From time to time the blogmaster retrieves the various manifestos shared over the years by the two main political parties in Barbados and it makes for interesting reflection. It is obvious the objective by the BLP and DLP is to baffle a gullible electorate. Have a read if you are a doubting Thomas – http://www.caribbeanelections.com/eDocs/manifestos/bb/blp_manifesto_2018.pdf

The blogmaster was drawn page 30 of the BLP manifesto titled Rebuilding the Economy, Financing National transformation. Notwithstanding the country had to battle the Covid 19 pandemic for the last 3 years there is a view that with an unprecedented large Cabinet the government should have made more progress implementing several of the promises made in the 2018 manifesto. 

Last week the government received a donation of personal equipment supplies and Minister of Health (former chairman of the controversial NIS) took the opportunity to remind Barbadians so far, fighting the pandemic has costed government about 100 million dollars. The ministry of health should be congratulated for being transparent and efficient to share the cost with the public. We will wait to have the number validated by the Auditor General.

While congratulating the Minister of Health for being able to share the cost to fight the pandemic so far – why should we be congratulating for this anyway – the public has seen roadblocks to ascertain the cost of the Barbados Digital ID Project. It is ironic that Minister of Industry, Innovation, Science and Technology Davidson Ishmael has been unable to share projected and or actual cost given the type of ministry he is responsible. It is too much of a big pill for the public to swallow he has no idea the cost of the project. He was quoted in the press as saying – “I am going to provide the public with the costs related to this project very soon. The thing is, we have the information relative to the cost [but] that information is spread across many financial years, many different components, many different agencies, departments and ministries”. 

The blogmaster understands the ID project has had several iterations across financial years straddling BOTH administrations. Is Minister Ishmael saying that at minimum he is unable to share cost incurred under his BLP government with the caveat information will come at a later date regarding prior years expense? It is the height of arrogance by the minister and flies in the face of this government’s pledge to be transparent. Is this another case of public servants messing up the bookkeeping by being complicit with politicians in the award of contracts to private sector players?

In today’s Nation the editor in chief Carol Martindale calls out government ministers for not returning calls to journalists pursuing information in the public’s interest. Again a read of the 2018 BLP Manifesto promised a government committed to being transparent. In reality, it is about making promises to win votes from a gullible public, or shall we say damn lies. Is the proclamation of Integrity and Freedom of Information legislation still a promise?

We have a Ministry of Health quick to toss around a 100 million dollar price tag for propaganda purposes, BUT, in a another ministry there is a veil of confusion about how tax payers dollars have been allocated to the Barbados ID project. Why do we have annual Estimates debates and Appropriations Bills? Surely Minister Ismael can tell the public he serves monies allocated to the project under his term? Is this a case for the Auditor General to unravel in a special audit? This maybe the case based on what the blogmaster was been made aware. If only public servants would do the damn job and stop politicians from interfering ways.

86 responses to “Politicians Make Promises and Tell Lies”

  1. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    “For the time being, wunna could leave out the ‘Dr’, de ‘Most Honourable’, and the damn Pitchfork,”

    lol


  2. @NO

    Right again. “Most” is the icing on the cake

  3. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Sarge
    Based on the response from the man himself, looks like I’ll settle for the most honourable ole boar!!


  4. Thought The Pandemic Was Bad? THIS Is What’s Coming
    https://youtu.be/CqIJbLGV52c

  5. NorthernObserver Avatar

    On the topic of truths and promises
    “The 2020 BOSS bonds and the 2022 BOSS Plus bonds are exempt from any restructuring that may take place at any time in the future, and if you listen to the experts from the Ministry of Economic Affairs, they will make it very clear that the circumstances which existed in 2018 in the first instance that led to a complete restructuring of Barbados’ international and domestic debt do not now exist, and therefore the notion of a domestic debt restructuring as was done in 2018 is an absolutely false narrative that does not exist in reality,” she said. (Sen Lisa Cummins)
    Note the wording….”if you listen to”..
    I en saying so, I only telling you what others, who know, are saying.
    Fool me once…….

  6. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Northern…can’t believe they have the nerve to push that scam…


  7. The Bank of Canada is widely expected to deliver yet another oversized interest rate hike next week, lifting its policy rate into restrictive territory for the first time in two decades, but bets are split on whether or not a pause will follow.

    https://www.msn.com/en-ca/money/personalfinance/bank-of-canada-expected-to-push-interest-rates-into-restrictive-territory/ar-AA11m3hG?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=U531&cvid=1c8d3258418449539b5ba9f9778747b3


  8. Barbados has many energy possibilities.

    Solar. Wind. Wave.
    .
    Desalination is still possible to solve the drought problem


  9. If the government cannot borrow by issuing bonds to service its obligations what is the alternative Northern?


  10. ” the focus of the sugar mill will be on the production of “high-value” molasses and less so on sugar”

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2022/09/01/mega-investment/


  11. If the government cannot borrow by issuing bonds to service its obligations what is the alternative Northern?
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Same as anyone else who have run out of begging and borrowing options…
    What do you think BUMS and Street Characters are…?
    …or countries like Sri Lanka, Burundi and DR Congo?

    When will you surrender to the REALITY that our donkeys are grass..?

    By the sweat of his brows should a man eat bread… not by borrowing from the sweat of others.


  12. @David
    You should address that question to the MoF or any of the junior Finance Ministers or any of the many Consultants. You have Greenidge, Persaud, White Oaks, etc etc etc
    Or maybe you could consider exactly what those “obligations” you reference are.
    When is that IMF program decision due?
    You already know my bets have been on the compulsory vs the optional, a long time ago.


  13. If memory isn’t failing a decision is due this month.


  14. Then Sept is likely to be an interesting month?


  15. Sep 2, 2022 A Barbados Labour Party (BLP) supporter who said she walked through the sun and the rain canvassing for candidates for The City of Bridgetown seat, is feeling abandoned by the party in her time of need.

    Wendy Lashley, a 65-year-old who lives in Hunte Street, The City, also worked as a part-time maid at the BLP’s headquarters on Roebuck Street, The City

  16. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    Hants…ya got the jump on me, only just saw this video with these NASTY LYING POLITICIANS and the way they treat the Afrikan people who bend over backwards to get them elected…

    Stop voting for trash……ALL OF THEM ARE TRASH…so stop voting for them if you don’t want this personalized treatment of NEGLECT and DISENFRANCHISEMENT…

    So…where is this ladies pension and disability payments…

    oh ah forgot THE PENSION FUND GET TIEF…

  17. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    you notice these supporters of trash governments…can’t even afford dental care…..let alone healthcare or food.


  18. Benefits are paid to those who paid into the scheme. She is not yet eligible for pension. Any benefits she is due will be paid, once she qualifies. The problem is twelve years down the line.

    She needs some assistance from the Welfare Department, National Assistance Board and the Urban Commission or whatever it now is. I understand there is to be an amalgamation of all these entities.

    Those she helped to get elected should now help her. It is a shame that it had to come to this.


  19. FALLING BIRTH RATE
    People dying continue to outstrip newborns, says BSS
    By Shawn Cumberbatch

    shawncumberbatch@nationnews.com
    Barbados’ population continues to shrink, as the number of Barbadians dying exceeds those being born.
    This latest Barbados Statistical Service (BSS) evidence of the decline comes amid concern about the negative implications Barbados’ falling birth rate has for the future of the National Insurance Scheme.
    Overall BSS data showed that Barbados’ death rate has been consistently exceeding the birth rate since 2016.
    At the end of last year the country’s estimated population was 269 806, a decline of 6 494 people since 2010.
    Based on the BSS’ Births And Deaths Report for the quarter ended March 31, the population has been falling further, ending that period at 269 132.
    The Government agency said that between January and March there were 555 births, an 11 per cent increase over the 500 recorded in the same period last year.
    However, there was a 40 per cent increase in deaths in the same time, 1 004 this year versus 717 in last year’s first quarter. Nineteen centenarians were among those who died, an increase over the nine aged 100 to 109 who passed away in the first three months of 2021.
    Deceased age groups
    “All age groups registered expansions in the numbers of deceased persons; the highest rise was in the 90 to 99 age group (64.6 per cent), followed by the 70 to 79 age group (49 per cent) and then the 60 to 69 (41.5 per cent),” the BSS said.
    “In January to March 2022, the larger number of deaths was attributed to males – 506 as opposed to 498 females; whereas in the same period for 2021, 352 females passed away, 13 less than the number for males.
    Marital status
    “With regards to marital status, single persons accounted for 44 per cent of all deaths, followed by married which stood at 25.4 per cent. St Michael for the second year running, had the largest number of registered deaths – 370 for quarter one of 2022 and 248 for 2021,” it added.
    The fewest deaths were recorded in St Joseph in the first quarter – 16. St Andrew had the lowest in the same time last year – 11.
    Regarding births, between January and March the report said that “for the first quarter in 2022, female registered births (287) exceeded those of males (268); conversely, in the same quarter of 2021, 255 males were registered when compared to the 245 females”.
    “The greatest number of births registered with respect to the age of the mother was in the 20 to 29 age group, 255, down slightly from 258 in the period under review of 2021. The next age group that had a large number of births was the 30 to 39, with 228 in 2022 and 216 in 2021; which was the largest number for that age group
    for the quarter,” the BSS reported.
    “For the period January to March 2022, the youngest mother was 14 years, followed by two 15-year-olds, while the oldest mothers noted were both aged 45 years. In 2021, the age of the youngest mother was lower than that of 2022, 13 years; but it should be noted that the oldest mother registered in 2021 was actually older than the ones recorded in 2022 – 48 years.”
    The BSS also said that “on the other hand, there were three 18-year-olds, who were logged as the youngest fathers for the period in 2022; conversely, the oldest was 61 years. For 2021, the oldest father was at the cusp of the 70 to 79 age group, while the youngest was 16 years old.”
    The report also noted an increase in the number of single babies registered in the period under review, as the number of twins declined in 2022 to eight from 20 in the first quarter of 2021 and there were no triplets born in either year.
    “Quarter one of 2022 saw expansions in the number of births for all parishes except for St Philip and St Thomas, which recorded contractions of seven and four, respectively. The parish with the most births was St Michael (202) and conversely, St Andrew registered the least (nine),” the BSS said.
    “The north of the island reported significant increases in the number of births. St Peter, St James and St Lucy recorded the highest rises of 31.6 per cent, 23.3 per cent and 21.4 per cent, in that order.”

    Source: Nation


  20. Pension planning not adequate
    The following article was submitted as a Letter to the Editor by Kammie Holder.
    Retirement, can be a luxury for some or the most miserable chapter in the final stages of life for many. Funding for retirement, usually comes from three main sources, social security, personal pension plans and accumulated savings, known as the three-legged stool.
    Planning for retirement is by no means, a task that should be taken for granted, and should be clearly discussed with a team which should include but not limited to, a competent financial advisor and attorney, for it’s a very expansive and complex subject which I cannot cover in one article.
    Income gap
    Very often, many cannot retire because of what is known as RIG or Retirement Income Gap, the difference between what is accumulated in a retirement fund and what is needed to maintain adequate and comfortable living.
    Experts posit an amount of 60 to 80 per cent of final years monthly income is adequate.
    Truth be told, the expenses eliminated from retirement will vary from individual to individual. Daily transit and lunch cost are the two main expenses eliminated, while clothing cost is also reduced. However, the stark reality for most is, if you cannot live adequately on 100 per cent, how will you exist on 80 per cent in an era where corporate greed \\is fuelling extreme inflation.
    Expenses do not disappear during retirement and such things as health care, property taxes, food prices and property maintenance are ever increasing.
    Worrying to me, are persons who entered variable 30-year mortgages who are now seeing astronomical rising interest rates. No wonder British newspapers reports on how five-figure income households are losing their homes in the recession sweeping through Europe.
    In Barbados, proper pension planning is inadequate, lacking, not widely available, and often lacks critical concise solutions, to ensure a personal Balance Financial Portfolio, funds the retirement nest egg.
    Created crisis
    Let’s be sincere, to say the removal of the tax credit by the government of Barbados in 2015, has created a crisis in waiting for Barbados, with its aged population, that will create epic geriatric poverty in years to come. It was ill-advised and lacked clarity, I know some will seek to blame the IMF but the blame lies at the feet of what I will call a visionless linear thinking government.
    My studies and readings have led me to conclude, many wait too late to plan for retirement and miss out on the miracle of compounding. To wait in your forties to plan for your retirement is way too late, and the amount that you will earn as a monthly pension will be embarrassingly disappointing. Taking a job at the minimum wage rate will not help and will only contribute to stress and an early death. To put it in perspective we have women down the Harbour Road working 40 hours weekly, taking home $288 weekly.
    A person who at age 45 decides to start paying into a retirement plan contributing $500 monthly with a one-time lump sum of $6 000, with a projected retirement at age 67 will only receive $1 560 monthly under a period certain of ten years, let us say I used an extremely generous pre-retirement interest of seven per cent, tax rate at four per cent and an inflation rate of some three per cent.
    For clarity let me juxtaposition this against a 25-year-old, using the same assumptions above. This individual, thanks to the miracle of compound interest, would receive a monthly pension income of some $4 088 monthly. Again, I say if most find it hard to live on 100 per cent how will they live with 80 per cent.
    Be warned, many born in the 60s and 70s are in for a rough retirement and will not find it possible to retire, for it will not be possible because of large Retirement Income
    Gaps, exacerbated by high inflation and a punitive tax regime, that does not punish consumption.
    National consultations need to be had by all stakeholders, for social security will not suffice, nor will menial subsistence jobs fill the retirement income gaps. I am saddened to say, every turkey will have to fend for themself, for the social welfare network will not be able to cope and having adequate retirement income is your responsibility and not that of any government.
    Call me an alarmist but I am a realist who is never afraid to share the unpalatable truth, for avoiding facts never defeats potential vagaries.
    The silence of the life insurance industry of which I have served the last 36 years, is embarrassingly mute.
    Expenses do not disappear during retirement and such things as health care, property taxes, food prices and property maintenance are ever increasing.

    Source: Nation

  21. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    yeah….blame the HEIST of the pension fund.. on falling birth rates ….and increasing deaths for the last 6 years…sounds like a plan THAT NO ONE EXCEPT FOOLS BELIEVE..


  22. People dying continue to outstrip newborns, says BSS
    ~~~~~~~~~~
    “However, there was a 40 per cent increase in deaths in the same time, 1 004 this year versus 717 in last year’s first quarter. Nineteen centenarians were among those who died, an increase over the nine aged 100 to 109 who passed away in the first three months of 2021.”
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Do a search and see how many times Bushie had pointed out on BU, this 40% INCREASE in overall deaths (not just in Barbados, but wherever Covid vaccines were deployed).

    Now that the actual NUMBERS are in, perhaps we can begin to see….

    The bigger picture however, is that this project called ‘Life on Earth” has run its course. Like ALL life forms, this END phase comes along with disfunction, chaos, change, and confusion….
    EVERYTHING, …from the weather, climate, earth resources, food, water, security, and even COMMON SENSE seems to be reflecting the degeneration associated with old age.

    It will only get worse. So vaccinating our school children now, may actually make sense in the current circumstances.


  23. @Bush Tea

    TB sent a link over the weekend that meshes with your view, will try to cobble something later.

  24. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    So is it true someone stole the steel frames from the chinese barns…


  25. Has anyone else noticed our attraction to failures?
    Duguid has been a textbook case in point. Lotta shiite talk …and NO success.

    He was behind the short-lived license number plate tag – an idiotic scheme by ANY measure, given the ease with which any dishonest person could remove a tag from someone’s vehicle and fix it to theirs. There was absolutely nothing wrong with the license fixed on the INSIDE of the windshield.
    One wonders how much money he wasted…?

    He also came up with the Chinese steel houses and the shady ‘EAST WEST’ scam at $28M for 150 houses in six months. 18 months later, only a ‘show’ house and a few outliers to show …. and no word on the $28M spent, until the Auditor General does his thing next year.

    So what happened to this chronic failure… ?
    Was he made Junior Minister of dentistry and sent packing back to his failed business?

    Nah!!! He is now SENIOR minister in charge of national infrastructure… according to today’s Nation.
    LOL Oh SHIRT!!!

    The REAL joke is that Duguid is TYPICAL of the country’s ‘leadership’ from justice, crime, agriculture, fine ants, trade, sport….. ONLY a CURSE can explain such a situation. Much like God did to Pharaoh when he ignored Moses….

    Predicting that our ass is grass is a no-brainer….


  26. SO BUSH TEA ARE YOU SAYING THEN THAT WE ARE IN THE LAST DAYS OF “THE LAST DAYS”?
    ARE YOU SAYING THEN THAT WE ARE APPROACHING THE ONSET OF THE ESCHATON?

    THEN SINCE THE ESCHATON BEGINS WITH THE RAPTURE OF THE CHURCH, AS ANY SOLID SERIOUS SCHOLAR OF SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY WOULD TELL YOU, THEN THE IDIOT AND BIBLE ILLITERATE, WHO WROTE ON THESE PAGES AFTER THE THIEVERY OF THE LAST ELECTION IN THE USA THAT “THE RAPTURE WAS RUPTURED” IS DENSER THAN THE DENSEST FOG.

    SINCE THE ESCHATON BEGINS WITH THE RAPTURE OF THE CHURCH, AS ANY SOLID SERIOUS SCHOLAR OF SYSTEMATIC THEOLOGY WOULD TELL YOU, THEN THE RAPTURE OF THE CHURCH IS IMMINENT, AND THUS THE PREDICTION IN ROMANS 13::11 IS MOST NOTEWORTHY,
    And that, knowing the time, that now it is high time to awake out of sleep: for now is our salvation nearer than when we believed.

    ONE LOOKS FORWARD TO READING THE PROMISED THE RUBBISH FROM THE LONG WINDED FALSE PROPHET WHICH WILL BRING ITS USUAL MIRTH

    ALTHOUGH ONE SHOULD BE SAD THAT THE MORON BEING OBVIOUSLY UNREGENERATED CAN NOT RIGHTLY DIVIDE THE WORD OF TRUTH .

    BY THE WAY EVEN BEFORE THE START OF THE CHURCH AS RECORDED IN ACTS 2, JESUS PROMISED MARTHA IN JOHN 11″26 THAT THE RAPTURE WOULD OCCUR, SINCE WHAT HE PROMISED MARTHA, IS THE EXACT THING THAT THE HOLY SPIRIT REVEALED TO PAUL TO TEACH BOTH THE THESSALONIANS IN I THESSALONIANS 4:14-16 AND THE CORINTHIANS IN I CORINTHIANS 15:55 ET SCQ.


  27. BT
    IT HAS BEEN SAID THAT “WHOM THE GODS WILL DESTROY, HE FIRST MAKES MAD”
    IS THIS NOT SEEN IN BIM AND ELSEWHERE–ESPECIALLY IN “THE GREATEST COUNTRY IN THE WORLD EVER”


  28. “Do a search and see how many times Bushie had pointed out on BU, this 40% INCREASE in overall deaths (not just in Barbados, but wherever Covid vaccines were deployed).”

    Some fancy footwork there. Ali would be envious.
    On the other hand, some believe that the increase in deaths was due to Covid-19.
    Both sides have their champions.


  29. I had the pleasure of driving up and down the wonderful motorways on the Platinum Coast at the weekend.

    Everything like new. Thank you, great Minister Druid, for your amazing work!


  30. IMF boost?
    by SHAWN CUMBERBATCH shawncumberbatch@nationnews. com

    BARBADOS’ CHANCES OF GETTING a credit rating upgrade will improve if Government enters a new International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme, says Moody’s Investor’s Service.
    With the country’s current IMF Extended Fund Facility expiring this month, the Mia Amor Mottley administration is yet to announce if its economic reform programme will continue with the international financial institution’s supervision and financing.
    However, in its latest published credit opinion on Barbados, dated June 23, 2022, Moody’s said a new IMF programme focused on fiscal consolidation and structural reforms “would be credit positive for Barbados”.
    “We expect Barbados and the IMF to announce that agreement on a new programme will be reached soon,” the international credit rating agency stated.
    Barbados, which defaulted on its debt in 2018 and subsequently concluded domestic and external debt restructurings, currently has a non-investment grade Caa1 stable credit rating from Moody’s. The agency said ratings of Caa were “judged to be of poor standing and are subject to very high credit risk”.
    Moody’s said Barbados’ credit rating would be upgraded “if, in addition to the resumption of fiscal consolidation, growth rebounds sufficiently to reverse the pandemicrelated increases in debt and result in primary surpluses that lead to a sustained reduction in Government debt metrics”.
    “The successful implementation
    of structural reforms leading to higher medium-term economic growth and improvement in competitiveness would also improve the sovereign’s credit profile,” it explained.
    But the rating “would be downgraded if the Government fails to resume fiscal consolidation, such that high deficits lead to an additional build-up of Government debt”.
    “A reversal of the recent recovery in foreign-exchange reserves and renewed pressure on the currency peg would weaken creditworthiness,” the firm said.
    Moody’s observed in relation to the IMF that Barbados “has consistently met quantitative targets set in the IMF programme; discussions about a new agreement are under way [and] in May the IMF’s staff level agreement completed the final review of the country’s Economic Recovery and Transformation programme supported by Barbados’[EFF]”.
    “The report noted that all quantitative targets under the EFF for year-end 2021 and for 31 March 2022 were met. Most significantly, Barbados increased its international reserves, a development that provides important support to the country’s credit profile,” it stated.
    Moody’s overall assessment was that “Barbados’ credit profile is constrained by high debt levels and weak economic growth. Moreover, large transfers to its state-ownedenterprises limit flexibility on the spending side”.
    “The pandemic has also weakened the Government’s balance sheet and delayed
    its ambitious reform agenda. However, relatively high income levels and low exposure to foreigncurrency- denominated debt support creditworthiness,” it said.
    “Moreover, the Government’s recent debt restructuring has significantly improved its fiscal position and we expect debt metrics to improve gradually over the next few years as the economy opens up and the government rebuilds its primary surplus.”
    Moody’s expects Government’s efforts to improve its fiscal position to “resume after the effects of the pandemic abate, supporting a net decline in the Government’s debt burden over the next three to five years”.
    It said Barbados would have “limited financing opportunities in the coming years because its IMF programme explicitly prohibits the Government from using marketbased financing”.
    “While the Government’s rollover risk and overall financing needs have diminished substantially in the wake of its debt restructuring, its ability to access market-based funding will
    remain limited, which could increase liquidity risks for the government in the future if the fiscal deficit were to reverse its improving trajectory,” it added.
    Moodys’ said the stable outlook attached to its current credit rating “balances Barbados’ high debt levels and subdued growth against strong pre-pandemic reform momentum”.
    “Despite the severe economic shock, reform efforts have continued and we expect the recovery in economic activity to support fiscal consolidation more in line with the high primary surpluses and debt reduction observed before the pandemic,” it said.
    “On the other hand, the uncertain speed of recovery in the tourism sector increases risks to Barbados’ fiscal outlook.”
    Moody’s also said it expected the recovery in global tourism flows to support an economic “rebound” of seven per cent growth for Barbados this year, and four per cent in 2023 “before the country gradually returns to potential thereafter”.

    Source: Nation

  31. African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved Avatar
    African Online Publishing Copyright ⓒ 2022. All Rights Reserved

    The fallout from collaborating with and facilitating CROOKS…

    “Regrettably, apart from the government of the day opting not to tweak the fund at that time to extend its projected sustainability, it impaired the fund by deliberately accumulating arrears of employer contributions that it was legally obligated to pay,” he said.”


  32. I did not remember this blog, which is much more appropriate for my comments.
    ~~~~~~~~~~

    John2 September 15, 2022 7:56 AM #: “That statement should should be removed immediately. I am sure he can find a more appropriate statement and just leave it off.”

    John2

    That’s exactly my point.

    Although I understand Layne’s intentions, I believe parliamentarians should develop empathy between themselves and their constituents, or any other persons who are seeking their assistance.
    A more humane statement would’ve achieved that objective.

    Instead, using that ‘old saying,’ suggest he’s being intolerant and contemptuous of them.


  33. Mr. Skinner

    What concerns me is the fact that, during an election campaign, politicians go into constituents’ homes, pretending to be friendly and concerned about their well-being, sitting on their floors, eating food, drinking drinks and promising ‘the moon and stars,’ because they’ll do anything for a vote.

    After ‘winning the seat,’ the “duly elected representatives” immediately becomes inaccessible to the people who elected them, while surrounding themselves with ‘pimps and yard-fowls’ who take pleasure in treating constituents with contempt and ‘doing the dirty work.’

    I remember during the 2013 election campaign, the representative for our constituency and his entourage were canvassing one afternoon.
    The politician’s brother asked the few of us who were gathered together, if there was anything we wanted.
    A friend of mine said he wanted a job. The politician’s brother said he ‘did not know if MTW, Drainage Unit or NCC wanted people.’
    When the representative came, he spoke with my friend and told him to visit the constituency office.
    When the guy visited the office, the representative gave him a recommendation letter to take to a particular state owned agency that was under his portfolio.

    After leaving the office, he tore up the letter. I agreed with him because that letter was only a convenient gesture to say the representative was doing ‘something’ for the guy.
    If his INTENTIONS were GENUINE…… and the guy was a member of ‘the inner circle,’ the politician would’ve either sent or taken him to the SOE…… and he would have gotten a job.

    A guy and girl who canvassed for the politician and are members of his constituency branch, were REWARDED with certain jobs at NCC and Constituency Councils respectively.

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