The PNM's General Council on Monday put systems in place for the party's constituency elections to begin today (Wednesday) and continue in the 41 constituencies until July 31.
To vote in the party elections, the PNM's General Council has waived any outstanding membership fees from April 2024 to June 2025 and mandated that members pay dues for July 2025 to June 2026.
This was confirmed at Monday's special General Council meeting at Balisier House.
Motions were approved to put systems in place for holding the internal polls. Membership dues are $10 per month.
One motion stated that the last party group elections were held from May to June 2024, when members were required to pay dues up to the end of the first quarter of 2024. It noted that membership dues remained outstanding from the second quarter of 2024 to the end of the second quarter of 2025.
Since party group elections were scheduled to begin this month, the Council on Monday approved waiving any outstanding membership dues for the periods April 1, 2024, to December 31, 2024, and January 1, 2025, to June 30, 2025.
The motion also stated that, in order for party group members to be eligible to vote in the elections, they must pay membership dues for the period July 1, 2025, to June 30, 2026. This amounts to $120 per member.
Tunapuna member Krystal Horwood recently wrote to PNM general secretary Foster Cummings calling for the postponement of the elections until an audit of the membership register was completed to address issues raised in previous years. Horwood unsuccessfully contested the PNM's 2022 and 2025 executive elections for the post of social media officer. She has denied being a non-financial member and produced evidence of a $120 bank transfer to the PNM's Balisier House account for her 2026 membership.
Also on Monday, the leadership agreed to extend the deadline for the submission of a report into issues raised in San Fernando East by SFE MP Brian Manning and SFE executive chairman Patricia Alexis.
Manning wrote to Cummings on June 16 outlining the issues. These include concerns among SFE members over a perceived conflict of interest involving Alexis because she serves both as the PNM's assistant general secretary and as head of the SFE constituency executive. Members have also expressed concern over the recent appointment of a person in SFE with ties to an executive official. There are also allegations that some SFE members are not acting in a manner that inspires confidence in their integrity.
A three-member team headed by PNM deputy political leader Jennifer Baptiste-Primus was appointed last week to conduct the inquiry and also examine a June 10 letter sent to Cummings by Alexis. The team was scheduled to submit its report by yesterday (June 30).
However, Manning said the timeframe for the probe was too short. He added that he would co-operate with any inquiry conducted by the General Council rather than a team appointed by the PNM's National Executive, of which Alexis is a member.
As a result, two General Council members were added to the three-member inquiry team on Monday, and the deadline for its report has been extended to July 14 from yesterday (June 30).
Monday's General Council meeting also marked the first anniversary of Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles' tenure as political leader.
