Demo planned against election switch
(CNS): A number of local activists were expressing outrage across social media platforms Wednesday evening, in the wake of the strategic move by Premier Alden McLaughlinAlden McLaughlin (PPM): Red Bay MP, Premier, Minister of International Trade, Investment, Aviation and Maritime Affairs (MITIAMA). Biography: McLaughlin has been a member of the... More to bring the election forward. Angered by what is clearly a way for government to avoid dealing with the ‘Bush question’ and throwing undeclared candidates off guard, at least one demonstration has been set and the target is not just McLaughlin but the governor, too, for supporting the switch.
McLaughlin’s move yesterday has cut the time left for election campaigning from fifteen weeks to just nine. And with Nomination Day being moved to 1 March, the official campaign period is now reduced to just six weeks from what would have been around eight.
Voters were crying foul, as they believe that they are being robbed of the time they need to get to know potential candidates. And while the move is constitutional, one activists told CNS, “Just because it’s legal doesn’t make it right.”
Taura Ebanks, who is the first to organise a protest, which will take place at Governor’s Beach on Saturday morning, said this was clearly a political move by the premier, who is still the leader of the PPM, to help himself, his party and the coalition. She argued that it is not, as he claims, to prevent the collapse of the government.
And yet Governor Martyn Roper has given the political move his seal of approval, Ebanks said.
“The governor had a choice and was not constitutionally bound to approve the premier’s request,” she said, adding that he had “made the wrong decision to support the premier’s request to dissolve the House and hold an early election”. She said that with his approval, Roper is “actively allowing the premier to abuse the Constitution and pursue his political motivations and avoid MP accountability as it relates to the Special Meeting for the Vote of no confidence in the speaker of the House.”
The Constitution allows the governor to support the premier’s request but he was not obligated to do so. The request was not based on a public interest issue, and while the premier has said that the ‘Bush issue’ is undermining the stability of government, there is no evidence to support that claim.
Bush controls his own vote and that of Captain Eugene, his only remaining CDP member. This means that McLaughlin would still have ten members in his coalition if Bush and Ebanks were to cross the aisle. Only three of those ten members remain ‘officially’ on the outside of the PPM.
There is no evidence at all that Tara RiversTara Rivers (IND): West Bay South MLA - NOT RUNNING IN THE 2021 ELECTIONS. Minister for Financial Services and Home Affairs. Biography: Rivers made history... More, Dwayne SeymourDwayne Seymour (IND): Bodden Town East MLA, Minister of Health, Environment, Culture and Housing. Biography: Seymour was first elected to the Legislative Assembly in 2009... More or Austin Harris, who is McLaughlin’s own councillor, have any intentions of crossing the floor to protest for the removal of Bush.
Moreover, even if they did, the official opposition has expressed no interest in bringing down the government and Ezzard Miller has also agreed to support the principle of the government majority and vote on a case by case basis.
Given the limited work left to do in this parliament, which is now not going to be done in any event, McLaughlin could easily have steered the current coalition through without the slightest problem after forcing Bush’s removal, until the previously set Nomination Day at the end of March.
This means that the governor is backing a purely political decision, enabling McLaughlin and his government to dodge public demands that they go on the public record with their positions on Bush’s role as speaker and whether or not he should have been ousted as a consequence of his conviction for a violent assault against a woman.
Ebanks said that there is no advantage or benefit to voters in having an early election. While she accepts that this demonstration will do little to prevent the curtailing of the campaign, she said it was still important that this move does not go unopposed by the people.
“I invite everyone who sees the manipulation in this move to join me on Saturday expressing their objections and to stand up, stand together,” she said.
The demo is set for 11am.
Category: Election News