Dear Editor,
I listened with keen interest to Prime Minister Mark Phillips’s contribution to the Budget 2026 debate. While national budgets are meant to outline fiscal priorities and policy direction, they should also reflect restraint, balance, and respect for historical truth. Regrettably, I left the Prime Minister’s presentation deeply disappointed.
Rather than confining his remarks to current economic stewardship and measurable outcomes, the Prime Minister once again resorted to a distorted portrayal of Guyana’s past, implicitly casting the era of the late Linden Forbes Sampson Burnham as one defined solely by political favouritism and exclusion. Such characterisations, repeated without context or scholarly balance, do little to advance public understanding and instead serve a familiar political narrative.
It is now forty years since LFS Burnham passed. One would have expected, by this point in our national evolution, a more mature and restrained engagement with history. It is time for the People’s Progressive Party/Civic to allow his soul to rest in eternal peace, rather than continually resurrecting his name as a political convenience whenever accountability for present governance is required.
The persistent failure of the PPP/C to meaningfully account for its own actions is increasingly evident. Issues of transparency, oversight, and institutional accountability are too often concealed behind layers of political messaging and sustained propaganda. Instead of confronting legitimate public concerns, historical misrepresentation is deployed as a shield. This approach undermines democratic maturity and erodes public trust.
I was a young girl when Forbes Burnham died. My assessment of his leadership is therefore not shaped by lived political allegiance, nostalgia, or inherited loyalties. Nor do I permit propaganda, past or present, to occupy my mind. I read. I study. I educate myself on who Forbes Burnham was, what he attempted to do, and the geopolitical and economic constraints under which he governed.
The historical record is neither singular nor simplistic. Burnham’s tenure, like that of many post-colonial leaders, included serious shortcomings; economic difficulties, governance challenges, and democratic concerns. Yet it also encompassed foundational contributions to nation-building; free education, public infrastructure expansion, national self-assertion, and the deliberate effort to craft a Guyanese identity in the early post-independence period. To reduce this legacy to a recurring political caricature is intellectually dishonest.
A responsible Budget debate should be anchored in the present: transparency in the management of public resources, accountability in decision-making, respect for institutions, and tangible outcomes for citizens. Continual reliance on historical distortion cannot substitute for these obligations. Guyana deserves leadership that engages its history honestly, governs the present transparently, and plans for the future responsibly.