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Sorry, Gerhard, this is not the reality I see in Guyana


Gerhard Ramsaroop is a dear friend and, like Charandass Persaud, will remain a close friend of mine who I am fond of. I believe Gerhard has a lot to contribute, and whichever government is formed after the imminent general election, there should be an offer. He should come home from Berlin and serve the country that on countless occasions he told me he loves.
I now conclude my polemical discourse with Gerhard, with the definitive declaration that I reject his proclamation that in the absence of constitutional reform, the PNC embodies the greater possibility of reaching out to all strata of the Guyanese class structure.
I have seen not a scintilla of evidence of that the past four years, about the PNC’s inclusiveness. I will offer snippets of proof that the PNC and the PPP are trapped organisms that cannot come out of their inherent ethnic prison. The PPP and the PNC have never grounded across the racial divide. The result of that omission was a one-sided evolution. This is the reality of their respective ontology since the mid-fifties.
Could Hoyte have transformed the PNC and Guyanese sociology simultaneously? I think he wanted to, but he didn’t get the time. His tenure lasted seven years. Jagdeo was brand new without baggage. But because he was handpicked as the solution to a volcanic confrontation among the top leaders in the PPP to succeed President Janet Jagan, he accepted to be a surrogate. By the time he was his own man, the culture of the PPP was so rubbed off on him that he couldn’t nurture a transformative vein in his political anatomy.
The PNC today has nothing in common with the PNC under Burnham, Hoyte and Corbin. I think all three leaders were better thinkers in how they approached different constituencies. Corbin, of course, wasn’t president. Burnham and Hoyte were innovative presidents, and though the results were not phenomenal, they were not banal either. The present PNC has no such personalities in office or the party at the moment.
Space will not allow for a discourse on these three PNC leaders, but I think a PNC government under Corbin would have been more inclusive. Nothing has been written about him, but I think Corbin from 2009 had ideas about the PNC’s directions that could have put the PNC as a far better entity in the eyes of the Guyanese people than it is seen today.
The fulcrum of Gerhard’s thesis is that of the two Leviathans, the PNC is more capable and ready to reach out to diverse dimensions of the Guyanese nation. The PNC, like the PPP when it was in power (forget the AFC), practices exclusion, racial preferences, incestuous politics and corrupt governance.
In his embrace of the potential positives of the PNC, Gerhard uses the words, “the PNC is the party most inclined to reach out to others and give them real power.” This is a formidable

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