SEVERAL voices in the public space on Tuesday queried President Paula-Mae Weekes' upbraid of MPs in her address at the ceremonial opening of Parliament on Monday.
Opposition Senator Jayanti Lutchmedial strongly disagreed with President's remarks, veteran journalist Andy Johnson queried Weekes' stance, House of Representatives Leader Camille Robinson-Regis cited the Prime Minister's spirited response, and academic Prof Bishnu Ragoonath reckoned the comments were fair.
Amid her calls for cross-bench collaboration, Weekes had claimed most people saw sittings of parliament as opportunities for finger pointing, ‘gallerying’ and ‘kicksing’, not forums to make laws to improve people's lives.
"Parliament, and its members, have long been objects of public derision," Her Excellency argued.
"People look on at these proceedings with resignation, despair, or worse, contempt.
"The respect, trust and confidence that once characterised the relationship between parliamentarian and John Q Public have been squandered and whittled away, leaving little but disregard, suspicion and doubt..."
Robinson-Regis told Newsday, "What the Prime Minister said reflected what we thought." She said she had nothing to add.
On Monday, Newsday had asked if MPs struck the right balance between decorum and the cut-and-thrust of political debate.
Dr Rowley had replied, “All I’ll say to that is that people who are familiar with Commonwealth parliaments, see Trinidad and Tobago as one of the milder ones.”
Ragoonath told Newsday he was abroad and had not read the speech.
When read part of the above extracts, he remarked,"I think the comments are fair comments. The question is how will the politicians accept it."
Johnson said the comments were consistent with Weekes having previously taken "high-sounding kinds of positions," although these were countered by both Dr Rowley and his predecessor Patrick Manning.
"It might be that the President is trying to perform as how she understands a head of state is expected to perform. From day one, her speech at the opening of Parliament she addressed was that sort of thing – trying to bring people to some sort of hallowed place that parliamentary debate should be conducted as such.
"But it didn't stand the test of time.
"It nicely collides with what the Prime Minister said in his response, that our conduct here is tame in comparison to elsewhere."
Johnson said the PM's remarks had come even against the backdrop of some criticism of the Opposition's conduct last October in an unruly sitting they had held to try to fire Weekes.
"In that sense to me it is heartening to see the Prime Minister say we don't behave badly or worse than anybody else. Mr Manning had the habit of saying, 'This is not a tea party when you come here, and that kind of thing'.
"I think she (Weekes) is doing what she feels is necessary to be done, but really the conduct of Parliament in any democracy should be as robust as ours is."
Lutchmedial told Newsday the Opposition's clear role was to hold the Government to a