Cary Fraser
teaches at Penn State University, and is a regular contributor to
the Trinidad and Tobago Review.
By Cary Fraser
The death of the former President Janet Jagan signals the passage to
a new era in Guyanese politics. Mrs. Jagan’s death brings to an end
her role as caretaker of the People’s Progressive Party and mentor
to a generation of party leaders who have been the heirs to the
careers and accomplishments of Cheddi and Janet Jagan. Her adult
life was dominated by politics and her passing will have significant
consequences for both the party and Guyana. With national elections
due by 2011, the PPP will be entering an election for the first time
in its history without either of its two key architects whose appeal
provided both automatic legitimacy and electoral appeal over the
course of the party’s history. The next election will also be a test
of the party’s resilience and of the quality of the current
generation of leaders. Mrs. Jagan had been the key organizer for
most of the party’s history, and her mastery of tactical politics
within the ranks of the party had played a decisive role in ensuring
that Cheddi Jagan’s charismatic appeal was the anchor of the party’s
survival and its longevity. The 2011 elections will also provide a
glimpse into the legacy of both Jagans for the PPP and for Guyana.
Mrs. Jagan’s career was a
reflection of her own personal commitment to a politics of change
that had its roots in her early involvement in radical politics in
Chicago. As a young Jewish woman of Eastern European origin in
Depression-era America, embracing radical politics was not unusual,
but marrying outside of her culture and voluntarily alienating
herself from her community of origin marked her as a free spirit. It
was that quality that led her to marry Cheddi Jagan and to follow
him when he returned to British Guiana in 1943. Her willingness to
adapt to the culture of the rural Indo-Guyanese community in which
Cheddi was reared, and her role in the 1940s in encouraging him to
adopt Marxism-Leninism as he became a political activist and
nationalist leader after establishing his dental practice in
Georgetown, were an indication of her willingness to pursue a
radical vision of change for herself and for her adopted country.
For Janet Jagan, the personal was political and it was this
characteristic that would define her life’s trajectory, including
her election as the first female, and fifth, President of Guyana.
For much of her career, Mrs. Jagan
proved to be both a catalyst for change and a polarizing figure in
the politics of British Guiana/Guyana. As a young American white
woman who embraced the “natives” in British Guiana, she was a
transgressor of the colonial order and the segregation that
underpinned it in the 1940s. As a woman of Jewish origin championing
the cause of colonial “subjects,” her political activism triggered
hostility among British colonial officials and their American
counterparts in the Caribbean. While much has been made of her
affinity for radical politics, the anti-Semitic undercurrents of the
hostility that she encountered, and that no commentator on this
period has properly acknowledged, should not be discounted. On the
other hand, for the colonial subjects in British Guiana, her
advocacy of their cause – as well as her courage in marrying the son
of sugar plantation workers – was a statement of her identification
with the cause of the disadvantaged and they reciprocated through
their admiration for her. Further, her willingness to work as a
journalist and party official in building the PPP as a national
force, offered an alternative to the traditional roles for women in
the colony. Even before the founding of the PPP, she had been a
founder member and General Secretary of the Women’s Political and
Economic Organization that was established in 1946. Her status as a
full partner in marriage and politics was a powerful statement about
the role of women in the emerging national movement.
Her emergence as a major influence
in the party’s development created a dynamic that would affect the
PPP’s stability over the course of her career. Her unflinching
commitment to Cheddi Jagan’s leadership protected him through all of
the crises that he confronted from the early split of the party into
the Jagan and Burnham factions in 1955, through the subsequent
departures of Sydney King, Martin Carter, and Rory Westmaas; the
Anglo-American plan undertaken to oust the PPP between 1962 and
1964; and the marginalization of the PPP through PNC-managed
fraudulent elections until its return to power as a result of the
1992 election monitored by the former American President, Jimmy
Carter. The partnership between Cheddi and Janet effectively allowed
them to control the party’s business on a day-to-day basis, as well
as the deliberations of its General Council and Party Congress. It
was a structure that facilitated tight control of the party and
effectively limited the range of internal debate and dissension.
Ultimately, many talented people departed from the party and the
constant haemorrhage of talent has produced a PPP government that,
in recent years, has been tainted by damaging allegations of
tolerance of, if not complicity with, the penetration of the state
and the party by criminal networks.
This centralization of power
within the party was a key factor in its marginalization over the
period 1964-1992 as the ruling PNC could invoke the ideological
leanings of the Jagan to circumscribe the challenge from the PPP.
Given long-standing American hostility, and the support of other
hemispheric states for the containment of the PPP, the Jagans were
in a constant state of siege both at home and abroad. The lack of
ideological pluralism within the PPP was a critical factor in the
reputation for ineffective opposition that saddled both the Jagans
and the party. It is perhaps arguable that Mrs. Jagan’s tight
operational control over the reins of the party’s governance
structures limited the PPP’s appeal at home and abroad. It is also
arguable that her roots in American radical politics and its
propensity for factional conflict may have had a subtle influence
on the PPP’s internal culture. The centralization of power became a
mechanisim for pre-empting internal ideological and political
challenges, even as vitriolic campaigns of character assassination
against dissident voices within the party created levels of
alienation that fed a constant exodus of activists and supporters
from the PPP to the PNC, to the WPA, and to migration abroad. Even
as the PPP complained about the lack of democracy and free and fair
elections in Guyana after 1964, its own internal politics of
representation and democracy provided no assurance that there was
respect for intellectual pluralism as a guiding principle. Any
assessment of Janet Jagan’s political legacy will require a fuller
examination of her role in creating and sustaining this culture
within the party from its inception.
Over the course of her career,
Mrs. Jagan had demonstrated the ability to be an effective political
force in her own right even as she was a key partner for her husband
who was recognized as the charismatic leader of the party. While
much attention has hitherto been focused upon the role and influence
of Cheddi Jagan in the national politics of Guyana, it would be
important for Mrs. Jagan’s accomplishments to be more closely
examined to provide a clearer assessment of her incontrovertible
contributions to Guyanese political life. Hers was a singular career
and life, and she deserves no less than the equality that she
championed as a woman and an advocate of a politics of radical
nationalism.
