APNU+AFC will be under more pressure than the PPP to achieve

Dear Editor,

The results of the election on May 11 and the new joie de vivre of the populace have brought a new reality and perspective, buoyed no doubt with genuine hopes and positive aspirations just as the 1992 election did when Cheddi Jagan assumed the presidency. Indeed, the joy, happiness, and contentment on the many smiling faces in the photographs in the press tell their own story, but will the dreams of the Guyanese people be realized this time around? The recent clean-up campaign is but one positive indicator that change has come. Let us hope that there are many more such indicators.

The realization of the dreams of the Guyanese people is, however, largely dependent on a strong, vibrant and useful opposition, but will the PPP play their part and do they really understand their role in it? Indeed, smarting as it is from its own folly, the PPP‘s continued ill-advised behaviour only confirms that it has long lost touch with reality in Guyana and elsewhere. Its current behaviour is not encouraging and it must play its part or become hopelessly irrelevant in Guyana’s political arena. A changing of the guard with new direction and leadership has to occur for it to become relevant in these changing times. Simply put, it must reinvent itself and one hopes that that occurs sooner rather than later.

As the euphoria over the change in circumstances dissipates, the victorious APNU+AFC coalition must also come to the realization that they will now be under much more pressure than the PPP to achieve and do more. Every microscopic detail of their actions will be placed under closer scrutiny. Indeed, so it should be if our fledgling democracy is to be strengthened and Guyana is to progress. They should always be cognizant that it was the ill-advised choices of corruption, nepotism, poor governance and gross mismanagement and the taking for granted of their supporters, etc, that led the PPP to take a free ride into historical uselessness. The APNU+AFC have now become the barometer for a much higher standard of progress in Guyana and this simple fact gives us a much better chance to measure, achieve, and gain that success to which everyone is now looking forward. The APNU+AFC will not please all of the people all of the time but they must strive to please most of the people all of the time.

Let us then give them their first hundred days in office and then take a look at how they turn the corner. Having said that I pray that they do not become reactive politicians/leaders but set finite goals by which they can be judged and Guyana can, indeed, progress. Let them come up with a veritable blueprint for the development of this beloved country of ours so that the potential we all talk and dream of will one day become a reality. To that end I randomly add the following to the to-do list of the new Government of Guyana:

I can go on and on but I end now by wishing this new regime and its President every success. I have been personally associated with some of the members of the cabinet in the past and I am confident that they will do well and be better stewards of the public interest in Guyana. I am counting on this if only to ensure that two of my very good and late friends, Winston S Murray and Riley C A Abdelnour, can now truly rest in peace. Their dreams of, and hopes for, a better Guyana are now a very distinct possibility.

Yours faithfully,
R N Mungol