Dear Editor,
Lowenfield’s claptrap declaration report to the commissioners on June 23, 2020 is an extension of transparent attempts at rigging Guyana’s March 2, 2020 General and Regional Elections.
Dear Editor,
The Court of Appeal recently returned a ruling to the effect that the term “more votes cast“ in Article 177(2) of our Constitution shall be construed to mean ”more valid votes cast“.
Dear Mr. Lowenfield,
I write you as a fellow Guyanese directly and publicly in the interest of our nation, in the name of justice and democracy for all of our people.
Dear Editor,
Mr. Keith Lowenfield, the Chief Election Officer, has been notoriously delinquent and culpable in executing his job responsibilities and should be replaced urgently.
Prime Minister Trudeau’s rejection of a deal with China over the detention of two Canadians has lent a significant twist to the extradition battle over Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou.
Dear Editor,
In an unprecedented 115 days after General and Regional Elections were held in Guyana, a declaration is yet to be made electing a new President.
Dear Editor,
Every government, organization or person who has publicly condemned the flagrant, vulgar and incessant attempts by the rigging cabal and their acolytes to perpetrate fraud at the 2nd March 2020 elections held in Guyana and to attempt to defeat the will of the electorate and steal the new Government, has been met with public vitriolic abuse and vilification.
Dear Editor,
Over the past months, the words “evil” and wicked” have surfaced as descriptions of the acts of fraud being attempted by the PNC and its co-conspirators in the ongoing post-election crisis.
This must be a first in the world. It cannot have happened in any other democracy that a Chief Election Officer could arrogate to himself the power to decide which votes he would count in a general election and which he wouldn’t.
Dear Editor,
Of late there is a deafening silence from the PNC/Coalition leader on the release of the CARICOM report, the filing of the Eslyn David matter, and the subsequent Court of Appeal Order.
Dear Editor,
It is disappointing that none other than the sitting head of CARICOM, a Queen’s Counsel in law, choses to make comments sub judice even as the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) is yet to hear a case brought before it on the recent election.