Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley’s surprise announcement on Thursday of a new addition to his Cabinet throws the spotlight on an MP who has spent most of his parliamentary term on the Government back benches.
However, Keith Scotland, the MP for Port-of-Spain South, who has just been elevated to the position of Minister in the Ministry of National Security, has not been completely out of the political limelight for the past four years. For one thing, he represents a constituency rich in PNM history as a long-held stronghold that was once represented by the party’s founder, Dr Eric Williams, and which includes some key districts in the nation’s capital.
In Parliament, he has been serving as chairman of the Joint Select Committee on National Security, and at the party level, he chairs the ten-member working committee that is developing the PNM’s position on constitutional reform. His professional background in the legal profession for more than 25 years, including more than a decade as head of Virtus Chambers, includes expertise in criminal, corporate, civil, industrial relations, and family law, as well as experience practising in several Caribbean jurisdictions.
To take up his new Cabinet appointment, Mr Scotland has had to step aside from his legal practice just weeks after being elevated to senior counsel. As a relative political newcomer now thrust into the frontline, Mr Scotland will have to draw upon all his legal experience to manage the weighty aspects of the national security portfolio that are now his responsibility.
And as he steps into the National Security Ministry, Mr Scotland will share in the criticisms and scrutiny that until now have been directed mostly at his Laventille East colleague, Fitzgerald Hinds. He will also be under pressure to deliver as the country’s crime crisis reaches unprecedented levels of violence in the ministry that takes a considerable chunk of the national budget with little to show.
Mr Scotland’s share of the national security portfolio covers the T&T Police Service (TTPS), management of illegal migration, and drug enforcement, all areas with significant challenges.
Since 2016, T&T has faced a surge of illegal entries into the country, mostly from Venezuela. Management of this influx is complicated by the fact that the Immigration Act does not adequately address the issue of refugees and asylum seekers.
Legislative gaps have also impeded efforts to curb drug trafficking, a decades-old problem made worse by this country’s geographic location and easily accessible borders. Lax drug enforcement is one of the contributors to the crisis of heightened crime and lowered public confidence that Mr Scotland will now be required to take on full-time.
He doesn’t have much time to deliver, as measurable results will be expected by the time elections are called next year. Crime has been rising dramatically since the late 1990s, and Mr Scotland is the newest member of a Cabinet that is under increasing pressure to expeditiously implement effective policies to reverse the situation.
All eyes are already on him to see if he can work successfully with Police Commissioner Erla Harewood-Christopher, the TTPS and the other agencies that are now under his purview. Soon enough, the country will see whether, professional qualifications and experience aside, Mr Scotland has the will, determination and continuity for this difficult assignment.