Dear Editor,
I am compelled to respond to the recent missive by Annette Ferguson regarding the National Clean-Up Campaign. Her argument, that the central government’s intervention in national sanitation is a “troubling departure” from democratic norms, is not only intellectually dishonest but reeks of a political party that has completely run out of relevant ideas.
Ms. Ferguson’s defense of Local Government Authorities (LGAs) would be more palatable if those very authorities weren’t the ones presiding over years of filth and administrative paralysis. To suggest that the central government should sit idly by while local bodies fail their constituents is an absurd interpretation of “autonomy.” Local governance is a responsibility, not a shield to hide behind when one fails to deliver basic services.
The PNCR’s current stance reveals a party in a state of terminal desperation. Having outlived their usefulness, they are now reduced to manufacturing “crises” of governance over something as fundamental and universally beneficial as a cleaner environment. It is clear that the APNU/PNC agenda is now centered on obstructionism rather than progress. Historically, this party has survived on a diet of racial division and exclusion. In a modern Guyana, one that is rapidly developing and looking toward a unified future, the PNC’s reliance on these old, corrosive tactics is failing to resonate. Consequently, they are grasping at straws, attempting to turn a national sanitation drive into a constitutional debate.
The statistics regarding local government performance under their preferred status quo are telling. In many jurisdictions where the opposition held sway, waste collection and drainage maintenance had reached near-catastrophic levels of inefficiency. For example, during their own tenure in Georgetown and in the municipalities they currently influence, the lack of “sustainable systems” they now decry was the very hallmark of their administration.
Ms. Ferguson asks if these campaigns are about “optics.” I would argue that her letter is the ultimate exercise in optics, a transparent attempt to get her party’s name back into the public eye because they have no actual policy alternatives to offer. The Guyanese people are tired of political gatekeeping that prioritizes “jurisdiction” over the health and cleanliness of our communities. If the LGAs were doing their jobs, central intervention wouldn’t be necessary. The PNC’s attempt to stall national progress to protect their own waning influence is a disservice to every citizen. It is time they move beyond the politics of division and stop treating a clean street as a political battlefield.