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Saturday, June 21, 2025

Analysts say PM’s legacy will be stained by crime, economic woes

by

Jesse Ramdeo
98 days ago
20250315
Political analyst  Dr Winford James

Political analyst Dr Winford James

As Prime Min­is­ter Dr Kei­th Row­ley of­fi­cial­ly steps down from lead­er­ship af­ter a decade at the helm, po­lit­i­cal an­a­lysts have weighed in on his lega­cy, with one giv­ing him a fail­ing grade.

Dur­ing an in­ter­view with Guardian Me­dia yes­ter­day, Dr In­di­ra Ram­per­sad not­ed that plagu­ing is­sues af­fect­ing se­cu­ri­ty and the econ­o­my were among the defin­ing and di­vi­sive as­pects of Dr Row­ley’s time in of­fice.

“It will be a fail­ing grade, maybe some­thing like three out of 10, it won’t be a pass­ing grade, too many things. I will be giv­ing points on man­age­ment of the econ­o­my, I think that was a fail­ure, man­age­ment of crime, fail­ure, for­eign ex­change, that has to do with the econ­o­my, al­so fail­ure.”

Dr Row­ley, who is of­fi­cial­ly step­ping down as Prime Min­is­ter to­mor­row, has led the coun­try through COVID-19, shifts in the en­er­gy sec­tor, as well as grow­ing con­cerns with crime and gun vi­o­lence.

Dur­ing a wide-rang­ing in­ter­view that was aired on Thurs­day evening, Dr Row­ley de­fend­ed his lega­cy and not­ed that he had done his best to steer the coun­try clear from cri­sis.

“I am not in the lega­cy busi­ness, you see thing about lega­cy and lega­cy and lega­cy, I’m not in that. I was in the busi­ness of say­ing this coun­try has been good to me. When I got in­to the po­lit­i­cal are­na, it was what I can do be­cause oth­er peo­ple be­fore me sac­ri­ficed. I wasn’t about run­ning to get the best-pay­ing job in the coun­try, be­cause I had of­fers to work for oil com­pa­nies, I chose not to do that, I worked for the state,” Row­ley said dur­ing the in­ter­view.

But Dr Ram­per­sad said while his re­silience must be recog­nised, Row­ley’s han­dling of press­ing is­sues has been a let­down.

“I can’t even think of one good thing, I’ve been rack­ing my brain in oth­er in­ter­views to think of one thing pos­i­tive and I can­not.”

Mean­while, Dr Win­ford James took par­tic­u­lar aim at Dr Row­ley’s han­dling of the coun­try’s ed­u­ca­tion sec­tor.

“He has al­lowed young men and women to come out the sec­ondary school sys­tem, too many of them, with­out skills, can’t be em­ployed, and that can have an ef­fect on the crime we see­ing in the coun­try. I’m not say­ing it’s the on­ly thing but if young peo­ple don’t have skill sets they can sell, then what you think is go­ing to hap­pen?” Dr James said.

He fur­ther con­tend­ed that Dr Row­ley’s decade-long tenure may ul­ti­mate­ly be over­shad­owed by the un­re­solved crime cri­sis and the stag­na­tion of the econ­o­my.

2025 General Election


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