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Today
is Nomination Day
By
Lynford Simpson, Staff Reporter
TODAY
IS Nomination Day for some 200 candidates from the ruling
People's National Party, the opposition Jamaica Labour Party,
the New Jamaica Alliance, the United People's Party, other
minor parties, and independents, who are seeking to contest
the October 16 general election to the House of Representatives.
In
the elections which are 16 days away, the PNP which has been
in power since February 9, 1989, is seeking an unprecedented
fourth five-year term as government. The JLP last won national
parliamentary elections on October 30, 1980 as the PNP boycotted
the snap election the JLP called on December 15, 1983.
Candidates
have four hours today from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. during
which they can be nominated and there are 60 nomination centres
throughout the island one in each constituency.
The
persons who are duly nominated on Nomination Day become the
official candidates for election in the constituencies in
which they are nominated.
In
order to be nominated, each candidate must make a deposit
of $3,000 at the Nomination Centre to the Returning Officer
for the constituency. The deposit is later turned over to
the Accountant-General. If, on Election Day, the candidate
gets less than 10 per cent of the votes polled in the constituency,
he or she loses the $3,000 deposit. If the candidate gets
more than 10 per cent of the votes the deposit is returned.
Persons
wishing to be nominated in a constituency must hand in a prescribed
form with the names of 10 electors qualified to vote in the
constituency actually on the voters' list. The 10 electors
must also sign the form. Usually the 10 electors accompany
the candidate to the Nomination Centre and are the only persons
allowed into the Nomination Centre with the candidate on Nomination
Day.
The
candidates seeking nomination today will be vying for a place
in the 60-seat lower House of Parliament. A total of 194 candidates
were nominated for the December 18, 1997 general election
60 from the PNP, 60 from the JLP, 58 from the National
Democratic Movement, and 16 independents and representatives
of minor parties. The PNP won 50 seats to 10 for the JLP.
"We
expect more than 200 (candidates) Neville Graham, Information
Officer at the Electoral Office of Jamaica, Duke Street, downtown
Kingston, told The Gleaner on the weekend. He could not give
a precise figure, however, noting that the final number would
have to await the actual nominations.
The
two major political parties the PNP and the JLP
will have a full slate of 60 candidates each; the UPP and
the recently-formed New Jamaica Alliance are expected to put
up 55 to 60 candidates. The NJA is a coalition of the National
Democratic Movement, the Republican Party of Jamaica and the
Jamaica Alliance for National Unity.
The
International Ethiopian World Federation Incorporation Party,
dubbed "the Rasta Party", is expected to nominate
at least five candidates today, the EOJ said.
Fringe
parties such as the Natural Law Party and the Pan African
Liberation Movement which contested the 1997 election, have
not indicated whether they will field any candidates this
election.
Mindful
of potential clashes between supporters of the two major parties,
Bishop Herro Blair, the Political Ombudsman, said he would
be on "full alert today".
"I
will be on the spot and I will name breaches as I see them,"
he told The Gleaner. He said that to the best of his knowledge,
all candidates of the two major parties had signed the Code
of Political Conduct. "The Custodes would have informed
me otherwise. I have not had anything to the contrary,"
he said.
Following
a clash between JLP and PNP supporters in St. Elizabeth South
Eastern last week, the two candidates Franklin Witter
of the JLP and Lenworth Blake of the PNP, have agreed to being
nominated two hours apart and to avoid having the supporters
who usually accompany them to and from the Nomination Centres
going through each other's strongholds today.
Other
rival candidates have agreed to go to the Nomination Centres
at well-spaced intervals to minimise the chances of their
supporters clashing.
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