Senior Reporter
sascha.wilson@guardain.co.tt
Anderson Nanan, a manager in the Opposition-controlled Penal Debe Regional Corporation, has been recommended by the People’s National Movement (PNM) Screening Committee to contest the by-election for the Quinam/Morne Diablo seat.
Nanan and Lengua/Indian Walk nominee Autly Granthume got the nod from the Screening Committee at the Balisier House in Port-of-Spain on Thursday.
General secretary Foster Cummings confirmed that a special meeting of the central executive will be convened on Monday to consider and approve the recommendations of the Screening Committee.
While they were expecting fierce competition from the United National Congress (UNC), Rural Development and Local Government Minister Faris Al-Rawi said they welcomed the challenge.
Noting that Nanan worked as a manager at the corporation and had 24 years of service, he said Nanan was adamant that he had a very good chance.
Interviewed by reporters at the Southex Food, Agriculture and Beverage Expo at Gulf City Mall in La Romain, Al-Rawi said, “For someone like him to step forward and represent the PNM says a lot. It is a corporation that is almost 100 per cent Opposition-controlled and has always been. So to have someone who comes from the establishment, step forward and say I am willing to be part of the Peoples National Movement, for us as a political party is a big statement and a big win.”
The minister said the dipstick of the by-elections on June 17 would be the voter turnout and not so much the results.
“Whatever the results are going to be, the corporations will stay the same. There is not going to be a swing one way or the other. It remains the status quo, 7/7.”
The Quinam/Penal seat became vacant following the death of Diptee Ramnath last December.
Following the August 2023 Local Government Elections, the preliminary results indicated that Granthume won 1,430 votes while the UNC candidate Nicole Gopaul got 1,425.
At the request of the UNC, there was a recount that eventually resulted in a deadlock that led to the Election and Boundaries Commission ordering fresh elections.
The UNC had subsequently mounted a legal challenge, but it was dismissed by the Court of Appeal.