By Timothy Hendricks- In Guyanese politics, where the stakes are nothing less than the soul of a nation, there echoes an ancient political maxim: even the most cunning rodent abandons a vessel doomed to the depths. One might have anticipated that the resounding defeat of the A Partnership for National Unity (APNU) in the recently concluded General and Regional Elections would summon a reckoning from its vanguard. Accountability, that cornerstone of democratic praxis, demands no less. Yet, Aubrey Norton, ensconced as Leader of the Opposition, clings to his perch with the tenacity of a colonial relic – unyielding, unrepentant, and perilously oblivious to the tectonic fissures eroding the edifice of his authority.
Let us dispense with euphemisms and confront the unvarnished truth. The APNU, forged in the fires of coalition politics as a bulwark against hegemonic overreach, has devolved into a spectral remnant of its erstwhile potency. This alliance, which once marshaled the disciplined cadres of the People’s National Congress (PNC) – established on October 22, 1957, by the indomitable Forbes Burnham as a beacon of Afro-Guyanese empowerment and national sovereignty – now grasps shamefully, at a paltry 12 seats (out of 65 seats) in the National Assembly.
This is no mere electoral setback. In fact, and figures, it is a cataclysmic repudiation, a verdict etched in the ballots of disillusioned masses, that has reverberated through the ranks of even the most steadfast loyalists. And still, Norton and his coterie stunningly persist in a charade of normalcy, as if the inferno consuming their political fortress were but a fleeting mirage.
The indignity deepens: a nascent formation, the We Invest in Nationhood (WIN), scarcely four months in existence, has eclipsed the APNU to claim the mantle of official opposition. This is no incremental pivot; it is a seismic rupture in the Guyanese political landscape; a dialectical upheaval that exposes the APNU’s antiquated hegemony as brittle and bereft of vitality.
A venerable institution, spanning over six decades of struggle against colonial yoke and post-independence inequities, outflanked, outmaneuvered, and outpolled by upstarts who have grasped the inexorable shift in the winds of history. These interlopers comprehended what Norton and the APNU’s entrenched elite manifestly ignore: the groundswell of Guyanese aspirations has transmuted, demanding a responsive vanguard attuned to the rhythms of social transformation, economic justice, and inclusive governance.
This rupture shows twin imperatives. Foremost, it indicts the APNU as profoundly estranged from the lived realities of the ordinary people – the soaring cost of living, the erosion of public services, the clamour for equitable resource distribution in an oil-booming economy. Norton’s tenure has presided over a hemorrhaging of relevance, where policy prescriptions ring hollow against the cacophony of street-level grievances.
More alarmingly, it calls, in fact, demands, an unequivocal overhaul of leadership. To helm a vessel through historic tempests, only to watch it founder amid defections, including the seismic resignation of the party chairman, and then demur from the bridge is not mere intransigence; it is an affront to the foundational ethos of the movement. It mocks the sacrifices of the rank-and-file, the ideological purity that Burnham enshrined, and the democratic compact that binds leader to led.
Where, then, is the clarion call from the party’s conscience? Where resonate the voices of principled dissent within the APNU and its PNC core? The void is not mere reticence; it is a symphony of capitulation, a paralysis that stifles the revolutionary fervour once ignited by Burnham’s vision of “feed, house, and clothe” the masses, or Desmond Hoyte’s tentative overtures toward liberalisation. In this hush, the party forfeits its moral authority, drifting into obsolescence while the People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) accelerates toward Local Government Elections with the precision of a well-oiled machine. It is mobilising constituencies, refining narratives, and fortifying alliances for yet another hegemonic consolidation.
Norton’s persistence is not merely unsustainable; it is a peril to the very pluralism that sustains Guyanese democracy. Under his stewardship, the APNU forfeits its role as a countervailing force, ceding the discursive terrain to unchecked executive dominance. The PPP/C, emboldened by supermajorities, advances with impunity (be it in constitutional reforms or fiscal allocations) while the opposition atrophies in rhetorical impotence. No galvanising mobilisation stirs the hinterlands; no coherent message pierces the veil of voter apathy; no strategic horizon beckons the youth, the diaspora, or the burgeoning middle class.
The specter of annihilation looms not tomorrow, but in the cadence of the next electoral convulsion. The APNU’s parliamentary foothold is but a prelude to marginalisation in the agora of power: the streets, the markets, the digital forums where sovereignty is truly contested. Without rupture, without renewal, the party courts erasure, consigning Burnham’s legacy to the dustbin of irrelevance.
It is imperative, comrades, for a renaissance: fresh leadership, untainted by defeatism, infused with the audacity to reimagine the APNU as a people’s tribune. As the venerable Jamaican statesman Michael Manley, architect of Caribbean democratic socialism, proclaimed: “Any realistic vision of change must be based on the notion of empowerment of people.” This is the clarion for Guyana’s opposition – empower the dispossessed, not entrench the elite. Norton must relinquish his grip, salvaging what shreds of dignity endure, not for personal absolution, but for the resurrection of a movement that once dared to dream of equity amid empire’s ruins.
For the APNU’s survival. For the PNC’s storied bloodline. For the indomitable spirit of Guyanese democracy. The hour of reckoning has dawned. Seize it, or perish in its shadow.