Senior Investigative Reporter
shaliza.hassanali@guardian.co.tt
Prakash Ramadhar believes that his return as leader of the Congress of the People (COP), on the eve of the 2025 general election, could save the 19-year-old party from political burial.
Since assuming the position, Ramadhar has faced attacks from people within the COP, some of whom even threatened legal action and began wrangling over the party’s leadership.
On Wednesday, Ramadhar, a former St Augustine MP and legal affairs minister in the People’s Partnership government, said he believed in the “Lazarus syndrome,” referring to the COP that was politically dead but whose life has since been restored.
“It (COP) was not completely dead ... it was close to it. I think we came in the nick of time. You know everything in this life; sometimes the most important thing is timing. I believe in the good work of the Bible that even when one is written off if there is a holy spirit, a good spirit, a light, that life could be restored. Now that there is a new breath, light, and revival, they scream and complain bitterly,” Ramadhar told the Sunday Guardian during an interview at the COP’s new headquarters in Curepe.
Having renewed hope for the party, Ramadhar is gearing up to form a coalition with the UNC led by Kamla Persad-Bissessar.
It would be the COP’s third merger with the PP.
“Coalition is a must,” he said. “It’s the only way to defeat the PNM.”
The united front must be done swiftly, he said.
Last Saturday, Ramadhar admitted that the COP was not bound by a Memorandum of Understanding with Gary Griffith’s National Transformation Alliance and HOPE led by Timothy Hamel-Smith, which they had entered into.
Griffith criticised Ramadhar for announcing the MOU without first contacting the other parties.
Ramadhar said he was encouraged by the party’s former political leader Kirk Sinnette and current general secretary Ralph Hart to return to the COP to help rebuild and strengthen it.
When the COP contested the 2007 general election under its founder Winston Dookeran it garnered 148,345 votes but did not win any seats.
In the 2020 general election, 467 people voted for the COP, which Ramadhar described as an embarrassment.
He blamed “uninspired leadership” for the poor voter turnout.
“When I saw the numbers, it was painful for me,” he admitted.
Elected political leader in 2011, Ramadhar resigned from the COP in 2016 after some members began dominating the party’s conversation.
He said those voices became a destructive condemnation.
In the years that followed, Ramadhar, an attorney, said the COP found itself “in a horrible decline.”
There were no offices, phones, membership forms, or performance reports.
Internal elections and executive meetings were not held in months.
Members grew disillusioned.
“They breached almost every constitutional rule in the party. We are now re-constitutionalising the party.”
On the COP’s database, Ramadhar said there were over “tens of thousands” of registered members, but they are now trying to determine the actual figure.
Ramadhar said people who tried to run the party never did any work.
“So, the noises that you hear are the extraction of the poison of this party. You have to ask these troublemakers what is their ambition. What is their purpose, and what is their motive? What we are hearing are screams of death for those who determined that the COP should have been suppressed and to be muffled.”
Ramadhar said no one was perfect.
“But if they want perfection, find it here for me.”
He said people have been opening their mouths and saying things.
“I have some of the best lawyers already lined up. I am not making a threat. I am making a statement. For those who wish to open their mouths and speak liberally, they say free speech can sometimes be very expensive.”
The former MP said those who accused him of violating the party’s constitution should ask themselves what have they done to keep the COP relevant, alive, and active.
With the help of its deputy political leader Imran Ali, Ramadhar has started drafting the COP’s 2025 manifesto, developing policies and programmes and rebuilding its support base.
“I expect we will get people to come in and finance slowly but surely. It has started. We want that to accelerate.”
In the coming weeks, Ramadhar said the party will decide how many seats it will contest in the upcoming general election.
“We don’t have the resources to shoot as a scattershot. We are laser-focused on several of the seats.”
Asked if the UNC can win the 2025 general election, Ramadhar was optimistic.
“Absolutely! With credibility, consistency, and the right candidates. We’ve had challenges before, and I am confident these challenges will fall very quickly. Winning is a must. If we don’t, then something has to be horribly wrong in this country that the people’s spirits are so broken and demonised by those who hold power. This is a do-or-die for the country’s benefit. If we do not succeed, this country will become a one-party state. That is what dictatorship fully is.”
Ramadhar defended Persad-Bissessar, who he said was often “demonised” by the PNM and their trolls on allegations of corruption.
“They would say I am defending Kamla, but I have to. For everything the People’s Partnership (PP) did, it was defined as corrupt. There is corruption. There has been. There was. So they put it out there that there was corruption. I am sure in every government since the formation of mankind there has been corruption.”
Even though the PP responded to the corruption claims by establishing the procurement legislation, Ramadhar said, the negativity continued to spread, leading the party to lose the 2015 general election.
Asked if the PP learnt from their mistakes, Ramadhar replied, “I don’t know; I expect that they must have.”
Ramadhar also trained his guns on the PNM, stating that T&T is “in a state of a deficit by a government that only finds excuses.”
He said the PNM under Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley spent billions of dollars in the last nine years and had nothing to show for it.
Rising crime, low unemployment, the sale of the Petrotrin refinery, inflation, businesses shutting down, a forex shortage, and people migrating, Ramadhar said, have brought this country to its knees.
“A lot of the money is now paying interest on loans. As a geologist, our Prime Minister should know you can’t get blood out of stone.”
He said while the Government continues to boast of its great vision, the population is burdened with paying taxes for everything.
“Everything they can tax, they will. A government must not look to oppress and suppress its population. They seem not to care.”
Ramadhar said T&T was heading down a path of Haiti, which is exploding with a wave of gun violence and crime.
“Every institution of this country has been compromised, if not demolished.”
How history was created
History was created on April 21, 2010, when the UNC, led by Persad-Bissessar, signed an accord with the COP, Tobago Organisation of the People (TOP), Movement for Social Justice, and National Joint Action Committee, paving the way for a unified entity called the People’s Partnership (PP) to fight the ruling PNM government in the May 24, 2010 polls.
That union propelled the PP to a 29-victory against the PNM’s 12 seats.
The UNC captured 21 seats, COP six, and TOP two.
The constituencies of Arima, D’Abadie/O’Meara, Lopinot/Bon Air West, San Fernando West, Tunapuna, and St Augustine went into the hands of the COP, which garnered 61,222 votes.
The St Augustine seat was won by Ramadhar, who netted 15,166 votes.
Dookeran, who captured the Tunapuna seat and was appointed finance minister, resigned as COP leader in May 2011, following an emergency meeting with the party’s executives.
He promised to offer himself when the COP held its internal elections the following month.
Dookeran backed down from the election race, and Ramadhar was voted the new leader after challenging contenders Anil Roberts, Vernon De Lima, and Nalini Dial.
Faced with internal conflicts and challenges, calls were made by party members for Ramadhar to step down in 2013.
Among the callers was Ramadhar’s brother Kishore Ramadhar, the COP’s secretary for education and research, who blamed his sibling for destroying the party and the principles it stood for.
Ramadhar (K) also felt the COP should remove itself from the PP.
Ramadhar refused to budge.
The COP remained a partner with the fragmented PP in the 2015 general election, putting up eight candidates.
This time around the PNM won 23 seats to the UNC’s 18.
Reelected for the St Augustine seat with 12,606 votes, Ramadhar was the lone COP MP on the Opposition bench.
Within hours of Ramadhar’s victory, the COP’s youth arm called on him to step down, stating that many commentators referred to the party as Congress of the Person.
Not long after, Ramadhar threw in the towel.
After serving his second term, Ramadhar bowed out of politics.
In the 2020 election, the UNC fought alone and lost again.
The COP contested four seats, netting 467 votes—a far cry from the popularity and overwhelming support it generated in 2006.
Analyst: Alliances critical for upcoming election
Political analyst Dr Indira Rampersad stated that if the COP and UNC forms an alliance, Ramadhar would need to demonstrate his ability to attract substantial support, particularly from COP voters or the third-force voters who refuse to back either the PNM or UNC.
Rampersad recalled that in 2007, the COP reached its peak with over 148,000 votes. “But they were struggling until the People’s Partnership revived them. Dr Dookeran had openly stated that, thanks to the UNC, the COP managed to survive.”
Despite its highs and lows as a third force, the COP has faced challenges, she noted. “They don’t control any specific constituency, which is the problem. What remains uncertain is whether they can galvanise more support in this election.”
Rampersad acknowledged that there is a segment of the electorate disillusioned with both the UNC and PNM, who tend to support third-force parties. However, she pointed out that several third forces are competing, and it’s unclear which one is the most viable.
She said these alliances will be crucial in determining the election’s outcome.