With an alleged 20,000 public sector workers dismissed since the United National Congress (UNC) assumed office, People’s National Movement (PNM) chairman Marvin Gonzales has called on nongovernmental organisations (NGOs) to unite with his party to confront what he describes as escalating social injustice.
Speaking at a public meeting in Chaguanas on Saturday evening, Gonzales said the dismissal of CEPEP and Forestry Division workers—many labelled as PNM supporters—was not merely a political battle, but a national one. He urged NGOs to stand in solidarity, stressing that the 20,000 affected workers include citizens from “PNM, UNC, church, mosque, temples, NGOs and other groups.”
He cited the Industrial Court’s $4.3 million award to 13 former Tobago House of Assembly workers whose contracts were terminated after the 2022 change of administration, warning the Government faces mounting legal penalties.
“It is not coming from Barry Padarath’s pocket. It is not coming from Kamla Persad-Bissessar’s pocket. It is coming from the pockets of the taxpayers of this country,” Gonzales said.
Gonzales said that while on his way to the meeting on Saturday night, he received a WhatsApp message from a CEPEP worker who could not afford to attend. The woman, a single mother from Five Rivers, Arima, had recently lost her job with a CEPEP contractor. Her heartfelt message, he said, moved him deeply.
The woman shared the difficulty of raising three children alone and her growing fear of food insecurity and unpaid debts now that her small supervisor’s wage was gone. Gonzales claimed the woman expressed regret over voting for the UNC in the April 28 general election, saying she felt misled and abandoned.
“I did not expect that I was voting for my life and my family’s life to end up in this mess,” the message read.
Gonzales said the message also issued a warning to others.
“This UNC Government will face the wrath of God for their wickedness.”
Turning back to the audience, Gonzales asked how many others now shared her plight. He said that while democracy had resulted in the PNM’s temporary removal from office, it was never the intention of the nation’s founding fathers that governance would bring such hardship.
Addressing state appointments, Gonzales said the former PNM government always aimed for boards that reflected the national population.
“You cannot put a board that looks like it comes from India. You cannot put a board that looks like it came from Mozambique... You put a board in place that represents the people of Trinidad and Tobago so that it would have the respect of the people of Trinidad and Tobago.”
He claimed the current government appointed boards that exclude key segments like trade unions and grassroots supporters.