Senior Reporter
elizabeth.gonzales@guardian.co.tt
PNM Tobago political leader Ancil Dennis says the Tobago House of Assembly has nothing to show for the millions spent on foreign travel in recent years except “selfies and joyrides”, and he promised that a PNM administration would only travel to secure real investment for Tobago.
Earlier this year, the Auditor General’s 2024 report flagged $6.8 million in unverified overseas travel expenses by the THA. Chief Secretary Farley Augustine said in May that his administration spent $11 million on travel over the years, but Minority Leader Kelvon Morris maintains the figure has already crossed $20 million.
Speaking at a political meeting in Charlottesville, Dennis said Tobago must start asking what came out of the trips.
“When your secretary of tourism or your chief secretary leaves Tobago, he is not going to Tobago Day to party and fete and sell benne ball and take out pictures and all those kinds of things,” he said.
He added, “It’s not to dress up nice and take pictures on Instagram. It’s not to travel all over the globe and have a good time.”
Dennis said too many trips yielded no benefit to the island.
“It is not to go to a conference and just sit down, and then they take your money and shop and come back with a suitcase full of clothes and Gucci bags and Gucci belts and all kinds of things. And after four years, you benefited nothing from those trips.”
He told supporters that if elected, his administration would use every overseas meeting to fight for jobs and development.
“When we travel, we are not going to be travelling for frivolous reasons. When we travel, it will be to sit in rooms with hoteliers, with cruise lines, with investors… We will arm ourselves with a prospectus outlining the areas that we need investment in Tobago.”
Dennis promised that within one term, the PNM would return with concrete projects: “At least one major hotel… your cruise ship village… a new pair to accommodate an additional two to four cruise ships… your marina… and other investments in renewable energy, the fishing sector and the agriculture sector.”
He said Tobago deserves leaders who work, not pose for cameras.
“When you hire an administration, it’s a serious matter… When you hire us, it is to work for you.”
