FNM in six months

By RASHAD ROLLE

Tribune Staff Reporter

rrolle@tribunemedia.net

FORMER Free National Movement Deputy Prime Minister Frank Watson admitted yesterday the Minnis administration is “maybe not moving as quickly as one would like them to,” however he added another six months may be needed to give a proper assessment of the new government.  

His statement came as today marks 100 days since the administration’s first Cabinet meeting. Last Friday marked 100 days since the FNM was overwhelmingly voted into office. 

An official in the Minnis administration said Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis would not release a statement marking the first 100 days.

“(It’s) not a marker that the prime minister recognises,” the official said: “(He’s) continuing to do the work for which he was elected, beginning with the cleanup.”

The Minnis administration took a ten-week break from the House of Assembly in July that will end on September 13 when Parliament resumes. It is expected that the new government’s legislative agenda will ramp up once this happens. 

“What I hear people saying is they want to hear the plan which means (the administration) needs to do a better job of explaining what they have in mind,” Mr Watson said when contacted yesterday. “I think they are maybe not moving as quickly as one would like them to but I think they are making some decisions that appear to be in the interest of going forward. There are a number of things one might do immediately after getting into office but it takes a while to plan a programme of action that begins to be seen by the general public. We should judge them after six months or so.”

While an administration that spent five years in opposition “should have a plan” for what it wants to do before entering office, Mr Watson said “the circumstances” the administration finds itself in are relevant.

“You don’t really know all the things going on when you’re in opposition,” he said. “You hear many stories but don’t really know until you look at the records and books.”

The new administration is encountering a similar situation to what the first Ingraham administration did in 1992, Mr Watson said, adding that this scenario may be even worse.

“I thought it was a very bad situation in 1992, but the financial situation of the country now is much worse,” he said. 

Still, blaming the former Christie administration for the country’s woes will wear on Bahamians, he said. 

“Sooner or later they have to speak in clear and unambiguous terms about what their plans are.” 

In a statement yesterday, the Democratic National Alliance (DNA) labelled the administration’s first 100 days “unfulfilled.”

“Armed with a myriad of pre-election promises on how to improve the lives of Bahamians, the Minnis led opposition rode a wave of anti-PLP sentiment into office and declared that after five years of lackluster governance it would finally be ‘the people’s time.’ “Unfortunately, more than 100 days into this term, it has become painfully clear that the FNM, though clearly capable of winning the election, was not prepared to govern,” DNA Leader Branville McCartney noted.

He chided the administration for not offering detailed plans on the way forward.

“While the government has been consumed with the arrests of former politicians––a move which in isolation is an important part of efforts to root out corruption––they have ignored the needs of the persons who voted them in,” Mr McCartney added. “Families being crushed by the weight of the oppressive value added tax and who were promised a repeal of that tax on poplar bread basket items, continue to suffer. Business owners and budding entrepreneurs who have, over the years found themselves buried by miles of red tape, and who were promised a greater sense of ease in conducting their affairs, continue to face challenges. Similarly, Bahamians in Over-the-Hill communities who bought into the prime minister’s promised initiatives for the revitalisation of those areas have been left with absolutely nothing to show for all the PM’s grandiose promises.”

Aggressive

Yesterday, Attorney General Carl Bethel said the government will unveil an “aggressive legislative agenda of reform and improvements” starting next month.

While he did not give specifics, he mentioned the FNM’s support for the appointment of an ombudsmen and said “there may be some movement towards that.” He suggested that when Parliament returns, the administration’s focus on good governance policies, a major talking point for the FNM, will only intensify. 

Mr Bethel said: “A host of radical changes are going to be enacted that we hope will become institutional features of governance in this country and bring a higher level of performance for this government while subsequently enhancing integrity and enshrining the highest conduct for officials.”

The Minnis administration has not placed a timeline on most of its promises, nor has it been specific about much of what it intends to do. A call from the National Congress of Trade Unions of the Bahamas (NCTUB) last week to start to give timelines for its priorities was seemingly ignored by the administration, despite requests for comment from the press.

In the lead-up to the May general election, one area for which the FNM came closest to giving a timeline for implementation involved value added tax (VAT) repeal on some items.

During a rally in Grand Bahama on May 5, Dr Minnis said: “Your FNM will immediately remove VAT from bread-basket items to bring relief to the less fortunate.”

However, after coming to office, officials suggested this promise would have to wait as the Minnis administration cleans up the fiscal mess left behind by the Christie administration.

Among its promises, the government has pledged to create and enforce anti-corruption legislation for parliamentarians and public officers; bring legislation to amend the Public Disclosures Act to include a campaign finance component and allow for a matter to be referred to an independent prosecutor.

The Minnis administration also pledged to enact legislation to establish the Office of an Independent Director of Public Prosecutions.

The party has also pledged to hold a referendum to constitute an independent Electoral Commission and Boundaries Commission, introduce term limits for prime ministers and introduce a system of recall for non-performing members of Parliament.

Comments

TalRussell says...

Well My Dear Comrades, the PLP have their George Smith and the Red Shirts are stuck with Frankie W....... Who is already planning to have to return once his "or so" time period will have expired for when Minnis's mouthpiece "ACE" will again step forward to explain that just likes how Minnis would not release a statement marking his first 100 days as PM, neither is talking after his "or so" days in office. { This is so easy... not having make this craziness up.... But in the meantime - exactly how many days, weeks, months, or possible entire red mandate in years - is "or so" days in office?

Posted 24 August 2017, 2:55 p.m. Suggest removal

DreamerX says...

Not in anyway the fnm are like Trump, but theie promises without revealing a plan are the same. Refusal to use date markers of progress and saying more time = you'll see.
I hope they do something, but I'm not relying on government and you shouldn't either.

Posted 24 August 2017, 3:16 p.m. Suggest removal

TalRussell says...

Comrade DreamerX, couldn't you say the Red Regime is in a technical shutdown?

Posted 24 August 2017, 3:21 p.m. Suggest removal

TalRussell says...

Comrades! Frankie W, never mentioned not a word about PM Minnis and his entire slate 35 MP's tooks a teachers like "Ten-week" vacation break from the House of Assembly (HOA) in July, 2017 that will not end on until September 13, 2017....... not bad when you get hired ona brand new job on May 10, 2017 and then you walk off the job for like 10 weeks of vacationing time ..... but it's hard teach Minnis a new trick - when he did same take a vacation thing away from the HOA - whilst leader opposition party?
Will PM Minnis and his Red Shirts MP's, keep their MP's salaries over the 10 weeks vacation period?

Posted 24 August 2017, 3:40 p.m. Suggest removal

sealice says...

Your boys planned it like that = they thought they were going to win and wanted to reward themselves with a vacation after the election - probably load up a BahamasAir plane (who needs customers?) and go to Trinidad or Venezuela??

Posted 26 August 2017, 9:35 a.m. Suggest removal

BahamasForBahamians says...

Lol... By that time Frank Watson may be in jail for public rape he conducted at BPL...

Well BEC at the time.

Posted 24 August 2017, 4:34 p.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

In six months they'll be saying "its only been a year". No one asked them to solve anything. All that was asked was "present the roadmap"

Posted 24 August 2017, 5:19 p.m. Suggest removal

Baha10 says...

One must "painfully" accept, with such a Landslide Mandate to effect wholesale fundamental change, not very impressive so far. Addressing corruption is both necessary and laudable, but job creation through inward investment is far more impressive, as indeed without same, you are merely fostering the environment that created the need for corruption in the first place, as if everyone was doing well, there would be no need to "skim from the till". Regrettably, the opposite is occurring with reductions in the Public Sector's Work Force and Budgets, which again are both necessary and laudable, but the same must be off-set by "new" Private Sector jobs, otherwise you are making people even more desperate to survive in an environment which is already primed for corruption as a means of getting by.

Posted 24 August 2017, 5:51 p.m. Suggest removal

Well_mudda_take_sic says...

Most of the individuals already cut and to be cut from the public sector work force do not possess even the most basic skills necessary to make them employable in either the public sector or the private sector.

Posted 24 August 2017, 6:03 p.m. Suggest removal

ThisIsOurs says...

Train them to do "something". Even if it's learn to read or to speak properly. That's a start to learning something else. I'm very disturbed by this "throw people away" attitude for both older and then younger unskilled individuals. You can't sweep these people under the rug and build a society of highly skilled people under 25.

Posted 24 August 2017, 6:35 p.m. Suggest removal

Well_mudda_take_sic says...

Decades of neglecting our public education system, and continued neglect of it to this very day, has produced and will only produce more "throw away" people to be re-educated (or trained as you put it) for a second time at great cost. Unfortunately, our society, as a result of years of fraudulent abuse by corrupt politicians, just does't have the unlimited resources to educate for a second time those who were failed in the first instance by our failed public education system. Bleak indeed, but we can only ever reap what we sow.

Posted 25 August 2017, 2:07 p.m. Suggest removal

Reality_Check says...

Translation: Even if we fixed our failed public education system anytime soon (which I seriously doubt could happen under Jeffrey Lloyd's ministerial leadership), we are still destined to have decades of serious social unrest and crime. Yep, that sure sounds truly bleak indeed!

Posted 25 August 2017, 2:19 p.m. Suggest removal

TalRussell says...

Comrades! I'm so convinced that "Money Changers" Red Shirts, had been talking about the length of time that they will permit Minnis to stay on the job as prime minister - minutes before Her Excellency Dame Marguerite administered his Oath to office...... But even I didn't think the Tribune and Guardian newspapers, would sprungs their attacks on PM Minnis - so early into his mandate?
All I can say is PM Minnis knows not the morning whence he wall out of his residence's front door and his government issued luxury BENZ - will have disappeared?

Posted 24 August 2017, 5:54 p.m. Suggest removal

SP says...

PM Sheriff Minnis anti-corruption policies will quickly move the Bahamas further up the ranking as least corrupt country in the world.

According to the world rankings, **The Bahamas is at 24, the least corrupt country in CARICOM** according to transparency!

Stop the corruption, says former St Kitts-Nevis minister

http://mexico.shafaqna.com/EN/MX/1578547

Posted 25 August 2017, 6:38 a.m. Suggest removal

SP says...

Nobody above the law anymore. Influence peddling lands Samsung billionaire chief in prison!

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/south-ko…

PM Sheriff Minnis looming audits will send many former corrupt "untouchables" to extended vacations at Fox Hill prison.

Posted 25 August 2017, 7:33 a.m. Suggest removal

Maynergy says...

There has to be some type of compromise with the issues of marijuana growth and seizures in the islands of the Bahamas. There has to be a compromise because our people "grew up with the plants in the yard" .The country got a lot of work to do for our children to keep this country as their country i.e. Bahamas. No more selling any out islands or family islands to anyone or entities.

Posted 29 August 2017, 3:16 p.m. Suggest removal

Log in to comment