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McDonald Calls for Genuine Democratic Accountability

Admin by Admin
January 1, 2026
in News
GTU President Coretta McDonald MP

GTU President Coretta McDonald MP

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By Mark DaCosta-In a pointed critique of President Irfaan Ali’s recent remarks, Coretta McDonald, a notable trade unionist and Opposition Member of Parliament, has called attention to the troubling state of democratic scrutiny in our country. Serving as the President of the Guyana Teachers’ Union and a prominent figure in the political landscape, McDonald urges a vigilant approach to governance, highlighting the urgent need for consistent institutional accountability.

McDonald’s letter to the editor delivered a clear and incisive analysis, stressing that the confidence displayed by the President should not substitute for substantive proof. She asserts, “in constitutional democracies, executive discourse derives legitimacy not from assurance or repetition, but from its consistency with institutional practice.” This remark underlines her claim that where discrepancies arise between executive claims and institutional realities, it becomes the role of the Opposition to step in and provide necessary scrutiny.

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The crux of McDonald’s argument revolves around the significant absence of a formally recognised Leader of the Opposition following the 2025 elections. This situation is not simply a procedural oversight; it cuts to the very core of our democratic structure. “An administration that speaks fluently about standards, discipline, and national responsibility presides over a parliamentary environment in which the principal constitutional counterweight to executive authority remains unresolved,” she notes. The lingering uncertainty regarding the Opposition leadership is a pressing issue that demands immediate attention and resolves.

She points out that the structure of our parliamentary system, rooted in the Westminster model, relies heavily on the effectiveness of the Opposition as a check on executive power. The Leader of the Opposition is essential in shaping parliamentary oversight and legitimising dissent. However, the President’s retention of influence over this process, whether overtly or subtly, complicates the landscape of accountability. McDonald argues that “silence, delay, and tacit pressure operate as effectively as formal action,” underlining a troubling climate where oversight is systematically hampered by inaction.

Moreover, McDonald critiques President Ali’s assertions regarding key national issues, noting that the lack of an active Opposition diminishes the challenge against executive narratives. She highlights that where opposition voices are weakened, claims presented by the administration often go unexamined. For instance, Ali’s statements on poverty were framed as settled truths, rather than subjects open to rigorous debate and scrutiny. In her words, “Assertions concerning poverty, productivity, development finance, and food security were presented as settled conclusions rather than propositions open to examination.”

The implication here is significant: Without a robust opposition, the executive is left free to create narratives that may not withstand critical analysis. McDonald highlights Ali’s references to income thresholds devoid of methodological clarity, asserting that such claims rely on acceptance rather than interrogation. The issue is not merely about rhetoric; it involves a fundamental challenge to the integrity of our democratic processes. She argues that “democratic accountability is not undermined only by overt breaches; it is equally weakened through strategic inaction and institutional ambiguity.”

The impacts of this weakened scrutiny extend to the government’s ambitious targets, such as the “25 by 2025” initiative, which McDonald warns risks becoming a mere exercise in deferral. “Targets are meaningful only when institutions exist to demand explanation at the point of failure,” she asserts, emphasising that the absence of effective opposition stifles the necessary questioning that can hold the government accountable.

At the heart of McDonald’s letter is a call for alignment between words and actions. She contends that “democratic credibility does not rest on eloquence alone,” stressing that genuine governance requires a commitment to institutional integrity and openness. A flourishing democracy cannot tolerate ambiguity at the very foundations of parliamentary accountability, nor can it thrive in an atmosphere where dissent is systematically minimised or ignored.

As the nation grapples with its democratic future, McDonald’s statement poses a crucial challenge to President Ali’s governance. The need for a clearly defined and empowered Opposition is not merely a matter of political protocol; it is vital to the very essence of our democracy. In McDonald’s succinct words: “In a republic, democracy is not declared. It is constructed, maintained, and defended.” Her emphasis on this principle urges citizens and political leaders alike to confront the pressing need for authentic democratic processes, stressing that without them, our nation’s governance risks becoming hollow amidst grandiose proclamations.

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