Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar says a senior Government senator was approached by two Independent Senators before the vote on the Zones of Special Operations (ZOSO) Bill on Tuesday. The Bill failed in the Senate with eight voting against the Bill while Senator Courtney McNish abstained.
In a public statement issued after the Senate vote, Persad-Bissessar said she anticipated opposition from the President’s appointed Senators and claimed that attempts were made to trade support for personal favours. She said those requests were refused and that, from that point, it became clear the Bill would fail.
“My Government will not buy votes,” the Prime Minister stated, adding that those involved “know who they are” and must accept responsibility for their actions.
Persad-Bissessar said the proposed ZOSO legislation was intended to limit and replace the use of States of Emergency, arguing that her administration was seeking to reduce, rather than expand, executive powers available to the State. She maintained that an SOE could have been declared instead, but that the Government chose a legislative route to constrain those powers.
She also criticised the Opposition People’s National Movement and its supporters, accusing them of misunderstanding the implications of the Bill and celebrating an outcome that, she said, weakened efforts to reform national security policy.
The Prime Minister linked crime and violence trends to political decision-making, stating that most murder victims over the past decade were young Afro-Trinidadian men and that many communities affected by gang violence were Afro-dominated areas within PNM constituencies. She accused the Opposition of obstructing security measures and alleged links between political interests and criminal financiers.
Persad-Bissessar cited crime figures from 2015 to 2025, claiming more than 124,000 crimes were recorded during that period, including about 5,000 murders and nearly 9,000 rapes and sexual assaults, which she attributed to governance under the PNM.
She said her Government and the security services remained committed to reducing crime and improving public safety, with support from law-abiding citizens, and pledged that efforts to reform national security policy would continue despite opposition.
