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Keith Rowley to be sworn in as Prime Minister of Trinidad & Tobago
Trinidad & Tobago’s Prime Minister-designate Keith Rowley will be sworn into office on Wednesday, after voters in the twin-island nation backed his calls for change amid an economic contraction.
Rowley’s party, the People’s National Movement (PNM), won 23 of 41 seats in general elections Monday, ousting Prime Minister Kamla Persad-Bissessar after 5 years in power.
Rowley, a 65-year-old vulcanologist, vowed to keep his campaign pledge to name a smaller cabinet than his predecessor, in addition to reducing the size of government.
“That is a commitment that I made and I intend to keep. To compress things into a smaller bottle requires a little more time,” he told journalists today after meeting President Anthony Carmona, the largely ceremonial head of state.
Rowley also met with losing candidates at his party’s headquarters, in keeping with his campaign promise to include them in his government.
It was a punishing election for Persad-Bissessar and her coalition, the People’s Partnership, which lost 11 of the seats it previously held. The outgoing Prime Minister struggled at the end of her term to fend off corruption allegations, concerns about crime and an economic downturn.
Her claims of stabilizing the economy despite a drop in the country’s’ oil and gas revenues were debunked by statistics released 3 days before the vote indicating the economy contracted by 1.2 percent and shed more than 20,000 jobs in the first quarter of the year.
“The people of Trinidad & Tobago made an intervention that is satisfying to most of us,” Rowley said.
Persad-Bissessar’s coalition also had to battle an upstart splinter party launched by disgraced former FIFA executive Jack Warner – her former ally.
Warner, is currently battling extradition to the United States after being indicted in the sweeping US probe into allegations of massive corruption at FIFA. He launched the Independent Liberal Party after Persad-Bissessar sacked him from her cabinet 2 years ago.
