Dear Editor,
Finally the long-awaited report on why the People’s National Party (PNP) lost the election is ready. It has even been passed around senior members of the party’s hierarchy. The little that has made its way to the public and comments from those who have seen it is damning, to say the least. It speaks of political intrigue, factions, competing campaigns and plots — usually the domain of the Jamaica Labour Party.
Old habits die hard, however, and it seems that the old guard refuses to budge. With many influential party members begging to either withhold the report or release a heavily edited version, the party is at a moral crossroads.
The party, put plainly, is viewed as dictatorial and deaf, not only to outside calls for reform, but also calls for reform from within the party. But the people have not forgotten the advances made by Michael Manley, they have not forgotten the desperate past that we have come from. They are just despondent because the near past and immediate future look bleak and to be the polar opposite of the PNP of times past.
To not release the document, in full, to the public would be another nail in the coffin for the PNP as it relates to electability, because it would confirm in people’s minds that the party’s elders are not open to scrutiny and, more importantly, its findings could be whitewashed and or implemented in a ham-fisted fashion that would see the party continue to operate as is.
The release of the report, coupled with the PNP’s reasonings, could be a blessing in disguise for the PNP. The report will show that the party’s apparatus need serious shaking up, and the reasonings have shown the need for the party to find its ideological bearings; both agree (one more subtly than the other) that a change is needed in the party hierarchy — how far up still remains up for debate.
This can only be a positive if they use it. Using it means actually listening to people in the reasonings and publicly showing and debating the findings of the report. That will show to Joe Public that, as a party, the voter is taken seriously and that will begin the process of slowly winning voters back.
The process will be slow, it will be painful, and may result in a few electoral losses, so it is therefore understandable for the old guard to want to both hide the report from the public and shore up their power bases. But if they have any love for the nation, as they claim, they will allow for public discussion on the matter. If they have respect for the party, as they always state, then they will allow for change. If not, the party may be facing more than electoral defeat; it could very well face extinction.
Alexander Scott
alexanderwj.scott@gmail.com
Finally the long-awaited report on why the People’s National Party (PNP) lost the election is ready. It has even been passed around senior members of the party’s hierarchy. The little that has made its way to the public and comments from those who have seen it is damning, to say the least. It speaks of political intrigue, factions, competing campaigns and plots — usually the domain of the Jamaica Labour Party.
Old habits die hard, however, and it seems that the old guard refuses to budge. With many influential party members begging to either withhold the report or release a heavily edited version, the party is at a moral crossroads.
The party, put plainly, is viewed as dictatorial and deaf, not only to outside calls for reform, but also calls for reform from within the party. But the people have not forgotten the advances made by Michael Manley, they have not forgotten the desperate past that we have come from. They are just despondent because the near past and immediate future look bleak and to be the polar opposite of the PNP of times past.
To not release the document, in full, to the public would be another nail in the coffin for the PNP as it relates to electability, because it would confirm in people’s minds that the party’s elders are not open to scrutiny and, more importantly, its findings could be whitewashed and or implemented in a ham-fisted fashion that would see the party continue to operate as is.
The release of the report, coupled with the PNP’s reasonings, could be a blessing in disguise for the PNP. The report will show that the party’s apparatus need serious shaking up, and the reasonings have shown the need for the party to find its ideological bearings; both agree (one more subtly than the other) that a change is needed in the party hierarchy — how far up still remains up for debate.
This can only be a positive if they use it. Using it means actually listening to people in the reasonings and publicly showing and debating the findings of the report. That will show to Joe Public that, as a party, the voter is taken seriously and that will begin the process of slowly winning voters back.
The process will be slow, it will be painful, and may result in a few electoral losses, so it is therefore understandable for the old guard to want to both hide the report from the public and shore up their power bases. But if they have any love for the nation, as they claim, they will allow for public discussion on the matter. If they have respect for the party, as they always state, then they will allow for change. If not, the party may be facing more than electoral defeat; it could very well face extinction.
Alexander Scott
alexanderwj.scott@gmail.com