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Jul 15, 2023 Letters
Dear Editor,
Early Tuesday morning, Guyanese woke up to the sad news that Mr. Ashton Chase, a trailblazer on the political and trade union front, and a legal luminary, had passed away quietly at the age of 96. Any effort to analyze the life and work of Cde Ashton will take several publications and more in-depth research that has to span a period of almost seven decades. He was the last surviving member of the Political Affairs Committee (PAC) that was the forerunner to the formation of the People’s Progressive Party (PPP) in 1950 and also played a crucial role in the election of Dr. Cheddi Jagan to the legislative in 1947.
After joining the juvenile section of the British Guiana Labour Union in the 1940s, he rose to the position of Assistant and later General Secretary of the union. Dr. Cheddi and Janet Jagan met Ashton Chase at Joycelin Hubbard bookstore in Water Street, and they subsequently agreed to set up the PAC in 1946. When the PAC celebrated its 50th anniversary in September 1996, Cde Ashton was one of the panelists along with Cheddi and Janet Jagan at a seminar in Georgetown. He stated that the main idea behind the setting up of the PAC was to enhance political awareness and struggle to reduce poverty in British Guiana. He remarked that two militant PAC groups, one in Kitty led by the late Boysie Ramkarran and another in Buxton led by the then Sydney King actively promoted the idea of the formation of a political party in 1947.
The formation of the PPP in 1950 and its subsequent victory in the 1953 election led to Ashton Chase becoming the Minister of Labour, Trade and Industry. The government was removed after 133 days in office with the suspension of the constitution and the rest is history.
Cde Ashton left for London to study law in 1954, after his return in 1958, continued to be active with the PPP becoming President of the Senate in the 1961-64 period and a member of Parliament until 1968.
He made an unsuccessful bid for the President of the GLU in the mid 60’s. The trade union was very militant during that period Cde Ashton along with Bertis Bangaree helped transitioned the Sugar Estate Clerk Association (SECA) to National Association of Agricultural Commercial and Industrial Employees (NACCIE) in 1970, this allowed the union to broaden its membership to represent field and factory supervisors and sugar boilers. He was very active promoting the rights of the workers and very vocal at the TUC annual delegates conferences.
Cde Ashton activism was not only limited to the political and trade union front but was prominent in the halls of the courtroom. He was part of a battery of lawyers that successfully defended PPP activist Arnold Rampersaud on framed up political charges. When the PNC government curtailed press freedom with draconian methods, he successfully represented Eusi Kwayana in the Day-clean trial in 1976. He along with Fenton Ramsahoye represented the Mirror newspaper at the Court of Appeal that strangely overturned Justice Frank Viera’s decision that a denial of newsprint is tantamount to the denial of freedom of expression.
However, his most famous of legal battle was when Seeram Teemal, a clerical worker at Leanora sugar estate successfully challenged the non-payment of the minimum wage and merit increment by the PNC government agreed upon with the TUC in 1977. After the court decision and in effort to prevent the workers from receiving their rightful dues, the PNC passed the controversial Labour Amendment Act (1984) that wages will no longer have the safety accorded property and could be reduced unilaterally or retroactively by government. Justice Clifford Baburam upheld Ashton Chase’s arguments that this amendment was unconstitutional, the case was finally heard and successfully settled at the Court of Appeal in a landmark decision on a matter that lasted more than ten years.
Ashton Chase will be remembered for his positive contributions on many fronts – the political, economic and social – but last and by no means least his writings especially his seminal publication “A History of Trade Unionism in Guyana”.
Rest in Peace Cde Ashton, your good work shall live on.
Regards,
Rajendra Rampersaud
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