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A YOUNG MAN'S VIEW: Revolt in the ranks leaves FNM in political no man’s land

By ADRIAN GIBSON

ajbahama@hotmail.com

In the wake of yesterday’s coup d’état within the Free National Movement (FNM), the political landscape in the Bahamas has shifted. The FNM is in a state of flux, it is in a state of alarm.

Yesterday, history repeated itself as the FNM - a party that has been subjected to many divisions and factions over the years - now finds itself knocking on the door of history for an encore.

Yesterday, a petition by seven of the 10 FNM MPs was moved to replace the organisation’s leader Dr Hubert Minnis as leader of the Her Majesty’s Official Opposition in the House of Assembly.

Fort Charlotte MP Dr Andre Rollins, Central and South Abaco MP Edison Key, North Eleuthera MP Theo Neilly, Long Island MP Loretta Butler-Turner, St Anne’s MP Hubert Chipman, Montagu MP Richard Lightbourn and Central Grand Bahama MP Neko Grant all submitted a letter of no confidence in Dr Minnis to House Speaker Dr Kendal Major and to the Governor General, Dame Marguerite Pindling, yesterday morning revealing they have voted to be led in Parliament by Mrs Butler-Turner. Whilst the constitutional manoeuvre has to be approved by the Governor General, the move has sent shock waves through our archipelago.

This was a Machiavellian plot that is likely to hamper the FNM’s push towards the next general election. One wonders if this was a political plot that was devised with an end goal or merely a revenge plot to embarrass the leader and derail the party going into the next general election. I’m inclined to believe the latter. Most of the seven MPs - except Mrs Butler-Turner - have not been ratified as candidates for 2017. They have no seat to lose; they simply have nothing to lose. Yesterday, they donned their political suicide vests and decided to blow the FNM to smithereens, causing the party to reset and find itself in a state of emergency.

Notably, Dr Minnis remains party leader. This creates a conundrum within the FNM as the party will have one leader in the House of Assembly and another person leading the party. There will be lots of pulling and hauling. What’s more, this manoeuvre was employed a little more than five months before the next general election.

I have heard calls to expel the rebel MPs. That is a decision for the FNM. If those MPs are expelled, one wonders if that would settle the infighting in the FNM or lead to the formation of the much talked about “starfish” party. As it stands, the so-called starfish party would become the new Official Opposition and the FNM would become the third force in the House of Assembly.

The Progressive Liberal Party is no doubt in jubilation today. They sense a victory at the polls. The Opposition parties are splintered. The main Opposition party is facing internal warfare.

Whilst the seven MPs pulled a constitutional lever that was lawful and fully available to them, the short term impact on the FNM will likely cause many Bahamians to doubt if the party is ready to become the next government. I truly understand why many of the MPs are disgruntled. I have been told some of their stories. I have heard stories from Dr Minnis’ camp as well.

Something has to break! Either the seven MPs must resign from the FNM and form a new Opposition party (or possibly merge with the Democratic National Alliance or another) or Dr Minnis would have to resign. I do not believe that Dr Minnis and Mrs Butler-Turner can harmoniously co-exist. There is no trust.

The mantra of the FNM used to be that it is a matter of trust. Today, FNMs are no longer trusting each other and everyone seems to be rightly overcome by a sense of paranoia, anxiously waiting to be backstabbed by long knives. This is not the FNM of old. The FNM must recapture the magic that made it great, that caused people to deem its governance “government in the sunshine”.

Yesterday, Mrs Butler-Turner’s camp checkmated Dr Minnis. This is undoubtedly not the end of an ongoing rivalry that - notwithstanding the dancing, the re-nomination of Mrs Butler-Turner and the promise of her support - is likely to persist for years to come

Dr Minnis, too, is not without fault. Both of the leaders of the “new” FNM have contributed to the disunity we now see. The disrespect has come from both camps. That said, Mrs Butler-Turner never respected Minnis’ leadership and one must first learn to follow before they can lead. I have always had difficulty with what appears to be a spirit of entitlement that engulfs Mrs Butler-Turner.

The FNM last had a leader in the House and one outside the House in 2005. Then leader Tommy Turnquest lost his seat. This is perhaps the first time that both leaders will sit in the lower chamber, both serving as elected members of Parliament. I cannot wait to see how this new arrangement works.

As it stands, Mrs Butler Turner commands the respect and allegiance of the majority of her colleagues. Her grouping is a coalition of former political enemies, with Dr Andre Rollins - who she once slapped - now embracing her leadership and being one of the signatories to the letter.

Like many Bahamians I was surprised. Amazingly, these MPs managed to keep a secret and delivered a blow that no one expected. Finally, even if it was by nifty political choreography, Mrs Butler-Turner and company outfoxed Dr Minnis. During their last contest, Mrs Butler-Turner withdrew at the last minute, with Minnis on the cusp of delivering a five-to-one thumping at the party’s internal run-off.

Mrs Butler-Turner has now become the first female Leader of the Opposition. Notwithstanding how that came about, in all fairness, such an achievement must be acknowledged.

Interestingly, Dr Minnis directed all of his senatorial appointees to resign their posts. Last night, there was a wave of resignations in the party. It will be interesting to see who Mrs Butler-Turner appoints and what happens next in the FNM saga.

Comments and responses to ajbahama@hotmail.com

Comments

Well_mudda_take_sic 7 years, 4 months ago

The FNM party is no more and the root cause of its demise was Hubiggity's piss poor sore loser conduct in response to the thrashing he received from Christie in the last general election. Hubiggity's angst and utter disgust at the conclusion of the 2012 general election resulted in shameful post-election bahaviour on his part. Hubiggity's disgraceful walkaway from the FNM party back then created a power vacuum easily filled by a blithering incompetent corrupt imbecile with zero charisma and absolutely no ability to think quickly while standing on his feet to address or debate anything. We all know Minnis was never possessed of the qualities necessary to be or become a political leader; he could never overcome his many obvious limitations. Hubiggity knew all of this when he observed Minnis maneuvering to fill the leadership role in the opposition and the FNM party shortly after the last general election. But, like a spiteful child, Hubiggity did nothing to prevent the disaster he undoubtedly knew would be coming the FNM's way under the failed leadership of Minnis.

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proudloudandfnm 7 years, 4 months ago

Naieve young man....

The FNM only has one problem. Hubert Minnis. It is not a metter of LBT disrespecting him, everyone has disrespected him. He is simply not a leader. That is the only problem. If it was not LBT it would most definitely have been somome else. Last week Edison was Minnis' ally, this week he is not. Rollins was recruited as a Minnis ally, 3 mo ths later he signed a vote of no confidence.

This is not personal. Minnis simply cannot do the job.

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sheeprunner12 7 years, 4 months ago

Adrian is drooling to get the FNM Long Island nomination now!!!!!!!!!!! ............. what a coveted prize now!!!!!!!!!!

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Well_mudda_take_sic 7 years, 4 months ago

No one disputes that LBT is a big politician with a big loud mouth, but these qualities alone do not make her suitable for any kind of effective leadership role in Bahamian politics today or tomorrow. LBT's innate political instincts are insufficient in relation to her over-sized ego and grandiose sense of entitlement to one day sit on the high throne of Bahamian politics. But she deserves no coronation by Bahamian voters given that she is clearly unable and/or unwilling to achieve anything substantial in the political arena by well thought out reasoning combined with shear power of political persuasion and popular appeal. Time and time again we have seen her resort to instigating disruption in an effort to compensate for her intellectual limitations and unstable emotions. The last thing we need now is a political leader who is much more similar to Minnis than she would like to think, especially when it comes to holding grudges, having way too many axes to grind and possessing great fondness for the more skullduggery aspects of yesterday's style of very destructive politics. Neither Minnis nor LBT are the answer to the hopes and aspirations of the Bahamian people for a better tomorrow. LBT must therefore be knocked off of her fleeting momentary high perch to join Minnis in the rubble of failed politicians with no political future.

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sheeprunner12 7 years, 4 months ago

Whoever takes over The Bahamas next year will not be sitting on a throne ....... He/She must be willing to roll up some sleeves and get down in the trenches and re-write the development plan to save this country ........ it must begin with freeing the colonies (Family Islands) of its master (Nassau) ......... that is the only chance we have of surviving now ....... federalize this country and privatize the management of Nassau City bounded by the Harbour, Nassau Street, Wulff Road and Village Road and set up Local Government to manage the rest of New Providence into four or five Districts ............ The islands must become self-sufficient and develop their own niche economies

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