of the current opposition, the People’s National Party would have, we have another disaster in the form of chronically low quality in our political representation and governance both nationally and locally.
At our local level, the Municipal Corporation representation is seen as a glorified
divisional organizer appointed by political parties to keep their election
machinery active. These local rep functions continue to be overshadowed by central
government via Members of Parliament to curry favor with constituents. The local
reps are usually less educated but deeply passionate about their communities,
often lacking any substantial knowledge about government and governance.
We should
be additionally concerned that our local reps with years of representational experience
are continuously overlooked by the political parties for promotion to the House
of Representatives.
The Upper
House (Senate) is a prime example of decline, with the establishment political
parties continuing to thwart the initial concept by their perplexing political appointments
of defeated politicians, party activist and future candidates. The debates and
exchanges on legislative matters seem almost pedestrian. The upper chamber was meant
to be a legislative buffer of independent professionals or civic minded folks
not a compost heap.
Lastly, the
Lower House having the better crop of representation with older professional,
and tertiary educated folks seemingly lacks boldness to go against the party
line and fails to truly mirror changing sentiments of their younger and more
modern constituents. There is an unwillingness to be creative with policy as
many laws get dragged from colonial times to be applied now and reforms being
done piecemeal.
There is no
need for us to implement any stringent requirements for entry into political
representation, as any Jamaican citizen must have a right to run for public office
and offer themselves for service. However, we must demand political parties to
emphasize the need for candidates to be sufficiently groomed and empowered with
the knowledge about our government systems and governance is general.
As a developing state, we must support engagement at an early age with Civics and
Government in schools plus continued wholesome youth participation from the community
to the national levels. As we better the stock quality in the citizenry, surely,
we will see mark improvement overtime as the selected few offers themselves to
represent the masses.
Mario Boothe
Youth & Governance Advocate
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