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Submitted by Pachamama

For some time, there has a been a protracted โ€˜disagreementโ€™ between the Governor of the Central Bank of Barbados (CBoB), Delisle Worrell and the Minister of Finance, Christopher Sinckler. It represents a deepening political-economy crisis.

In trying to flesh out this phenomenon, we will sometimes directly address the prime minister, himself, as we urge urgent action.

Worrell and Sinckler have been the two main principals in the management of the Barbados economy, for the last 7 to 8 years. During this time, we have had many failures. Failures that both, men and institutions, might arguably to adjudged as equally responsible.

Rumours, gossip, some reporting and fake news on this matter, currently โ€˜sub judiceโ€™, have served to further weaken the political culture. That culture, with all its in-built frailties, has already delivered us circumstances where the distribution of forces in Parliament are nearly even, notwithstanding minor leakages on one side.

Since the last general election, there has been a close-quarter tug-o-war between the main belligerents that was engendered by a โ€˜misinterpretationโ€™ of the results. The DLP incumbent government believed that a nearly-tied election was a win instead of representative of a public demand for a national unity government.

At the same time, there was no evidence that the opposition BLP, under a MAM, would have been interested in that kind of political formation. Therein lies another weakness of the system. There must be โ€˜a winner takes allโ€™ mentality. Not only for the elites of both parties but the rank and file on either side, the yard fowls. In Westminster, we have had many coalition governments but Barbados, being more British that the British, this can never be. Talk of such is sacrilege.

The prime minister is therefore hemmed-in. Largely by the political culture but also by his socialization as a man who has long exhibited a lack of courage. What kind of a prime minister, within the Westminster system, can show that he has neither bark nor bite?

So what we have is a badly failing economy, a weak government, an international political-economic order in โ€˜transitionโ€™ and a prime minister whose cowardice is getting the better of him.

We are surprised that in these circumstances Stuart would want to travel, ignoring what is a deep crisis at home. Leaving it to fix itself. For in these difficult times the country needs its two principal economic managers working together to prevent the beginning of a never-ending cycle of devaluations, or worse.

It needs a strong prime minister even more. Strong for the countryโ€™s sake! And if these two economic โ€˜expertsโ€™ cannot bury their hatchets, the interests of Barbados must immediately be shown to be paramount, above personality cultism, regardless to whom they maybe.

In addition, Stuart displays a false temerity, mere word play, to suggest, from New York, that he will not interfere in a matter, in terms of Barbados, this is akin to issues of war and peace. Can there be any other crisis facing a prime minister of Barbados, within these dire contexts, more severe in peace time? Facing a near economic collapse with political disorder to high heaven.

Does this prime minister not know that his failure to address this matter has implications for Barbadosโ€™ image in the international financial markets? Why would Stuart, by his refusal to act, outsource the prerogative of the office of the prime minister to the judges in Coleridge Street, given the notorious delays which can be expected? And are these damages to Barbados not incalculable? Where is the economy in that or the economic brains driving this national fiasco?

We have argued elsewhere that there needs to be an intervention, preferably by the prime minister. But in these unusual circumstances, the Governor General may consider it in the Queenโ€™s interests to suggest a speedy resolution, since the prime lacks the will, courage.

Prime Minister, the announced demonstration/s by the BLP will only serve to deepen the crisis, increase the harm to our country, increase the level of instability, but it in your power to take such actions to at least partially repair the damage caused.

That resolution could include the firing of the minister of finance. The sending of the governor of the Central Banks on pre-retirement leave or its equivalent. The removal of the litigious matter seeking the attentions of the Courts. And the adequate compensation of warring parties for prompt compliance.

Prime minister, we are not unaware of the complex relationships with the governor and the minister of finance. We are not unaware of the role of Sinckler for future party leadership, even if your party loses the next election. We know that you are seeking to avoid a defeat, come next election. And that the perception of a rising economy is central thereto. However prime minister, hard decisions can no longer be avoided.

Look at the bright side, these are the times which try men souls, a writer said. For they present you with an opportunity to avoid your fate. They present you, circumstances to defy the odds, escape history and become the greatest prime minister the country would have known.

Sometimes it becomes necessary to shoot a โ€˜generalโ€™, or two, in a public place to restore order amongst the ranks. Prime minister that time has come. Should you continue to choose to fail in your solemn duty you will go down as the worst prime minister this country has had. At the same time, the price of your failure is the moral equivalent of treason.


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161 responses to “The Moral Equivalence of Treason”


  1. “What disagreement” between CBoB and MoF? For me, it simply looks like Scylla and Charybdis, pest and cholera, slavery and extra-plus indentured servitude for lifetime with lots of lashes or Laurel and Hardy.


  2. “I am not in a position to comment on whether the government’s confidence in the Governor of the Central Bank underwent any change because I preside over the cabinet of Barbados and at no time did the issue of the Governor’s relationship with the government come up for consideration.”………..PM Stuart in New York yesterday .
    ………………………………………………………..

    How could this be possible? Is Fruendel Stuart a mouse or a man in his government?

    Or is he a damned liar just like in the Cahill matter, he denied that he knew about any deal…….that there would be no Cahill deal unless he says so…………until we found out that he had signed the memorandum months before MAM exposed the sordid deal in the House.

    How could this matter never have been raised with the PM? What kind of cabinet meetings does this man preside over? It leads one to believe the talk on the street that this mouse we have for a PM only comes into the cabinet meeting when all of the morons have gathered and he leaves right after the last item and does not interact with them.

    Remember that the eager 11 or the gang as I called them said that they ask him for a meeting, hence why they were meeting and plotting behind hs back.

    All the more reason that he should have found his tail back home after the Caricom meeting. The governor and his minister of finacne are publicly at war and he gone to New York for a cocktail sip?

    Unbelievable!!!!!

  3. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Upon being reelected by whatever means in 2013, the government got more selfish and self-serving, that is when they should have formed a coalition to bring new ideas to the table to save the economy.., that is why they failed. Too busy thinking of self and not the people.

    Coalitions are formed all the time….for good of country,


  4. Another failed march by a power hungry demon- that is the BLP’s answer to the issues confronting Barbados. I thought it was truly revealing when Corey Layne asked Mottley today what was the BLP’s plan and the demon replied ” We are 12 months out from an election so now is not the time for that”

    How stupid does Mia Mottley really think Bajans are : On one hand she is telling the government to come clean , while instead of coming clean with a prescription she chooses cheap political grandstanding”.

    In the last US election , I heard a candidate say “Anger is not a plan”, apparently that is Mottley’s only plan.Cussing the Prime Minister would not create one job in this country but Mottley right now is not concerned with the jobs of Barbadians, she can only see one job, that my friends will explain every single action she takes over the coming weeks and months.


  5. A failed march………just like the failed DLP government.

    Which is worse?

    Barbados is now classed as a failed state under you useless morons! One thing I must give to you morons, you are the best in opposition and that is where you all should stay after the drubbing that is to come.

    Keep watching MAM instead of governing and look where we are now………….on the cliff ready to crash.


  6. This ahistorical ‘analysis’ is wide of the mark when it comes to seeking information on Westminster on Google.
    Apart from the recent Tory/Liberal Coalition government, and during war time, when was there a coalition government in Britain?
    Further, the role of the Supreme Court in this matter is limited to that of enforcing a contract. However, as has been discussed before, the court does not have the power to compel the government to keep Dr Worrell on as governor of the central bank. This is a misunderstanding of our system of government.
    The court case is theatre, it has no real political meaning, although it obsesses politically engaged.
    So far, unless this emerges from the court case with the next 24 hours, we do not know why the governor and minister at daggers drawn. We may think we do.
    The other obvious failing is that of a march by the official Opposition party. A march for what? We all know this government has failed.
    What alternative policies does the Opposition have?


  7. Dems are so steeped in their hypocrisy, it is priceless.

    The BLP, the Chamber of Commerce, the Bankers Association, BIBA…….and every person on BU and Brasstacks have all been giving the DLP advice since 2008………..and what did we get in return…….”we aint want to hear nothing from wunnah, any ideas wunnah got, keep to wunnah self, wunnah had 14 years, now is we time, we gine do things we way”.

    So what solutions do you want MAM to bring, we are tired talking to you hard ears arrogant idiots.

    Stew in the mud you have created…….you did not want to take any advice all these years why the hell you want solutions from MAM now?


  8. More like “Jaskassforlife” if you ask me. We already have a cowardly reluctant prime minister (all lowercase). Are you suggesting that MAM should not want to be a real leader and agitate for a change of government? Gimme a break brother, gimme a break.

  9. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Hal Austin February 22, 2017 at 8:54 PM

    You are telling us what we already know. You are no different from the other โ€˜standardโ€™ critics in the crowd.

    Why are you insisting the LoO must come up with solutions?

    Haven’t she and many others, including yourself, been advising and warning the present dastardly lot about the course of perdition they are on?

    Don’t Bajans already have Solutions in the form of Grenville Phillips 11, BIM and UPP to choose from?

    Why not demand of the PM to show at least an iota of care and patriotic concern for his country which has given him a great deal and call elections to let the people decide on their own future and on whom they want to be at the helm of ship of state on that re-charted course to recovery and survival in the brave competitively challenging world of the 21st Century?


  10. Jethro,

    I do not do patriotism, nor am I seeking elective office. It is the job of the Opposition to offer an alternative vision of the future of Barbados.
    Saying the government has got it wrong, and it has, is one thing; but putting forward a plausible alternative is another.

  11. millertheanunnaki Avatar
    millertheanunnaki

    @ Hal Austin February 22, 2017 at 9:26 PM

    That alternative vision was put to the same electorate in 2013. And what happened to the Privatization proposal that is being adopted at this late stage in the fire sale game?

    Another one would soon be put to the same disappointed electorate when the bell is rung.
    If the present administration does not even want to hear from their own kith and kin like Estwick, Dr. Don Marshall Sir Frank, or the discarded Deliar Guv of the CB and even Owen Arthur and Dr. Smith from the CDB (who has no skin in the political game) do you really feel it would change course by listening to the LoO?


  12. miller.

    Do you believe the PM when he said that this matter never came up at a cabinet meeting?

    What a nasty liar.


  13. Steupsss
    Hal is right
    It is the role of the opposition to review the operations of government and keep their asses in check – instead of leaving that job to BU
    ….and to articulate THEIR OWN alternative vision for a successful future.

    It is only childish IDIOCY and selfishness that drives this shiite position of ‘not offering alternatives least the government benefit’

    What the Hell!!
    The opposition is there to SERVE BARBADOS.
    If they offer alternatives and the government follow their advice successfully, …then the people should easily recognise where the vision resides….

    PDP got one thing right….
    The reality is that the blasted BLP is just as clueless ad the damned DLP. So brass bowl Bajans are caught between the damned and the blasted….


  14. @ Pacha
    Steupsss
    You are casting pearls at swine.
    Advising Froon is like trying to talk sense to Alvin Cummins.

  15. Violet C Beckles CUP Avatar
    Violet C Beckles CUP

    To much long talk for crooks, liars or scumbags, You need to post who was not a crook,

    Posting crooks and then looking to clean them up, all nasty people who now have the Nation is a Nasty mess,

    Nothing but crooks when posting about the Barbados government,none have clean hands,

  16. NorthernObserver Avatar

    We are missing the logic….the B’s are saying….”we en giving DEM no ideas, no solutions, fah wuh, so they can implement them now, and try to save their asses”. They may actually have no alternatives.
    Best to say nothing, other than hammer your competition verbally. To do anything else, opens the door to entrapment.
    Save any ideas you have for after the election bell tolls. No hurry.

  17. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    Hal…who said anything about UK having coalition…maybe thst is the main problem that has caused Barbados to fail and will continue to fail..they copy and follow the bullshit in the UK way to much.

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-latest-third-manufacturing-firms-leave-uk-eu-article-50-report-kpmg-a7594606.html

    UK is on the road to becoming a big fat failure with total confusion.

    Too many competing political parties filled with lies when they should ALL have only one goal….not deceiving the people to fill their own pockets from corruption…but working for the good of the people.

    All Barbados and the Caribbean have done for 50 years is copy the nasty corrupt pit that is the UK, none of the politicians seem to have independent thought outside of corruption. …none to benefit the majority.


  18. It is clear MAM and the Opposition spent some time to come up with the March of DISGUST. It taps into how many Barbadians are feeling. Look for a big crowd.

    >


  19. And what is the correct spelling of the goodly Sir? See the below extracted from Barbados Today:

    ‘While the Sol Group is led by Barbadian Sir Kiffin Simpson, information > released on the FTCโ€™s website revealed that the Sol Group would purchase > the terminal through BNTCL Holdings Limited, incorporated on November 7 > last year as a domestic company to the parent company, Sol St Lucia > Limited.’ >

    https://www.barbadostoday.bb/2017/02/22/oil-terminal-sale-will-hurt-economy-bim/

    >


  20. Well, well,

    I think you had better re-read the original submission.

  21. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    I did read and comprehend it Hal…why I understand the current failures that are the competitive at all cost UK political parties…as well as the 2 competitive failures for copycats political parties on the island who have never attempted to form any coalition in their 50 year history…..in the best interest of the people.


  22. Is recycling politicians the only option we have after years of investing in education? It reminds of how the WIBC has been doing the same for decades.

    Estwick should join forces with BLP – Belle


  23. @ David
    How about the brass bowlery of recycling ‘political scientists’ from Cave Hill who ain’t worth shit?
    That anyone even LISTENS to Belle is indicative of the nadir to which Barbados has fallen.
    The man is a waste foop….. His is a lifetime of shiite talk and failure.
    What could POSSIBLY lead us to listen to anything he says now…?

    Shiite man … we may as well listen to Carl Moore then….


  24. United Kingdom[edit]
    See also: National Government (United Kingdom) and United Kingdom coalition government (disambiguation)
    In the United Kingdom, coalition governments (sometimes known as “national governments”) usually have only been formed at times of national crisis. All six coalition governments in the last 120 years have involved the Liberal and Conservative parties.[1] The most prominent was the National Government of 1931 to 1940. There were multi-party coalitions during both world wars. Apart from this, when no party has had a majority, minority governments normally have been formed with one or more opposition parties agreeing to vote in favour of the legislation which governments need to function: for instance the Labour government of James Callaghan came to an agreement with the Liberals in 1977 when it lost the narrow majority it had gained in the October 1974 election. However, in the run-up to the 1997 general election, Labour opposition leader Tony Blair was in talks with Liberal Democrat leader Paddy Ashdown about forming a coalition government if Labour failed to win a majority at the election; but there proved to be no need for a coalition as Labour won the election by a landslide.[2] The 2010 general election resulted in a hung parliament (Britain’s first for 36 years), and the Conservatives, led by David Cameron, which had won the largest number of seats, formed a coalition with the Liberal Democrats in order to gain a parliamentary majority, ending 13 years of Labour government. This was the first time that the Conservatives and Lib Dems had made a power-sharing deal at Westminster.[3] It was also the first full coalition in Britain since 1945, having been formed 70 years virtually to the day after the establishment of Winston Churchill’s wartime coalition,[4] although there had been a “Lib-Lab pact”, an agreement stopping well short of a coalition, between the Labour and Liberal parties, from March 1977 until July 1978, after a series of by-election defeats had eroded Labour’s majority of three seats which had been gained at the October 1974 election.
    Germany[edit]

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coalition_government

    We think this shows that the United Kingdom has a political tradition of coalitions governments.

    Well Barbados has left this tradition behind. Barbados has evolved into a winner takes all tradition.

    This is a simple Wikipedia search. However, we have no more confident in them than we have in Google and rarely use either. If we did we would feel obliged to cite the source, as we have here done.

    Our writing always come from general knowledge and we do not directly nor coterminously rely on any materials. On average we spend 45 minutes to write one article. Virtually adlib!

    We lack the time and inclination to write as some suggest.

    When people are soo wrong, sooo many times, maybe we should ask them to kill themselves.


  25. Wunna too bandwagonist and that’s why everything that does not align with the bandwagon’s idea is ignored. #alternativeshavelongbeenoffered


  26. Further, are not lawyers and care not much what the law says.

    We are not pretending to know what the Supreme Court/s will find, or who they will find for

    Ours is a political-economy analysis

    Regardless of what the courts find or not find the political-economy damage is no less, it maybe more.

    That is our concentration. You are welcomed to play lawyer, but we refuse to be so guided

    To ask BU readers to ignore existential realities presuming a certain court decision is the height of malpractice and is aimed at turning a philosophical defeat, on just Sunday, into a perceived victory.

    A definitive court decision maybe years in the making.

    We note that David and others have allowed this idiots to be as dishonest as he often is.


  27. @enuff

    People want change. They searching for change.

    #helpthemnuh

    >


  28. We don’t even care why the Governor and the Minister are fighting.

    Our sole interest, in this article, was about saving Barbados.

    Yes, it would be helpful if that information were available

    But it is not a necessary pre-condition to judging the level of the crisis or the damage being done.

    That is not a necessary factoid

    There is no requirement for us to have 20/20 vision like the ugly idiot in england.


  29. @ enuff
    Look boss, it is clear that you are not of ordinary intellect and that you keep your posts short for fear of identifying yourself through your extensive knowledge.
    But you are talking shiite.

    What alternatives what??!!

    It is NOT about running around with alternative manifestos and other shiite documents saying what you would or would not have done as opposition. It is about holding the government to account for what THEY committed themselves (and were elected) to do.

    If the DLP said that they would not be raising university fees, then when they did so, the BLP should have put EVERY SINGLE DLP MP on the line to expose their hypocrisy in voting for that.
    The BLP should be like a contractor general in the DLP’s ass with every project scrutinised for graft, kickbacks and inefficiencies.
    The BLP should be examining the composition of the various Boards appointed and commenting about the experience and capabilities of the appointees in the interest of EFFICIENCY.
    The BLP should be like a damn supervisory committee to keep Stinkliar and company in check…

    Instead, after lame attempts to call feeble meetings of the PAC, Mia is rebuffed like if she is some kinda vagrant by Froon changing the rules, and then by Stinkliar and Kellman thumbing their noses at her donkey….
    Steupsss…
    She could be really leadership material…? True leaders show spunk when they DO NOT have power. Any jackass (including Stinkliar) can demonstrate spunk and power when they have the state machinery behind them.

    Bandwagonist shiite!!! We are simply fed-up with the lotta brass bowlery.


  30. Yes, everybody knows this DLP government has failed, miserably

    But 8 years ago a BLP government also failed

    And for the last 50 years failure was the reason governments changed in Barbados

    So the policies of the DLP nor BLP have not been helpful in avoiding failure in the past.

    Therefore, something is more deeply wrong with this formation

    We have to go pass ‘policies’.

    That level of analysis is what idiots are made of.


  31. The people need to define change and within realistic parameters. If they want change they will march.

  32. pieceuhderockyeahright Avatar
    pieceuhderockyeahright

    @ The Honourable Blogmaster

    Your post at 4.34 am this morning might suggest that you are up like the ole man guarding your palace and watching the moat.

    But I was looking at your statement which reads “…It is clear MAM and the Opposition spent some time to come up with the March of DISGUST. It taps into how many Barbadians are feeling. Look for a big crowd…”

    Why is it clear?

    Let us dissect that comment a little…

    In Barbados one just can’t get up and get permission for a march but then you continue to enhance that statement with the qualifier “…come up with the…”

    As if you are privy to the internal workings of the Barbados Labour Party having posted previously on another topic to say “the BLP have things locked down tight…”

    Hmmmmmmmmm

    True the issues here tap into what several Bajans are feeling but then you add, and de ole man quotes you in this your most insightful statement and polarization “…look for a big crowd…”

    De ole man wonders how many of wunna realize how a specific noun or verb or tense oronstruct gives a clear insight into our allegiances.

    The fact is this Blogmaster

    Mia Mugabe Mottley is a despot and, AND, irrespective of how you or Dr. George Belle feel about the incompetence of the DLP we are faced with three choices (1) retaining the dufuses (2) replacing them by similar and worse dufuses who have been there before or (3) GETTING RID OF BOTH OF THEM AND CHARTING A NEW PATH

    Each of us makes our decisions about who we want to govern us but you know what Blogmaster? yours is NOT LIKE MINE OR THAT OF THE OTHER BLOGGERS WHO POST HERE.

    You kind sir are the Custodian at the Gate and you, like he who was the first “morning star” are bound by a completely different almost celestial rule complexioned by George Linnaeus Banks.


  33. @Pacha

    We need the Barbados Private Sector Agency and the CHURCH to get onboard to save the country. Until they do and the Opposition BLP has to play point in a polarised partisan political space will rubbish the effort.


  34. No. Those actions will merely insure that the BLP comes to power.

    We have no interests in that.

    We, more broadly, need them on board to radically transform our politics and economy

    Institute a cooperative form of government, declare the party system illegal, etc


  35. @Pacha

    We want the same end result but the paintpoint is and will always be how to disrupt prevailing mindset.

    >


  36. David

    The job is not that difficult.

    For we are not talking about something that is completely foreign.

    The cooperative movements is deeply ingrained in the Bajan psyche

    For a period long than we’ve has popular political parties

    So we already have a workable ‘ideology’ that Bajans have long practiced and seen success with

    What we need is to galvanize around these discourses.

    In doing so we need a spark. We have some ideas as to what maybe triggering events


  37. 74,027 people voted for the BLP in 2013.

    How many of them will march based on party loyalty ?

    The march will only provide exercise for those who don’t go to a gym or jog.


  38. @ David

    Dr. George Belle once formed a party called the Workers Party Of Barbados. It was Marxist in outlook and was supposed to fight for the working class. Today, Belle is solidly behind the BLP, or so it seems. Staying the course, outside of the BLPDLP is not easy and we certainly do not have academics who intend to sacrifice for the greater cause.
    We will note as it becomes clearer that there may be a change of government, that our acdemics take up positions. For insatnce, at one time , it was thought that Sir Hilary would have been a future PM of a DLP government but he ended up clinging to Arthur’s coattails.
    That is why any serious third party must denounce the BLP and DLP as one. We should be encouraging the church and other social partners to denounce the the BLPDLP. We should be marching against both rather than giving either BLP or DLP plugs.

  39. are-we-there-yet Avatar

    Pachamama;

    This, imho, is by far your best post ever on BU and in the very top tier of all posts on BU.

    But I think it might not be within the Froon to redeem himself. A history of almost unbelievable intransigence and political selfishness suggest that he might have the capacity to blemish history’s pages by competing with DT as the worst PM that Barbados has ever had.

    But we can hope that the Judicial branch will solve its component of the current situation expeditiously, as failing such carries the seed of greatly exacerbating our problems.


  40. @Pacha

    The two large credit unions responsible for 75% of the market have been infiltrated by the poltical operatives. Note BPWCCL was persuaded to purchase CLICO Mortgages now Capita and James Paul, Maxine McClean et al are ensconced at COB.


  41. Are-we-there-yet

    Thanks

    Are we to look to the courts to solve all other political problems as well?

    AWTY

    One must try even when the odds are overwhelming, this is our country

    It does not belong to Stuart or Mottley or Sinckler or Worrell – our country

    And we are not to be imposed on by builders of kingdoms in our midst.

    This bull shiite has to end

    Like you we are highly doubtful that FJS will ever exhibit a scintilla of courage

    But he is PM and the only person who can act in the country’s interests currently.


  42. And that is why we must rid ourselves of elected dictatorship in Barbados


  43. David

    Yes. We are too well aware.

    But very small numbers of people can demands general meetings and remove the infiltration of party hacks, at short or little notice.

    Could you imagine if the people of Barbados could do this with the Governor of the CB. Or the MOF, or the PM?

    That is the power the people need to retain.


  44. Hants
    95,820 did NOT vote in 2013.If one of the contending parties can peak their interest,that change most desired might become a reality.


  45. We are on the same page.

  46. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    https://www.barbadostoday.bb/2017/02/23/hello-chris/

    Simply put but still tainted with yardfowlism.

    “Hello Chris!
    Belle expects Sinckler to get his way with Worrell

    Added by Kaymar Jordan on February 23, 2017.
    Saved under Local News
    0
    In another few hours it looks to be โ€˜bye, bye Dr DeLisle Worrellโ€™, with political scientist Dr George Belle foreseeing only one outcome to the bitter court battle between the Central Bank Governor and Minister of Finance Chris Sinckler.

    Had Sinckler been allowed to have his way on February 13, the Governor would have been gone by now, except that Worrell, through his attorney Gregory Nicholls, has so far managed to block all attempts to have him dismissed and in the process securing not one but two court injunctions against the Government.

    From left, Chris Sinckler, Dr DeLisle Worrell and Dr George Belle
    However, with the second one due to be dispensed with by High Court Judge Randall Worrell Thursday, Belle cautioned that even if Worrell were to win his case, there was simply no turning back for the embattled Governor, who in the face of recent economic pressure, has been fighting to protect his professional reputation.

    โ€œAt this stage of the game everything now is politics,โ€ warned Belle, explaining that while the Governor may have been inclined in the past to support the Governmentโ€™s policies, even if he, intellectually, might not have agreed with them, this was no longer the case.

    โ€œThe Governor is really saying that I have supported you for so long and I know that the game is up in a year at the most and I want to go out being able to say that I critiqued the policies and especially in relation to the printing of money and on that basis, that should give me some political legitimacy in the future,โ€ Belle stated.

    He further linked the Governorโ€™s troubles to the recent unravelling of the Barbados economy, suggesting that Worrell was no longer deemed useful by Sinckler, who, acting on behalf of Government and the ruling party, would have initially โ€œwished to have a sufficient intellect technician supporting their policies to give them a certain amount of credibilityโ€.

    However, โ€œonce the thing has now crashed to the extent that it has, which is to say that the Governor is now saying, โ€˜I am no longer going to go along because I am thinking about my legacyโ€™, well then the [relationship] starts to unravel,โ€ Belle added.

    He therefore fully expects the court to grant Sinckler his wish to see the back of the Governor, if only on the grounds that โ€œit cannot force Worrell back on an employerโ€.

    However, Belle fully expects Worrell to get whatever compensation is due to him in keeping with the terms of his contract……However, with the clock ticking down to a general election within the next year, the political scientist stoutly dismissed calls by critics for Minister of Finance to step down on the grounds that Sinckler has been carrying out the instructions of the Freundel Stuart-led Cabinet.

    โ€œIf you said that Sinckler was told that the policies were not going to work and he was insisting on them going forward and there is some conflict in the Cabinet in relation to his persistence, then you could say he could have been [fired] two years ago. But clearly the Cabinet and the Prime Minister, who ultimately would have to fire him, went along with Chris Sinckler. So you cannot put the blame on Chris Sinckler now and say to get rid of Chris Sinckler. It is not Chris Sincklerโ€™s fault that the policies have failed, it is the entire Governmentโ€™s fault. It is the entire Cabinetโ€™s fault and ultimately it is the Prime Ministerโ€™s fault. These are the people that will have to go and the only way that such can happen is if you call a general election,โ€ Belle warned.

    However, given the Governorโ€™s admission that policies have failed to the extent that he is no longer willing to cooperate, the political scientist said the DLPโ€™s back was against the wall.”


  47. Witness what is happening in the USA to members of Congress in their town halls.They are being pilloried by an antsy constituency.This is what we need in Barbados.


  48. Bushie

    Pithiness over verbosity. Plus there are many other contributors who make good contributions, yourself included, even if I don’t always agree. There is therefore no need for me to hog the show, it is not about me.

    When Freundel et al blocked PAC etc, why didn’t you organise a rally outside Parliament? Why didn’t/don’t you examine the composition of the boards and the competency of its members and put it on BU or email to BLP/Solutions/BIM/UPP? Haven’t they spoken relentlessly about all the contracts, including the HCF dividend-financed Grotto?

    The change warriors are so determined to discredit the woman/party that all kinds of spurious and weak arguments are being presented. When they aren’t power hungry, they are not doing enough. Too many of us are too shame to admit that we were deceived, so much so that the same agenda is being used to castigate a party with a superior level of performance over the past 25 years. I suspect this continued opposition to the opposition is a quest for self-justification. Additionally, too many of the CW are cut & paste specialists. Only recently I read a contribution promoting the replacement of MPs with a digital participatory platform–blatant discrimination.

    We are where we are today because we fell for grandstanding, one upmanship, rumours, demagoguery and fantasy. Yes there is a need for CHANGES to the way we do things, and a key component of this process is the action of persons outside of parliament. I sense we are back at 2008 and are willing to climb (or further) down the rabbit hole again.

    P.S – My intellect is ordinary, I just know how to spot bullshit.


  49. I saw a woman piss all over Mitch McConnell on the matter of the GOP plan to abolish the Affordable Care Act.He stood on the dais like the proverbial deer caught in the headlights and did not answer the woman’s question.Thats the kind of constituent that scares the hell out of these morons for representatives of the people.Barbados has to get there and the sooner the better.

  50. Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences Observing Blogger

    http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/93879/mia-antics-pm

    I have a real serious problem with these 3….Payne because he publicly voiced he is looking forward to an illiterate, racist president to do something to help people in the Caribbean. …although the Caribbean has had leaders for 50 years…whose jobs it is to use thiir brainsto help their own people…..

    AND

    Mottley and Walcott because of their too close relationships to the former owner of CGI Towers Peter Harris…this is not a healthy or prosperous fit that will benefit the people.

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