GOVERNMENT officials were tight-lipped on Saturday about potential nominees to succeed outgoing President Paula-Mae Weekes.
In a notice in the TT Gazette dated December 23, Speaker of the House of Representatives and chairman of the Electoral College, Bridgid Annisette- George said the Electoral College will convene on January 20 when a new President of TT will be elected.
“A person shall not be a candidate for election as President of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago unless nominated for election by a nomination paper which (a) is signed by the candidate and by 12 or more Members of the House of Representatives; and (b) is delivered to the Speaker at least seven days before the election.”
Weekes, a retired Justice of Appeal in TT and The Turks and Caicos Islands, took office on 19 March, 2018 after being elected on January 19 of that year. As she was the only candidate nominated, she was deemed elected without the need for a vote and made history by becoming the first female President of TT.
She is the country’s sixth President after Ellis Emmanuel Innocent Clarke (September 24, 1976 – March 19, 1987), Noor Mohamed Hassanali (March 20, 1987 – March 17, 1997), Arthur Napoleon Raymond Robinson (March 18, 1997 – March 16, 2003), George Maxwell Richards (March 17, 2003 – March 18, 2013) and Justice Anthony Thomas Aquinas Carmona (March 19, 2013 – March 18, 2018).
Carmona and Robinson (deceased) served one term as President while Clarke (deceased), Hassanali (deceased) and Richards served two.
Speaking on condition of anonymity on Saturday, senior government officials said they had no idea about who is being considered as the Government’s nominees.
One official said, “That is entirely up to the Prime Minister.”
Dr Rowley was unavailable for comment.
Last week, UNC deputy political leader Dr Roodal Moonilal said the Opposition will caucus as to whether it will nominate someone to succeed Weekes.
Moonilal said the UNC would oppose moves for either Rowley or Senate President Christine Kangaloo to be elected President.
Under the Constitution, the Senate President acts as President when the President is unable to carry out his or her duties.
The Electoral College comprises all members of the House of Representatives and Senate.
With a combined vote of 37 (22 MPs, 15 senators), the Government holds the majority vote in the college. This means whoever the Government chooses as its nominee will be elected as the next president.
The Opposition has a combined vote of 24 (19 MPs, six senators).
The nine independent senators, who are chosen solely by the President under the Constitution, have one vote each.
Robinson was the only active politician to be elected president.
With the exception of Richards (a former UWI campus principal), all other presidents have had some kind of legal background either as judges or attorneys.
Sources said Government could stick with this pattern in choosing its nominee.
Last Thursday, the National Transformation Alliance (NTA) said Weekes’s tenure will be re