At least 32 candidates representing six political parties in St. Kitts-Nevis were nominated Tuesday in a carnival-style atmosphere to contest the August 5 general election that Prime Minister Dr. Timothy Harris was forced to call three years ahead of the constitutional deadline.
Harris’s People’s Labour Party (PLP), as well as the main opposition St Kitts-Nevis Labour Party (SKNLP) and the People’s Action Movement (PAM), is contesting all eight seats on St Kitts while the Concerned Citizens Movement (CCM) and the Nevis Reformation Party (NRP) are contesting the three seats up for grabs on Nevis. The Moral Restoration Movement (MRM) has nominated two candidates in Nevis.
The parties will contest 11 of the 15 seats in Parliament, with the other four legislators being nominated by the governor general following the polls.
Prime Minister Harris was forced to dissolve Parliament on May 10, paving the way for the general election after legislators from PAM and the CCM – two members of the coalition Team Unity government – accounting for seven of the nine seats in the Cabinet had filed a motion of no confidence in the prime minister, who scuttled that move by firing the dissidents and indicating that he would announce a date for the polls within the stipulated 90 day period.
In a video message, Harris urged voters to ensure that they secure their future “with a growing economy.
“A future where people are protected and where jobs are being created. But this future will not happen by accident. We live in uncertain times .you will decide who to trust to manage the economy in these uncertain global times. Now is not the time to choose inexperience,” Harris added.
But, Opposition Leader Dr. Denzil Douglas, speaking after being nominated to contest the Constituency of St. Christopher 6 on behalf of the SKNLP, told supporters he is grateful for their vote after first being nominated to contest the seat dating back to 1989.
“I thank you again for your support. My dear people, so far, we are winning the election, but today is another formal step in ensuring that you return the right candidate.
‘Now we have another week of serious campaigning. We must go from door to door, use our cell phones speak to our relatives in the diaspora, reminding them that there are only a few more days for victory. We shall return decency to governance again,” said Douglas, who last year stepped down as leader of the party.
The election is taking place amid concerns being raised by the political parties that the measures put in place to stem the spread of the coronavirus (COVID-19) have not been lifted, even though most, if not all, Caribbean countries have relaxed those measures.
St Kitts-Nevis still has in place the requirement for pre-travel authorization, even for nationals to enter the twin-island federation.
“Knowing the man that is Timothy Harris, he will do anything including trying to block PAM people and CCM people and Labour from coming home to vote. So we have to be concerned about any effort now to manipulate the entry systems in frustrating now the efforts to citizens to vote,” said CCM leader and Nevis Premier, Mark Brantley, adding, “in relation to the travel protocol I think the concern is a legitimate one.”