Finance Minister Davendranath Tancoo has defended the dismissal of 400 workers from the Unemployment Relief Programme (URP), saying the Opposition has no moral authority to criticise the move.
In a post on social media a short while ago, Tancoo wrote, “Reminder: in 2015 when PNM won elections, URP workers, ALL, were LOCKED OUT of offices and IMMEDIATELY FIRED — no explanation, no notice & not a cent — by the same PNM that is pretending to care for workers today.”
Tancoo did not give any further explanation as to why the workers were fired; if there was a financial component.
The Government’s decision was confirmed on Wednesday by Rural Development and Local Government Minister Khadijah Ameen, who rejected claims the terminations were politically motivated. Ameen said past governments had routinely fired all URP workers after elections, but this administration had not done so.
“Quite frankly, if we operated like the PNM, all of those people would have been sent home as soon as the election was finished. We did not do that. So, we are not victimising anyone,” Ameen said. She added that audits uncovered widespread irregularities, including ghost gangs and employees paid despite not showing up to work.
But at a meeting in Diego Martin on Wednesday night, Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles accused the UNC of hypocrisy. She told supporters that in addition to the 400 URP workers now dismissed, more than 300 CEPEP contractors had been removed earlier this year.
Beckles recalled that when the PNM took office in 2015, it retained CEPEP contractors and workers despite their late entry under the then UNC government.
"And I wonder if you all know that the PNM honoured those contractors. We didn't change not one of them. We kept the employees. We kept the contractors. They come into office now in 2025 and they have short memories and they get rid of not only the contractors that came in recently but even those that were there before."
Turning to Wednesday’s URP terminations, Beckles said workers in all 12 regional corporations were affected, including 51 in Arima alone. “Could you believe that in one day? What kind of shame… these people have any shame? You go and fire 51 people,” she asked.
Beckles also criticised Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar’s promise of love for the people during her swearing-in. “How you just love people and fire them? How do you love single mothers and send them home?” she asked.
The Government has maintained the cuts are part of efforts to address fraud and mismanagement in state programmes, while the Opposition has described them as heartless and unjustified.