kevon.felmine@guardian.co.tt
Despite public discontent with the People’s National Movement (PNM), the party will handily win a general election if called soon, a North American Caribbean Teachers Association (NACTA) opinion poll has found.
According to the study by Dr Vishnu Bisram, the PNM has the advantage because the public does not view the Opposition United National Congress as an alternative government.
Bisram started the poll on October 1, interviewing random voters to reflect different demographics. He found that voters were disillusioned with local politics and expressed dissatisfaction with the process of electing leaders and executives in the PNM and UNC.
The poll found that the Prime Minister or Opposition Leader has enormous power, giving little chance to challengers to their position.
“Almost everyone polled in a survey says intra-party democracy is sorely lacking in the two major parties and attribute it as a primary reason for the country being saddled with poor governance and weak parliamentary representation from both sides,” Bisram stated.
The general feeling among those polled is that within the PNM, leader Dr Keith Rowley will effortlessly win re-election because of the advantages of incumbency. Pollees feel the membership would not want to risk changing leaders mid-term while in Government.
However, they were concerned about the security of the ballots during the multiple days of voting. Besides this, pollees said the electoral process in the PNM was more honest and democratic than in the UNC, which held an internal election earlier this year.
They also felt that unlike in the UNC, the PNM leadership makes more effort to incorporate party opponents and does not view challengers as enemies of the leader or party.
For the UNC, the public questioned the integrity and validity of the internal electoral process, with party supporters and the public feeling the integrity of the last elections was impugned, tainted and not a true reflection of members’ choice.
According to UNC supporters, Kamla Persad-Bissessar and her slate of candidates would have faced more opposition if the electoral process were free and fair.
“Some complaints against the UNC’s internal electoral process were that it is a farce, a fraud, a sham, a joke, a mockery of democracy, an unfair selection managed wholly and solely to make preferred contestants get elected.”
There were allegations of skulduggery in the UNC electoral process, with claims that the system was manipulated and designed to defeat challengers.
The poll found that, unlike the UNC, there are few complaints about the election process in the PNM, with a more democratic process in line with the approaches used to elect representatives of Parliament and local governments.
However, the pollees feel that the process in both parties is biased and unfair against challengers and decry the incumbent leader endorsing or running a slate of candidates against others.
“Based on the survey, supporters of both parties are crying for a more transparent, fair, democratic system to choose a leader and executives,” Bisram said.
It suggested that one way to address the flawed or deficient intra-party democratic process in T&T is to emulate the model utilised in the US, Canada, UK and European countries, where there are debates among candidates for leadership and a fair voting system by members. The poll also suggested a law granting power and funding to independent bodies conducting the internal elections and primaries of political parties among their membership.