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Home Letters

The $3 Billion Ghost Hunt: Was Guyana’s Cash Grant a Trojan Horse for Voter Padding?

Admin by Admin
February 5, 2026
in Letters
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Dear Editor,

The mathematical anomalies of Budget 2026 are not just fiscal “fog”; they are the smoking gun of a calculated electoral heist. As Guyana’s oil wealth swells the 2026 Budget to $1.558 trillion, the sudden contraction of the National Cash Grant—the very program used to register the populace in 2025—exposes a terrifying logic. The 30,000-person “Evaporation” is the first anomaly that defies biological and statistical reality. In the lead-up to the September 2025 elections, Vice President Jagdeo and the administration touted a $63 billion allocation for $100,000 grants, an amount specifically calculated to cover 630,000 adults. This figure wasn’t a guess; it was based on a massive, door-to-door state registration drive. Yet, with the 2025 ballots counted and the PPP/C back in power, the 2026 Budget has inexplicably “corrected” itself to $60 billion—exactly 600,000 people. In a country with a rising population, how do 30,000 eligible adults—roughly 5% of the voting-age population—simply vanish from the state’s books the moment the ink on the election results is dry?

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This discrepancy points toward a darker, best-case scenario for the administration: that the 2025 register was intentionally bloated to facilitate electoral manipulation. The $3 billion “delta” likely didn’t just disappear into thin air; it either funded the ruling party’s campaign machinery or, more nefariously, provided the financial “skin” for 30,000 ghost voters. If these individuals were “registered” for grants by non-GECOM government agents and subsequently fast-tracked onto the Official List of Electors (OLE), they served their purpose on September 1st. Now that the mandate is secured, the “padding” is being quietly scrubbed from the budget to save $3 billion and hide the evidence. The manufactured unreadiness of GECOM completes this orchestration, as the commission’s funding has been gutted by a brutal 86%—from $7.3 billion in 2025 to a skeletal $981.2 million in 2026. This is not a budget cut; it is a tactical decommissioning of the only body capable of auditing these lists before the 2026 Local Government Elections.

When you starve the umpire and shrink the register simultaneously, you aren’t governing; you are entrenching a one-party state. By crippling GECOM’s ability to conduct a claims-and-objections exercise or implement biometrics, the administration ensures that the “ghosts” of 2025 cannot be exorcised. The $3 billion in missing grant funds serves as a grim monument to this lack of accountability. Our national demand must be a forensic cross-check of the grant and voter databases. We must demand to know who these 30,000 “missing” people are, where their $3 billion went, and why the government is so afraid of a fully funded GECOM. Citizens are the rightful owners of the Natural Resource Fund; we are not props in a play designed to turn oil wealth into a permanent political dynasty.

Parliamentary Action: The “Clean Hands” Mandate

To cut through the fog, the following demands must be tabled immediately:

  • A Payout Reconciliation: Publish the 2025 grant registry (anonymized by region) and explain the $3 billion contraction in 2026.
  • A GECOM Funding Restoration: Re-allocate the $6.3 billion “cut” to ensure Local Government Elections are not postponed or compromised.
  • The “Voter List” Audit: A joint forensic audit between the Ministry of Finance and GECOM to ensure no “grant recipients” were illegally added to voter rolls.

Respectfully 

Hemdutt Kumar

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