|  Home 
                  » Articles » The dead cat factor
 Stephen 
                  Vasciannie
 I 
                    AM not surprised that Bruce Golding has returned to the Jamaica 
                    Labour Party (JLP). Shortly following the 1997 General Election, 
                    I formed the view that Golding had decided to abandon the 
                    National Democratic Movement, and from then I concluded that 
                    it was only a matter of time. On 
                    my reading, now buttressed by recent events, Golding was always 
                    looking back into the JLP. He was in the midst of a mission 
                    within the NDM, but like Lot's wife, he just could not keep 
                    his eyes trained forward. The possibility that he would return 
                    home struck me forcefully following the 1997 elections when 
                    I noticed how drained and inattentive he had become. Golding, 
                    then, would come to meetings without any strong plan of action, 
                    and perhaps more importantly, without much energy. To some 
                    extent, this was understandable: he had been a Member of Parliament 
                    for 27 years, and now, suddenly and unceremoniously, that 
                    golden ring had been seized from his grasp  and it had 
                    been seized by Babsy Grange, a former friend, junior colleague 
                    and confidante, who now characterised him as a traitor. Moreover, 
                    in the immediate aftermath of the 1997 General Election, funds 
                    were low, and political allies were in short supply. In this 
                    period, true leadership skills required Golding to rally the 
                    troops, to reiterate the message, to press the flesh on the 
                    ground, to continue the construction of the NDM from the bottom 
                    up. His challenge was to hold on to the middle class base 
                    of the party, which was undoubtedly there, while extending 
                    its reach to rural and urban communities that continue to 
                    exist in conditions of abject poverty notwithstanding the 
                    arrival of cellular phones. But 
                    Golding, who once suggested that he was the man on the bridge, 
                    was simply not up to the challenge. Instead of fighting the 
                    good fight, he turned, it seems, to various schemes designed 
                    to chart his return to the JLP house. Of course, moving from 
                    one political party to another is not necessarily a point 
                    for condemnation, for, in some circumstances, it may well 
                    represent some kind of spiritual or intellectual growth on 
                    the part of the person who changes allegiance. PAULINE 
                    CONVERSION? Notice, 
                    however, that in the case of Golding, the matter was not that 
                    simple. Golding had abandoned the JLP in a manner which ostensibly 
                    suggested a Pauline conversion. On the road to Damascus, as 
                    Chairman of the JLP and heir-apparent to Seaga, Bruce was 
                    struck by a flash of light. Or so we were lead to believe. He 
                    became one of the chief proponents of separation of powers; 
                    together, we can dismantle the garrisons, he said; ridiculed 
                    persons wedded to "the old style politics"; he skilfully 
                    demonstrated the link between the over-centralisation of power 
                    in the hands of the Prime Minister and the tribalism that 
                    has come to bedevil the Jamaican political culture. And, most 
                    importantly, by leaving the JLP, he showed that he was a man 
                    prepared to act in defence of his PRINCIPLES even if this 
                    did not lead to immediate political advantage. Or so we were 
                    led to believe. Some 
                    current members of the NDM have already spoken about the sense 
                    of betrayal they feel. So, for instance Brascoe Lee suggested 
                    on Cliff Hughes' Impact programme that Golding's latest move 
                    raises questions of truth, principles, opportunism and deception. 
                    Bruce will have to address those issues in his own way. For 
                    me, though, the more difficult questions concern how he will 
                    reconcile his earlier assessments of the JLP (made upon leaving 
                    that party) with the decision to go back to the house that 
                    he once regarded as rotten. TO 
                    EXPLAIN THINGS Bruce 
                    has the capacity to explain things, and as his once united, 
                    disunited, now reunited colleague Karl Samuda has noted, he 
                    can do it with intellectual style and calm objectivity. So, 
                    maybe he will be able to square this particular circle; but 
                    I have serious doubts. The fish came from the bottom of the 
                    river and told us that sharks were down there: how on earth 
                    can the fish then return to the bottom of the river when there 
                    are really no strong indications that the river's ecosystem 
                    has changed? And, 
                    while he is explaining the paradox of the return to the bottom 
                    of the river, it would also be helpful if he could give us 
                    his current analysis of the deaths by the gun that occurred 
                    in Homestead, St. Catherine, in mid-1996: at the time, some 
                    people suggested that the persons killed were supporters of 
                    the NDM, and implied that the killings were linked to non-NDM 
                    political forces. Does Golding (still) have that view? Also, 
                    on a housekeeping point, is the libel suit contemplated by 
                    Golding against the Observer newspaper in respect of comments 
                    made by Young Jamaica president, Andre Franklyn, still a live 
                    issue? Generally, 
                    therefore, Golding has taken a grave risk in returning to 
                    the JLP at this time; and this risk  based on the undermining 
                    of his own credibility, will no doubt be exacerbated by the 
                    private unwillingness of some JLP stalwarts to accommodate 
                    him. Moreover, given that less than three weeks remain before 
                    the General Election, we are all entitled to wonder if this 
                    is rank opportunism dressed up in dry leaves. We may also 
                    wonder whether Bruce, who was never able to project the NDM 
                    to the heights, has the qualities to help a sagging JLP campaign. 
                    If he prompts "big money" to assist the JLP, then, 
                    perhaps he will be an asset, but beyond that, the impact of 
                    his return should not be exaggerated. Let's 
                    put it this way: Bruce's return is not a torpedo to the hull 
                    of the PNP ship. Rather, it is more akin to the JLP throwing 
                    a dead cat on the PNP deck. For a short time, PNP seafarers 
                    will be hurrying and scurrying about wondering what to do, 
                    and then someone will wash the dead cat away. No lasting impact. Bruce's 
                    capacity to explain things will be sorely tested in the next 
                    few weeks. Many Jamaicans will be inclined to say: "Bruce 
                    you fool me one time, you smart; you fool me two time, mi 
                    a eediat". That is the challenge faced by the former 
                    leader of the party founded by the former JLP Chairman, just 
                    the other day, in the Year of our Lord, one thousand nine 
                    hundred and ninety five. About 
                  this writer Stephen 
                  Vasciannie is Professor of International Law at the University 
                  of the West Indies.
 
   |