EDITORIAL: Pressing need for new political leadership

THE LITANY of disasters surrounding the beleaguered Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) government seems to be never-ending.

The latest is the massive fire which broke out last weekend at the dump on Harold Road and which may be considered one of its worst calamities, not only because of the immediate and long-term damaging effects involving so many people but also for the reason that it was clearly avoidable if the government had addressed the issue properly during the last five years.

This is already being seen as yet another example of incompetence and mismanagement by an ineffective and failed government which is also lacking leadership and direction. Nonetheless, we were able to sympathise with Mr Christie on a personal level as he cut a lonely figure surveying the huge blaze and reflecting, perhaps, on this latest misfortune of his ill-fated premiership as being the final nail in his political coffin.

Only last week he was being lambasted over his unacceptably crude, single finger gesture at a political rally in Fox Hill and the equally intemperate public use of offensive language by the sitting MP about a well-respected human rights activist lawyer. But it must be all the more galling to him that this latest catastrophe of the dump fire was directly attributable to his own and his ministerial colleagues’ lack of effort and action.

With a general election fast approaching and evidence of growing numbers of disaffected voters, we detect the raw beginnings of fresh support for the opposition Free National Movement (FNM), whose fortunes have been at least marginally revived recently by a return to the fold of some of the party’s dissident MPs and by the decision of former Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Brent Symonette to re-enter the political fray.

There is clearly much to be done, however, to achieve sufficient unity within the FNM in order to prevail against a PLP which can always rely on its traditional grassroots supporters since they see the party as having an inalienable right to rule, irrespective of its shoddy record of governance.

For some time, we have also been arguing in these columns that the Opposition parties, which include the Democratic National Alliance (DNA), should unite in order to ensure that a failed PLP is prevented from winning another term which would be disastrous for the country. If they do not do so, there remains a danger of the DNA splitting the FNM vote again and thus ensuring another PLP victory.

Given the PLP’s shameful record, however, it is hard to believe that there can be a realistic prospect of its return to power with so much dissatisfaction among voters, including younger people coming on to the electoral roll imbued with new ideas and attitudes about how the country should be run. Its failures have been well chronicled and they present a sorry picture of scandal, ineptitude, wrongdoing, victimisation, poor decision-making and alleged corruption.

The list is endless - worsening crime; unemployment; economic mismanagement with the investment downgrade to junk status and the national debt soaring by 40 per cent to $7 billion and the latest half-year deficit up by no less than 112 per cent; the Baha Mar debacle; the BAMSI, Urban Renewal and Bank of Bahamas financial scandals; the missing millions at Road Traffic; the government’s loss of two referenda and its refusal to accept the result of the one on gambling; a Cabinet minister thumbing his nose at the judiciary; and, most recently, blatant gerrymandering in the delayed Boundaries Commission report, and the ‘Spying Bill’ which would have been sneaked through without public consultation had there not been an outcry about encroachment on civil liberties.

Newspapers by their nature are inundated with information from a variety of sources. We are hearing complaints from many decent and well-meaning Bahamians who have seen the deterioration of this country since the period of rebuilding in the 1990s under former Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham following the excesses of the Pindling years. They now observe the rise of populism in other countries and want a return to honesty, transparency and propriety in public life together with sound management of the nation’s affairs, not least its finances.

They believe that PLP politicians have been serving their own interests, rather than those of the people, for too long, and that, if the current discredited leaders are allowed to hang on to power, the country will be in real jeopardy.

If The Bahamas is to recover and prosper again rather than continue to regress, it needs to put in place new leadership. Above all, the people desperately want real change. But is the political class listening?

Comments

birdiestrachan says...

Ah Well

Posted 10 March 2017, 6:30 p.m. Suggest removal

birdiestrachan says...

True to form The PLP is all bad and the FNM is all good. common sense says NO.

Posted 10 March 2017, 6:47 p.m. Suggest removal

Porcupine says...

Oh birdie, what would you know about common sense?

Posted 11 March 2017, 7:33 a.m. Suggest removal

OMG says...

Birdie has a valid point however the above letter is based upon facts and broken promises by the present government. The sad part is that if the FNM get elected they will have to make some painful and unpleasant decisions to get the country out of its present precarious mess. If the PLP retain power then downgrading, devaluation and the resulting consequences of an ever growing national debt are almost inevitable

Posted 12 March 2017, 2:10 p.m. Suggest removal

Porcupine says...

Your penultimate sentence says it all. "Above all, the people desperately want real change."
If we had a populace that spent more than 5 minutes of their time a month, reading and discussing ways forward, instead of cheerleading for a bunch of crass, ignorant fools they call leaders we may get somewhere. But here, we seem to cherish stupidity, patriotism and false religion. The gambling houses are not taking over the economy by themselves, the Bahamian people are helping every single day.
The vast majority of Bahamians simply don't give a shit.
If they did, would we be where we are today?
Desperately want real change my ass.

Posted 11 March 2017, 7:19 a.m. Suggest removal

sheeprunner12 says...

Minnis and the new cadre of FNM candidates .......... minus the Rebel Seven and Bran WILL win the 2017 election .............. and retire the hapless, crooked PLP Mafia forever!!!!!!!!!!

Posted 11 March 2017, 2:17 p.m. Suggest removal

Seaman says...

Birdie, It seems you are a PLP supporter.......... That's cool, but this election is not about the FNM, it's about the PLP and what they have done to hurt the people. People are hurting and they want a better Country. They want accountability from their Government. So far all we have gotten is a worthless set of crooks. Tell me who in the PLP is a nation builder like the old guard of the PLP. Neither one. The PLP must be kicked out of power and who ever wins must know that if they don't do good they to will be booted out. Birdie have some pride in your Country. You seem to love your party more then your Bahamas. The PLP have lost their respect for the laws of the land and they have lost the respect for Bahamian people .It looks as if the Bahamian people are going to reject the PLP. PS ........ The angry and hurting PLPs are going to reject the PLP.

Posted 12 March 2017, 12:46 p.m. Suggest removal

birdiestrachan says...

,Seaman and the others "THE TRUTH" all of the problems,including the debts The FNM
made their contributions, .All of the revolutionary and significant things done in the Bahamas
was done by the PLP. The college of the Bahamas, now University just to mention one.
what has the FNM done You will say open the airways. But according to you all they have
wings and dwell in the heavenly realm. Not so,

Posted 12 March 2017, 5:05 p.m. Suggest removal

Seaman says...

Birdie......... Your are on point.... That was LOP PLP not this pile of crap that call their self the PLP. LOP was a nation builder and a man with vision. HIA was also a nation builder. Have you forgotten....... Roads ,Water Upgraded Electricity, only to mention some. So don't say the FNM did not do anything. Now what the hell has this PLP done positive for this Country in the last five years .Do you think the Bahamas can take another five years of this failure?.

Posted 12 March 2017, 5:46 p.m. Suggest removal

birdiestrachan says...

Roads, Water. and electricity are run of the mill, they are not visionary.

Posted 12 March 2017, 7:18 p.m. Suggest removal

concernedcitizen says...

FMN is not perfect but only 2 billion of the debt is theirs 1,5 of it spend during the worst recession in 80 years to stimulate growth , also you can see the airport ,roads ,water system , harbor ,new port ,,The PLP put 2 billion in the last 4 years w / a billion in revenue from Vat ,,I,m sorry 30 students at BAMSI ,some couple thousand bananas and limes , and naming something that was barely an extended high school a university is not worth 10 million added to the debt much less billions and a downgrade .

Posted 13 March 2017, 10:23 a.m. Suggest removal

Seaman says...

Birdie......... I expected more then that. With that said by your expectations the PLP are not even run of the mill crooks. Ask Andros, North Abaco, Eleuthera, Grand Bahama. Cat Island, Rum Cay, Nassau, and the rest of the Bahamas then you will see what little they have done for the well being of us Bahamians. Good Night to you.

Posted 12 March 2017, 8:57 p.m. Suggest removal

Well_mudda_take_sic says...

We will likely be much worse off with Minnis at the helm. Setting aside the fact that he buys his fresh fish from known gangsters, Minnis is seriously lacking in what it takes upstairs, is way too temperamental, is devoid of good judgment, is financially "greedy" and is much too much in love with himself and the idea of holding power......he's got all of Christie's very negative ways and then many more to boot!

Posted 14 March 2017, 1:19 p.m. Suggest removal

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