Latest update April 12th, 2025 6:32 PM
Jul 05, 2011 Letters
DEAR EDITOR,
I refer to Dr. Joey Jagan’s letter titled: “Shared coalition governance is the only way to go” (SN June 21st).
The learned doctor used the phrases “coalition shared governance” in the first and “Shared coalition governance” in the fourth and final paragraphs, but I have to ask: does he really know that the concept of “Coalition Government” is not the same as “Shared Governance”? There is nothing in his letter to suggest that Dr. Jagan understands that these are two very different concepts.
I ‘Googled’ these words “Dr. Joey Jagan and Shared Governance” and a whole set of letters came up. Now I have to wonder how it had been possible for a leading advocate of Shared Governance to be writing so many letters and still not understand that “coalition government” and “shared governance” are not the same thing. So what is he really advocating?
Do the editors of these letters have some culpability in helping this learned doctor sow confusion about these two vastly different concepts?
The father of this idea of “shared governance” is Dr. David Hinds. It simply calls for the sharing of executive power in government among parties that won seats in the national elections.
That is to say, if the PPP, PNC and AFC are the only parties that won seats, then there would be a formula by which these three parties will share the presidency and Cabinet portfolios.
In Dr. Hinds’ scheme of things there would be no need for a functional opposition party or parties. This is not the same thing as coalition government.
Coalition government comes about only if and when no single party gets the required 51 percent of the votes or seats in the parliament. In this case, two or more parties coalesce to produce a 51 percent majority and are therefore allowed to form the government. Examples are the PNC-UF coalition of 1964 (Guyana) and recently the Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition in Britain.
According to Dr. Hinds, the main reason for his propagation of Shared Governance is because of a unique scenario in Guyana, namely, a culture that produces excessively high rates of ethnic voting for ethnic parties.
And, that this system will all but guarantee, Dr. Hinds argues, the re-election of the Indo-ethnic PPP in perpetuity because of the Indian majority group. This leaves the African-Guyanese at 35 percent of the population seething at their permanent exclusion from political power.
I have always said that Dr. Hinds’ cause is not without merit and is based on a genuine grievance, but I have always opposed his idea of shared governance, for the simple reason that his idea is the very antithesis of democracy.
Ralph Seeram (KN Jan 23rd and June 5th) in two published letters has argued persuasively that Shared Governance is both unworkable and impractical. His letters should be required reading for all readers who are interested in studying and understanding the subject.
Dr. Joey Jagan in his letter of June 21st wrote: “Any government formed after this election should include Mr. Granger and some of his comrades if he loses”.
On what basis should Mr. Granger and his comrades be included? Does the constitution allow for the inclusion of the losing party in the event of another party winning 51 percent of the votes? You suddenly realize Dr. Joey Jagan’s advocacy borders on the inane and the ridiculous!
The architect of Shared Governance, Dr. David Hinds should realize that in a democracy, parties have to devise campaign strategies and platforms aimed at winning elections. The PNC has no platform and no strategy to win an election. If the PNC receives all the African votes in the country, it will not be enough to produce a 51 percent winning tally of votes, so do they have an Indian strategy to win Indian votes? Or Amerindian strategy to win Amerindian votes?
Dr. Hinds should realize that the real cause of the problem he seeks to address lies in the PNC’s intransigence and failure to change and adapt new ways of doing politics and winning elections in a new, democratic environment. A study of the PNC’s internal party politics would show that there has been a significant movement for change in the consciousness and policies of the party led by Dr. Van West Charles. Dr. Hinds should know that Dr. Charles’ attempts at reforming the party have lost out to Mr. Corbin’s faction.
Mr. Corbin’s ideas of designing a campaign: no focus studies, no specific strategies of targeted constituencies, no specific messaging, no understanding of the electoral math, no party polling and testing of strategies. In other words just follow the old template, which is nothing but targeting the African constituency only.
Mr. Corbin’s idea of campaign politics is limited to an old template of having an African head of party and a few Indians as window-dressers and then claim your party is multi-racial. This template is long broken, useless and should be replaced. Mr. Corbin alone, of all the upper echelon leaders of the PNC, insists on holding on to an obsolete template.
Another useless campaign strategy is manifested by party writers Lurlene Nestor, Mark Archer, Nigel Green, Malcolm Harripaul – they groan literally in every letter about corruption of the ruling party, never about developing a strategy to communicate with the Indian constituency whose votes you need to defeat the ruling party. For now, the PNC’s electoral campaign is engaged in another exercise of utter futility. A re-run of 1992, 1997, 2001 and 2006.
What can you say of Dr. Hinds and Dr. Joey Jagan? Hinds has no faith in democracy – the idea of winning votes across all racial constituencies. Joey Jagan – well, he is utterly confused about what Shared Governance is or is not, and he is trying to confuse all the other voters with his – favorite word – nonsense.
Mike Persaud
Apr 12, 2025
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