KEJAN HAYNES &
GAIL ALEXANDER
Former prime minister Stuart Young will not be receiving a prime ministerial pension, after the Senate yesterday approved the Prime Minister’s Pension (Amendment) Bill, 2025, which now sets a minimum one-year term in office for any prime minister to qualify for a State pension. The bill also has a tiered payment structure based on time served. Crucially, the bill applies retroactively from March 10, 2025, completely disqualifying Young, who served from March 17 to April 28.
The bill required a three-fifths majority to pass in both Houses of Parliament, meaning the Government needed the support of at least four senators from either the Independent or Opposition benches. The House of Representatives passed the bill on June 27 with 27 Government MPs in favour and 11 Opposition MPs abstaining.
In the Senate, the Government again secured the numbers, with 20 senators voting in favour, none against, and 10 abstaining.
The passage came one day after the United National Congress (UNC) launched a direct attack on the Independent Senate bench, questioning their neutrality ahead of the vote. Speaking at a media conference on Sunday, UNC PRO Dr Kirk Meighoo said if at least four Independent senators failed to support the bill, they would be enabling the People’s National Movement “to continue to rape the Treasury, even in Opposition.”
Following a debate from 10 yesterday morning, with senators from all sides having their say on the matter and then a brief Committee Stage sitting, members of the Upper House then voted on the bill.
All 15 Government Senators voted in support of the bill, while all six Opposition Senators abstained.
In the end, Independent Senators’ votes were key to the bill’s passage. Here’s how they voted:
Voted Yes
Deoroop Teemal
Michael de la Bastide, SC
Francis Lewis
Courtney Mc Nish
Alicia Lalite-Ettienne
Abstained
Anthony Vieira SC
Candice Jones-Simmons
Dr Desirée Murray
Zola Phillips (temporarily replacing Dr Marlene Attzs)
Earlier in the day’s proceedings, Opposition Senator Faris Al-Rawi said the PNM was bound to abstain in voting on the Prime Minister’s Pension (Amendment) 2025 bill as five per cent of PNM members’ income go to the party’s levy system.
“And under the Integrity in Public Life Act, we have to declare that, so we’re an interested party as the PNM receives five per cent of that. Do we wish to be in those circumstances - no. Should we participate in something that offers assistance in that debate, I think - no,” Al-Rawi said.
Al-Rawi said while the PNM had no problem with the formula for calculating pensions, the Opposition felt the bill’s retroactivity targeted Young.
He said Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar had received the opposition leader’s salary but was “topped up” to the prime minister’s salary.
“But the Prime Minister’s salary was enlarged by the 120th Salaries Review Commission report. There was a song and dance by (UNC) members that the report was ‘obscene’ but everyone in UNC accepted the salary. They (like former PM Young) could have easily agreed they will not take the salary, they could give it to the Children’s Life Fund.”
Al-Rawi queried why, in broadening proportionality and saving taxpayers, retroactivity couldn’t apply to Persad-Bissessar and have the “top up” removed from both salaries received as opposition leader and as former prime minister.
“Why are we only retroactively affecting Stuart Young former prime minister...because (Persad-Bissessar) is entitled to a back pay of close to $1 million. Is that $1 million any different to the $1 million, former prime minister Stuart Young is going to receive?”
But Attorney General John Jeremie, who said Al-Rawi was wrong on his legal points, said the Pension Act was a 1969 law, when a PM’s pension wouldn’t have been a big burden on taxpayers, but has now moved to millions annually. He said the SRC’s last report catapulted the prime minister’s pay and that’s more than the President’s $81,000. He said when that occurred there was a hue and cry in the streets. He said it was at a time when public servants only got a four per cent increase.
He said Parliament’s function was to pass laws for the peace, order and good governance of T&T.
“That’s our job, you failed to do it and paid the consequence of ignoring ordinary people - we are not about to ignore them. That’s the reason why we’re here. We’re not about punishing any persons, we’re about doing our business with faithful reliance on sections of the Constitution.”