Excerpt from the Jamaica Observer column published on Monday, July 19, 2021
By Jean Lowrie-Chin
IT was coincidental that just a few days after a relative abroad shared an inspiring YouTube video on national hero and founder of the People’s National Party (PNP) Norman Washington Manley, news came that the chairman and vice-presidents of the party, as well as the president of the PNP Youth Organisation (PNPYO), had resigned from their positions. The video, produced by YeKengalé and featuring interviews with PNP elders PJ Patterson, Burchell Whiteman and Arnold Bertram, spoke of the perseverance and integrity of Norman Manley. They described his collegiality with Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) leader Sir Alexander Bustamante, whom he supported even after his defeat in the 1962 General Election. Significantly, former JLP leader Bruce Golding also spoke of Manley’s dedication to the development of our constitution.
So here we have a political party, founded by this shining Jamaican, now foundering as positions become hardened. The Jamaica Observer‘s lead story on Saturday, July 17 by Arthur Hall noted, “Last month, the party went public with news of its unity push, with the person given the job to lead the charge, former General Secretary Maxine Henry-Wilson, warning the Comrades that without unity the PNP would be in serious trouble.
“ ‘The public can’t believe that you have the capacity to lead if internally you can’t even talk to each other properly. So the work that the party has to do, and is doing, has to be brought to the fore and the disunity has to take a back seat… It is not going to disappear, but we all need to have a larger purpose around which we are revolving,’ Henry-Wilson told the Jamaica Observer.”
Our shop was blessed to serve the then Electoral Advisory Committee led by William Chin See, with membership including Henry-Wilson of the PNP and Ryan Peralto of the JLP. I recall the strong arguments as they discussed revisions to the Representation of the People Act, but with the respect and humour of mature deliberations.
Despite Henry-Wilson’s wise counsel, it seems that the damage has gone too deep to resolve internal differences. Arthur Hall quotes from Krystal Tomlinson’s resignation letter: “I will not continue to serve where there is a wavering commitment to integrity; where parish and region chairmen engineer and facilitate fraudulent behaviour and have the audacity to parade themselves as ‘untouchables’ because of their proximity to the leadership of the party.”
It is a crying shame that such accusations are being levelled at the leaders of the party that Norman Manley built. May they find a way to heal – in the words of the late Edward Seaga when he dealt with a rift in his party, “Light a candle, sing a sankey and find your way back home.”