Monday, 20 January 2014

Warmy's Warning

The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping from old ones.” John Maynard Keynes     

Mr. Everald Warmington
Google Photo
This past week, the Member of Parliament for South West St. Catherine, Mr. Everald Warmington had us talking, again. I wish I had the transcript but in its absence I'll rely on other sources to refresh my memory. If you can hear or see beyond the shock value of his utterances you'll get to issues worthy of serious thought. 

The crux of Mr. Warmington's argument seems to have been; if you don't vote you don't count. If you don't vote you have no business asking for government assistance. If you don't vote, unlike some thirty of so countries, there are no real consequences. 

Problem is that as offensive as these utterances were to many, we intuitively and for many, practically, know that this is the reality. "A suh di ting set". Mr. Warmington didn't say anything we didn't know, we just didn't want to hear it from an elected representative. Let's start with the recent kerfuffle with the Jamaica Labour Party and those Senate "resignations" - signed undated letters used to clean house. And what about Boards of Directors appointed to public entities - all asked to resign or summarily ejected with every change of government? 

The right to vote in a democracy is sacred, but in Jamaica the duty to vote is treated with scant regard by a large segment of qualified voters. Our voter’s list has grown healthily since 1944 but our rate of participation hasn't kept pace. I have lots of theories as to why but I keep coming back to what I most frequently hear; it doesn't matter - nothing is going to change. A vicious circle; if you don't vote nothing will change and if nothing changes you see no reason to vote. Chicken or egg?

The country will not, in my view, arise from its apathetic slumber until we see tangible and meaningful evidence that our votes matter. Some of us will vote regardless of the outcome, but we cannot continue to build a government based on 28.2% of the total qualified voters, as was the case in the last general election. A point also made by Ken Jones in his piece “Remedying Voter Apathy”, and appropriately dubbed, “electile dysfunction” by Ronald Mason.

I continue to believe, until I am proven wrong, that we are being hamstrung by a constitution which cannot serve us in the present nor will it serve is in the future. It guarantees that our elected representatives must first serve the best interest of their party at the expense of the populace. It ensures the victors are rewarded with ministries or worse, ministries without portfolios which bloat the cabinet at the expense of schools, hospitals, roads, water and other basic necessities for civilized living. It makes it impossible for an elected representative to vote his/her conscience for fear of incurring the wrath of the party leader. It reduces the cabinet to a collection of placeholders instead of a body armed with the skills and competences needed to manage a ministry in a modern and ever global time. It renders the notion of service to country through elected office unattractive to our brightest and best leaving only the most partisan to pursue a career in political life.

Most egregiously, it promises and delivers a never ending recycling of those who hold fast to the status quo until death do they part, locking out new ideas.

Year
Total Electorate
% Votes Cast
Party forming govt # of Votes to form the govt   % of All  Voters to    form the govt
1944
663,069
59%
JLP 161,138 24.3%
1949
732,217
65%
PNP 207,671 28.4%
1955
761,238
65%
PNP 250,338 32.9%
1959
853,539
66%
PNP 309,129 36.2%
1962*
796,540
73%
JLP 290,491 36.5%
1967
543,307
82%
JLP 226,312 41.7%
1972
605,662
79%
PNP 269,258 44.5%
1980*
990,417
87%
JLP 502,174 50.7%
1983*
990,586
29%
JLP 257,040 25.9%
1989
1,078,760
78%
PNP 473,752 43.9%
1993
1,002,599
60%
PNP 358,994 35.8%
1997
1,182,294
65%
PNP 429,807 36.4%
2002
1,301,334
59%
PNP 396,370 30.5%
2007
1,336,307
61%
JLP 410,401 30.7%
2011
1,648,036
53%
PNP 464,418 28.2%

Data source: Electoral Office of Jamaica

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