by Larry Smith
Like others, I spend a lot of time grazing on social media these days. Although you have to wade through muddy water, it is one of the best ways to gauge the opinions of a wide cross-section of Bahamians.
"A war has been declared,” wrote one poster on an FNM-oriented page. “The elephant in the room is whether the media will go where he sent them or go on the attack.”
Well, that’s an easy one. As former BTC marketing director Marlon Johnson posted: “The first rule I was taught in public relations is never go to war unnecessarily with people who buy their ink by the ton.”
Predictably, the Nassau Guardian’s op-ed section on Monday openly referred to the prime minister as “unhinged”, and castigated his “go to hell” remarks for being “extraordinarily disgraceful" and “incomprehensible.”
The PM - a man who loves to be loved - was portrayed as “incredibly thin-skinned, increasingly agitated", and "approaching his breaking point”, as events around him spiralled out of control.
Christie’s banishment of judgemental journalists to eternal perdition was (shockingly) given before an audience of working journalists and journalism students at the College of the Bahamas.
His point was that their judgement was not shared by the voters who had elected him over the past 40 years - and those victories demonstrated clearly that he was a great and successful leader. Like the Wizard of Oz, he was instructing his audience on how to depict his greatness.
However, Punch columnist Nicki Kelly disagreed with this view. She thought the PM’s remarks showed “how worried he is about the influence (of journalists) on a disenchanted electorate….A new breed of young Bahamians will no longer tolerate obfuscation by their government."
Meanwhile, Tribune publisher Eileen Carron was concerned that journalists are unfortunately in the same boat with the politicians, and if the boat loses its way both are headed straight for the bottomless pit together.
“We all want a better country,” she added. "To achieve that we have to demand zero tolerance of wrongdoing. And what better place to start than at the top? Our leaders have to set an example, and we have to stop making excuses for them."
But a quick look at Facebook showed that the excuse manufacturers were already hard at work.
On the one hand, Christie was presented as the nation’s saviour, a well-intentioned chieftain straining under the weight of incredible responsibility, and justifiably lashing out at his unfair tormentors.
"I guess he said enough is enough,” posted longtime apologist Forrester Carroll. “Given all he has done to rescue the nation from the brink of financial disaster, yet all he can get is their negativity. He is human, and humans get tired of ungrateful people. The Lord Jesus Christ put him back in office to rescue us."
On the other hand, doubt was being cast on the veracity of the media reports, implying that the PM’s remarks were somehow distorted and misrepresented by the evil journalists themselves for their own nefarious reasons.
"if you saw the whole sequence (of what the PM said), you'd agree that the way the reporter summed up the statement justifies the PM's notion that they can go there,” gloated ZNS news director Andrew Burrows, who cleverly did not include the remark in the national newscast. "Paraphrasing is not reporting, especially if it's wrong."
The full audio file of what Christie said is readily available on the Tribune’s website. And all the published reports I read were exact reproductions of the words the prime minister used. 'Go to hell' and "to hell with them' are identical sentiments.
Of course, Christie is not the only politician to have condemned the press for what they considered to be unfair reporting. Both Hubert Ingraham and Sir Lynden Pindling had their own difficulties, and occasionally vented in public. Pindling once tried to introduce a gag order on the Tribune in parliament.
But Christie’s problem is two-fold. First, once he gets going he finds it hard to stop talking, and his long-running soliloquies provide a lot of grist for the mill. Second, his government is patently resistant to any level of transparency and accountability, which flies in the face of progress.
The pending Freedom of Information law has become code for greater transparency and accountability. And Christie, at the COB event, touted this long-delayed legislation as an important plank of his legacy, promising that a revised Bill would soon be “brought” - presumably to parliament.
"When the historians look at this government,” Christie announced fulsomely, "notwithstanding what the naysayers say, there will never be any to match it in the history of this country (in terms of) what we are going to do, the legislative agenda, the reforms that we will put in place.”
But soaring rhetoric notwithstanding, it is clear that the entire record of the prime minister’s present term has been characterised by a reluctance to provide information or access on key public interest issues, and a studied failure to follow established protocols.
From the BEC “reform” process, to the confidential BTC agreement, to major contracts issued without public tender, to the shelving of costly audits of public agencies, to the infamous and mysterious letter of intent, to the multi-million-dollar BAMSI fiasco, to the Alfred Gray 'judicial interference’ affair—it has been one scandal after another with the government that Christie leads forever scrambling to cover its tracks and avoid consequences for anyone involved.
From our heated outpost in hades, we wish to advise the prime minister that he could better secure his legacy by dealing with these matters effectively instead of punting them.
Constitutional Equality for Men and Women
Retired governor-general Sir Arthur Foulkes gave a brilliant short speech on gender equality last week.
“To accord all citizens of a democracy equality regardless of sex is - plainly, simply and clearly - the right thing to do."
I like your headline better than the Tribunes. I note Shane Gibson castigating Scotiabank for only thinking of profit and not the plight of laid off Bahamians. As Minister of Labour does he ever think about empowering poor Bahamians and giving them a chance in this world. This Government is worse than a disgrace, and Christie is in cuckoo land. I seem to remember he used the word humility sometime ago, it certainly seems to have gone out of the window now.
Patrick Thomson
Posted by: patrick Thomson | April 01, 2015 at 09:40 AM