Thu | Mar 28, 2024

The PNP’s business is ours, too

Published:Thursday | October 29, 2020 | 12:06 AM

THE EDITOR, Madam:

The People’s National Party (PNP) needs to get over itself with the ‘Leave PNP business alone’ narrative. This seems to mean if you are not a member of the PNP, you should not care or utter a word about the Hanna v Golding race for the PNP presidency.

If this were a matter of the general secretary, party chairman, or some internal role, then I would agree with them. However, the president of the party is also a public servant in the form of opposition leader and potential prime minister. As such, the average Jamaican has every right to critique, assess, and evaluate the persons vying for such a role. I would have loved to see a broader consensus of the PNP members being allowed in the voting process. I do not believe some three or 4,000 members are enough to safely select a leader that the public will accept. The consensus does not seem broad enough.

Matter of fact, I believe the perspectives of the delegates are so cloudy, they should come second nature to the wants of the broader society. If the Peter v Peter debacle taught us anything it is that, no matter how staunchly a candidate is criticised by party officials, when the election comes around they all fall in line and give glowing recommendations. The people will not, I will not!

In the last internal PNP presidential election, the unaffiliated public seemed to prefer the younger Peter. However, the delegates went ahead and made their choice. With the older Peter at the helm, Prime Minister Andrew Holness took their brooms and almost swept them out of opposition.

Do not tell us to leave the PNP business alone because we will do just that with the internal election, at the local government elections due next year, and the general election four years from now.

ADREAN A. GENTLES

gentlesadrean123@gmail.com