Prime Minister faces calls to apologise after heated Parliament clash over Hansard
A sharp disagreement in Jamaica's Parliament yesterday has renewed pressure on the prime minister to apologise for his role in an unruly exchange on the floor.
At least one media house and posts on social media have focused on claims that the prime minister called an opposition member a bully. Accounts from people who were in the chamber describe a different starting point. They say the trouble began when the prime minister told a member on the opposition side to shut up—not once, but twice.
The confrontation unfolded while the member was addressing a question linked to Hansard, the official record of parliamentary proceedings. Hansard had been asked to confirm what was said earlier in the same sitting, which was already at the centre of a dispute between both sides.
When the member responded, "What did you say?" the prime minister repeated the instruction to shut up. Those two remarks, described as unparliamentary, are said to have opened a back-and-forth that grew into the wider squabble now being reported.
Critics argue the coverage has not been fair or balanced. They say it was unseemly for the head of government to be drawn into that kind of clash, particularly after language they believe he initiated. The exchange became heated enough that the Speaker suspended the sitting for a period to allow tempers to cool.
The call for accountability surfaced again this morning. Those raising the issue maintain the prime minister should do the right thing and apologise to Parliament for kicking off the series of engagements that disrupted yesterday's proceedings.
Syndicated from Jamaica PNP (Video) · originally published .
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