WHILE United National Congress (UNC) Senator Wade Mark hoped and predicted a victory for the incumbent Star Team at the party’s national executive (natex) election on June 15, he extended an olive branch to their opponents, saying there were common goals the party needed to achieve.
Mark spoke with Newsday outside the Seamen and Waterfront Workers Trade Union (SWWTU) hall on Wrightson Road, Port of Spain, where he visited before and after casting his vote in Aranguez, near his St Joseph home.
He said he was the Star Team’s mobiliser for the election, encouraging registered voters to exercise their rights.
“We have to always bear in mind, it is one family – it is the UNC family,” he said, after one of the most heated internal elections campaigns in the party’s history witnessed persistent attacks from both sides, the Star Team and the United Patriots, accusing the other of conspiring to lose the next general elections.
“Yes, we have contests (and) competition; that is part of the democratic spirit, and we welcome that,” Mark said.
“We feel confident that at the end of the day, the Star slate will emerge victorious, and we feel at the end of that process, we have to really bring all (our supporters) together to work toward the common objective.
“When the results are finally announced and the Star slate are announced victoriously as the preferred slate for the UNC membership, we have the task of really pulling the party together and working towards healing,” he said, adding that the teams must work together to oppose the PNM and “the clear policies that are anti-people and anti-working class and labour…
"So that whenever they call the general elections, we are going to have a united, solidified front to remove (the regime).”
The SWWTU hall was the polling venue for Laventille East/Morvant, Laventille West, Port of Spain North/St Ann’s West, and Port of Spain South, where two stations were set up for the four constituencies, traditionally PNM strongholds, with just a couple hundred registered UNC members.
About 90 UNC members had cast their ballots across the four constituencies when Newsday spoke with Mark at around 1.30 pm.
“Hopefully, it will increase as we get closer to 6 pm,” he said. “But normally what we find is that in these constituencies, like Port of Spain, the membership is not that spectacular – just under 200.
He said a 50 per cent turnout would be “reasonable in the scheme of things.”
Newsday also spoke with fellow UNC Senator Damian Lyder, who visited the Port of Spain station after casting his ballot at the Diego Martin Central Community Centre, Diamond Vale, where the turnout was more encouraging for the UNC.
Diego Martin Central Community Centre, Diamond Vale was the polling venue for Diego Martin Central, Diego Martin North East, and Diego Martin West, with one polling station.
“Like Senator Mark, I went ahead and made my vote and…I, too, support all 17 members of the Star Team,” Lyder said.
“What I can say is that from my time spent in Diego Martin this morning (the