By RASHAD ROLLE
Tribune Staff Reporter
rrolle@tribunemedia.net
PROGRESSIVE Liberal Party Leader Philip “Brave” Davis has personally asked Obie Wilchcombe not to run for party chairman at the upcoming convention, Fred Mitchell said on Thursday.
His comment in North Andros came as the former West Grand Bahama and Bimini MP revealed in Grand Bahama that he could announce this weekend whether he will run for chairman, an action he appeared to be inching towards.
Mr Wilchcombe attended an “Obie Wilchcombe For PLP Chairman” event in Grand Bahama Thursday evening and said he will meet party followers in Eleuthera today and others in Nassau on Saturday.
“I then will make an announcement,” he said. The event had the feel of a candidate launch, with frequent references to Mr Wilchcombe as “the next party chairman.”
The 60-year-old’s possible run has been closely watched by PLP insiders. Mr Davis has told supporters he wants his leadership team of Chester Cooper as deputy and Mr Mitchell as chairman to remain in place. He has said he wants no challenges to the team at the upcoming convention.
Speaking to delegates in North Andros, Mr Mitchell, the current chairman, revealed that Mr Davis also personally asked Mr Wilchcombe to “stand down” and avoid a challenge. “I got to tell you quite frankly, we did not expect for this to be a contest of any sort," he said. "(Mr Davis) had asked for everyone to stand down. He spoke personally to the main opponent in this and asked him, ‘in the interest of party unity, stand down from this.' People suddenly said this is being anti-democratic, people have their rights to run which is correct, everyone is entitled to run, but you know, there is a time and a place to do things. We tested this out by empirical data, by doing surveys and what the country has decided is the PLP is on its way back but they’re watching to see whether or not we are actually a united body with a set of plans that can take the country forward. That is why he argues, 'I have a team, the team is just in the middle of trying to get things up off the ground, we don’t need any division at this time.'”
Fighting to ward off Mr Wilchcombe’s challenge has been an expensive process, Mr Mitchell said. “If my sister knew the amount of money that I personally spend on this she would ask me if I’m mad because it takes for me to travel with an aide, one night in any island of the Bahamas, $1000 between transportation, airfare, hotel accommodation and food, so it is expensive to do this and I would rather be spending that money trying to defeat the Free National Movement," he said. "But as the former prime minister used to say, it is what it is so we’ve come to ask you tonight to heed the advice of Mr Davis to support the team he has in place.”
When he ran for chairman in 2017 Mr Wilchcombe received 419 votes to Mr Mitchell’s 627 votes, the closest of the big ticket races.
During Thursday’s event, the former tourism minister drew lots of implicit contrasts between the current state of the party and where he thinks it should be.
“The chairman of the party takes a lower profile," he said, "he’s not supposed to be the face. In our organization the face of the party is the leader, in government the face of the party is the chairman because that’s separation of chairman, party and government but when you’re trying to build your party the one person I have to sell is the leader."
Mr Wilchcombe expressed frustration with the infrequency and quality of party conventions, which are constitutionally required to take place every year, but are held only occasionally.
“There is a purpose that convention is held every year and usually it’s for five days,” he said. “The purpose was to bring your people together, same reason the church brings people together, same reason board meetings and organizations bring their boards together every year. Well, the PLP did that and then we had a long break. I think it was a mistake we made. We had conventions up until 2009. We were affected by hurricanes in 2004 and 2005 and then we got back on track. But then we had a convention in 2009 and didn’t get back together until 2017. Do you wonder why then you lost your base? Do you wonder why then people start to drift all over the place? Because if you don’t come together with your forces and reunite and reconnect, then people are going to be drifting. Conventions are fundamentally important because you, the soldiers, if I don’t arm you, what are you going to go out on the streets with? When you come to conventions the five days ought to deal with issues and I believe we have to return to the way we used to do it. When Sir Lynden wanted to introduce a social revolution or the defense force or any new national policy, he brought it to convention for convention to approve it first because that’s when you hear it, and then you take it to the streets and you talk to the people in your constituency about it. We stopped doing that. We make conventions all about a vote, who you voting for, an election. I think a two-day convention, I don’t think much can be done. I think it ought to be five days…I think it ought to be back to where it used to be in October as the constitution says. And I believe that because that’s when you get your best room rates, that’s when the hotel occupancy rates are lower, that’s when business isn’t much in the tourism industry. This kind of time everything is crazy.”
The PLP’s convention will be hosted at the Melia Nassau Beach Resort on July 25th and 26th.
Mr Wilchcombe also suggested the party has not been doing a good job raising money.
“When I was chairman of the PLP we didn’t have the money problem,” he said. “You know why? Because we constantly were raising money so we could have our conventions. You must have conventions and it is not for the leader to dig in his pocket, no. Why would you want to do that to the leader, or any of the leaders? What you have to do is have a very vibrant plan to raise the money, you have to do things to cause funds to come into your organization. Think about it, all the stuff we have for sale and we can’t sell nothing. Could you imagine if we sold some of the things we have, some of the speeches we have by the great ones, some of the books of the great ones, wouldn’t you want to buy the history?" The PLP originally scheduled a convention for November 14, 15 and 16 of 2018 but the event was postponed because of financial constraints.
Comments
Well_mudda_take_sic 5 years, 4 months ago
Fred Mitchell is finding out the hard way that the super rich like Sir Snake, who could easily afford to write a cheque to the PLP party for $20 million and not miss the money, are refusing to step up to the plate. Vomit Christie, Bag Man Baltron Bethel and the Wicked Witch of The West Maynard-Gibson could each write a cheque for several million dollars to the PLP party and not miss the money. So can Sean McWeeney and the widow of Little Good Brad. And there are so many others who have gotten filthy rich off of corrupt PLP governments since majority rule who could easily write personal cheques to the PLP party for seven-figures, but their greed just won't let them part with a penny, e.g. Lady Poodling, Tiger & Son, Darville, Gomez (both the Doctor and the lawyer), Davis himself, the Nottages, and so on and so on. LMAO
SP 5 years, 4 months ago
I don't want to hear ANYTHING from the PLP and FNM!
BahamasForBahamians 5 years, 4 months ago
Regressive Liberal Party!! stunting democracy lol
TalRussell 5 years, 4 months ago
What is there about comrade PLP's, and Imperialists red shirts politicians dictatorial attempts strong-arm enforcing their own version communist rules which go contrary their respective political party's own rules that govern convention delegates not being pre convention bound to a single candidate, and they can vote for whichever candidate they damn well want run party, yes, no .... Minnis and KP, sure as hell shut down Comrade Sister Loretta in most nasty fashion ....all whilst denying Sister, her promised equal share convention speaking time and monies ...
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