BAHAMAS PRIME MINISTER CALLS EARLY ELECTIONS

FLASHBACK: Bahamas Prime Minister Dr. Hubert Minnis was one of three leaders of CARICOM-member countries who  ignored a policy decision made  by CARICOM and met with then United States President Donald J. Trump at Mar-a-Lago in Palm Beach, Florida, on March 22, 2019. From left to right:  Prime Minister Allen Chastanet of Saint Lucia; President Danilo Medina Sanchez of the Dominican Republic; Prime Minister Andrew Holness of Jamaica; President Jovenel Moise of the Republic of Haiti; and Prime Minister Hubert Minnis of The Bahamas. Voters in Saint Lucia recently replaced Chastanet as  Prime  Minister and Haiti’s President  Jovenel Moise was recently assassinated. (Official White House Photo by Tia Dufour)

NASSAU,  Bahamas, (CMC) — Bahamians will go to the polls on September 16, eight months before a general election is constitutionally due, Prime Minister Dr Hubert Minnis announced Thursday morning, as he stressed that whoever emerges victorious will have to make key decisions on the way forward in the COVID-19 pandemic.

In an address to the nation at 11 am, an hour after Commissioner of Police Paul Rolle, in his capacity as Provost Marshall, read a proclamation from Governor-General Sir Cornelius Smith proroguing Parliament, Minnis said: “Earlier today, Parliament was dissolved. It is time for you, the people, to choose who you will elect to form the next government of the Commonwealth of The Bahamas.”

FLASHBACK: In the midst of the current COVID-19 pandemic, Prime Minister Dr. Hubert A. Minnis forced a highly competent Minister of Health, Dr. Duane Sands, to resign and replaced him Renward  Wells (second from right), who has no medical experience and is currently embroiled in a simmering corruption scandal involving honorariums paid to healthcare workers. This photo,  published by BAHAMAS PRESS on March 22, 2019, accompanied a story in which it was claimed that Dr. Minnis called for Wells to resign for corruption “in the Letter of Intent Scandal” when Wells was a member of the PLP before joining the FNM. The photo was taken at an event in March of 2019 at the Cathedral of St. Francis as PM Minnis presented Wells as “his soon to be ACTING PM to Fr. Glen Nixon.”

“I have advised the Governor-General to issue the writs of election which will be held on Thursday, 16th of September, 2021.”

Elections are not constitutionally due until May 2022, which would be five years after Minnis’ Free National Movement (FNM) defeated the Progressive Liberal Party (PLP) in the last polls, winning 35 of the 39 seats in Parliament.

The prime minister said the election was coming amidst “the worst public health crisis in our modern history”, referring to the COVID-19 pandemic that has affected the entire globe and resulted in the deaths of millions.

He said his administration had been able to secure more than 550,000 doses of vital COVID-19 vaccines, some of which have already arrived in the country, as it tries to get as many residents as possible vaccinated.

“Our goal is for The Bahamas to be one of the most vaccinated small-island developing countries in the world,” he said. “As a result of our country reaching the goal of securing the vaccines we need, it is now time for the Bahamian people to choose who they want to lead them as we move toward vaccinating every Bahamian who wishes to be vaccinated.”

Minnis told residents that their next government will have key decisions to make in enacting post-pandemic public health legislation, continued economic growth, and rebuilding and renewing a post-COVID-19 Bahamas. See complete story in St. Lucia Times at https://stluciatimes.com/bahamas-pm-calls-early-elections/