Opposition Leader Kamla Persad-Bissessar has never been the most diplomatic of politicians.
In fact, when she took office in 2010 as Trinidad and Tobago’s first female prime minister, it wasn’t long before she angered Caribbean colleagues and friends with an open declaration that T&T was not an automated teller machine, as she all but closed off years of T&T financial support to regional countries during times of need.
A few years ago, she also wrote to the US government claiming that the T&T Government had breached sanctions against Venezuela, amid ongoing negotiations for the Dragon Gas deal, while suggesting that the US should sanction Cabinet members in Port-of-Spain, but not members of her opposition United National Congress (UNC).
Now she has taken an unnecessary and unprovoked dig against outgoing US president Joseph Biden in a statement that was meant to congratulate incoming US President Donald Trump on his inauguration.
In her words, the Biden administration was a “disaster for the American people and the world,” before doubling down and using the term “absolute disaster” yesterday after experiencing a powerful blowback from her comments on Monday.
Like many others, we ask why Mrs Persad-Bissessar lacked the courage to express her obvious disdain while the Biden administration was in office—something she could easily have done by writing to the US Ambassador or directly to Washington, as she had done previously.
But alas! Having been called out on her stance on social media and by various commentators, Mrs Persad-Bissessar has listed 20 reasons for her position, focusing on the Biden administration’s policies on religious tolerance, gender affairs and censorship, all of which she defined as elements of a ‘woke’ culture.
Like any other citizen, Mrs Persad-Bissessar is entitled to her personal convictions.
However, to use her constitutionally appointed office to disparage the former president of one of our closest allies is alien to this country’s approach to diplomacy and international relations.
While we have in the past managed to disagree with the positions of other countries, our foreign policy over the years has been to stay out of the internal politics of other nations.
Arguably, T&T and Caricom enjoyed closer ties with the Biden regime than any other US administration in recent history, even though many of the initiatives announced were not fulfilled by the end of his tenure.
Certainly, under the last Democratic government, we have met more open doors in Washington than we have had in a long time.
T&T has its own battles to fight and the results of the general election this year will determine who will speak directly to Washington on our behalf.
Whether that party is the incumbent People’s National Movement, the UNC or any other, as a country, we would want the best diplomatic talent to safeguard and expand our interests with the United States of America.
In this light, Mrs Persad-Bissessar would do well to focus on convincing voters that her party is the best poised to lead this country in that regard, as it is the performance at home that will sway the T&T electorate, and not the performance of either the Biden or Trump administrations in the US.