In American football, players huddle to hear the quarterback call out the play. Huddles are now a thing in football and cricket. Players and coaches discussed tactics and supplied motivational charges only minutes before in the changing room, but performed an on-field ritual designed for TV.
There seemed to be some made-for-TV hugging outside the building by MPs and general council members of the People’s National Movement after tense meetings over the succession direction of Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley.
At the centre of the embraces was Stuart Young, the prime minister-designate. Inside, earlier, some of the huggers would have preferred to assume the role of Brutus. That said, it had been an emotion-fuelled previous few weeks. The tragic death of their colleague Lisa Morris-Julian lingered. Pennelope Beckles-Robinson was again being bypassed.
Let us be clear about what happened. Rowley, in announcing an intention to step aside as Prime Minister and political leader, seemed to time it to favour Young. It had the effect of limiting the choice to the MPs’ caucus. The succession is consequential and generational and should have involved the wider membership. We don’t have an opinion poll to guide us, but it seems clear that Beckles-Robinson would have defeated Young in a fuller contest.
This isn’t a knock on Young. As I’ve said in this space before, folks who don’t have a dog in T&T’s political fight have told me that he’s the most effective person in government at getting things done. He works ferociously hard. That would be attractive to a prime minister who can give the impression of being cut from a different cloth. Young has been a safe pair of hands in a crisis. That’s not to say that no one else in the Cabinet has worked as hard or is capable of being as reliable to the boss.
Young has had proximity—the closest working relationship with the Prime Minister of anyone else in Government. My criticism of Young is his apparent credulousness in dealing with the Government of Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela, a disreputable bunch that would filch his lunch money when he wasn’t looking. He probably has no choice, given the importance of the agreement to T&T’s future revenue earnings and how hard the agreement was to reach. However, he should dial down the self-congratulation. Dr Roodal Moonilal has correctly held his feet to the fire to give a fuller accounting of his trips.
Young entered Parliament as MP for Port-of-Spain North/St Ann’s West in 2015, after serving as a temporary senator the year before. His ascent has been rapid. Beckles-Robinson, the Minister of Planning and Development, is in her 30th year of public life, having entered Parliament as an opposition senator in 1995. She was elected MP for Arima in 2000.
Beckles-Robinson is the first woman deputy speaker. Despite having a 20-year start on Young, who previously competed for the leadership and built up considerable credit in the bank with the rank and file nationally, Beckles-Robinson has not had the visibility that Young has enjoyed in Rowley’s administration. Political choice is more a popularity contest than a boardroom hire.
Penny met the first standard. Who’s to say that she was incapable of meeting the second? We shouldn’t discount the fact that her relationship with the PM over the years hasn’t been as harmonious. She ran against him for the party leadership in 2014.
Mario Cuomo, the late former governor of the state of New York, said, “You campaign in poetry; you govern in prose.” Who we love matters less than who we think can do the job better.
Rowley denies interfering in the choice, but no one needed to be told which way he preferred the wind to be blowing. It shouldn’t have mattered. There seems to be a fundamental lack of democracy in the process, and there’s considerable disquiet in PNM ranks. There has been much disgruntled briefing about who promised what to whom to secure whose support on the Tobago ballot, which Young won 11-9. There’s been more leaking than at an old house in Woodbrook.
However, they’re professionals. They knew they had to put this behind them and fall in line. Nothing unites factions like letting in the bigger enemy.
Orin Gordon is a media and communications consultant.
Details at oringordon.com