UPDATE: Jamaica’s opposition wins elections in a landslide
Jamaica's former Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller shows her inked finger after casting her ballot in parliamentary elections in Kingston, Jamaica, Thursday Dec. 29, 2011. (AP Photo/Collin Reid)
KINGSTON, Jamaica- Jamaica’s opposition leader Portia Simpson Miller has reclaimed leadership of Jamaica in convincing fashion after narrowly losing four years ago.
The bells tolled early on the Jamaica Labour Party of Andrew Holness as the early ballots declared yesterday December 29, 2011 were highly in favour of the People’s National Party led by the stalwart politician Miller.
The results, although unofficial, are what Virgin islands News Online had earlier predicted.
Below is an updated article from the Associated Press
DAVID MCFADDEN, Associated Press
KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — On Jamaica’s rutted streets, the complaints have been chronic — home ownership is out of reach for most wage earners, the cost of electricity has skyrocketed, water service regularly fizzles out and decent jobs are scarce.
Fed up with chronic hard times, voters in this debt-wracked Caribbean nation on Thursday threw out the ruling party and delivered a landslide triumph to the opposition People’s National Party, or PNP, whose campaign energetically tapped voter disillusionment especially among the numerous struggling poor.
The win marks a remarkable political comeback for former Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller, who was Jamaica’s first female leader during her year-and-a-half-long first stint in office that ended in 2007. The 66-year-old known affectionately as “Sista P” reached out to Jamaicans as a champion of the poor with a popular touch.
“She cares about the ghetto people,” said Trishette Bond, a twenty-something resident of gritty Trench Town who wore an orange shirt and a bright orange wig, the color of Simpson Miller’s slightly center-left party, which led the island for 18 years before narrowly losing 2007 elections.
As word of her election win emerged Thursday night, PNP supporters shimmied and shouted in the capital, Kingston, and motorists honked horns in celebration as they tore down the streets.
“I am humbled as I stand before you and I wish to thank the Jamaican people for their love, for their support and for giving the People’s National Party and the leader of the party her own mandate,” she said, after receiving hugs from numerous candidates, some crying.
Simpson Miller defeated Prime Minister Andrew Holness, who at 39 is Jamaica’s youngest leader and leads the center-right Jamaica Labor Party.
Holness said the defeat will prompt a time of introspection and reflection for party leaders to examine what went wrong.
“I wish the new government well. We hope for the benefit of the country that they will do a good job,” said Holness, who warned during the campaign that an opposition win would scare away foreign investment and dash hopes of economic progress.

Holness said the defeat will prompt a time of introspection and reflection for party leaders to examine what went wrong. Photo: Jamaica Observer
While official results have not been released, elections director Orrette Fisher told The Associated Press that preliminary results showed Simpson Miller heading to victory.
“Based on the margins, it appears safe to say” that Simpson Miller’s party won, Fisher said shortly after Jamaican newspapers and broadcasters called the election for the PNP. He expected his office to release the official count and breakdown of parliamentary seats on Saturday.
News station TVJ said Simpson Miller’s People’s National Party won 41 seats in parliament and Holness’s Jamaica Labor Party 22.
Simpson Miller is beloved by her supporters for her folksy, plainspoken style. She became Jamaica’s first female prime minister in March 2006 after she was picked by party delegates when P.J. Patterson retired as leader. But she was tossed out of office a year later in a narrow election defeat.
This time around, she has pledged to lift debt-wracked Jamaica out of poverty, secure foreign investment, and create jobs. Specifics are few, however.
Her party will face deep economic problems in this island of 2.8 million people, with a punishing debt of roughly $18.6 billion, or 130 per cent of gross domestic product. That’s a rate about 10 percentage points higher than debt-troubled Italy’s.
Veteran opposition lawmaker Omar Davies said one of the first things the People’s National Party will do is get “a true assessment of the state of the economy,” a dig at Holness’ party which was accused of rarely providing citizens with a clear picture of the island’s dire fiscal straits.
Holness, who became prime minister two months ago after Bruce Golding, Jamaica’s leader since 2007, abruptly stepped down in October amid anemic public backing, won his parliamentary seat with 54 percent of the vote.
Simpson Miller has been a stalwart of the People’s National Party since the 1970s. She was first elected to Parliament in 1976 and became a Cabinet member in 1989. Partisans have long admired Simpson Miller as a Jamaican who was born in rural poverty and grew up in a Kingston ghetto, not far from the crumbling concrete jungle made famous by Bob Marley.
During her brief tenure as prime minister, her support waned amid complaints she responded poorly to Hurricane Dean and was evasive about a scandal regarding a Dutch oil trading firm’s $460,000 payment to her political party leading up to 2007 elections.
The two top candidates’ different styles were clear while they cast their votes.
Holness is largely seen as unexciting, but bright and pragmatic. He whisked into the voting center in the middle class area of Mona, barely interacting with voters. After being heckled by an opposition partisan, he said he was “very confident” of a Labor victory and departed after taking three questions from reporters.
By contrast, Simpson Miller hugged and chatted with supporters at a school in Whitfield Town and told election workers to help struggling elderly voters.
Her party, which experimented with democratic socialism in the 1970s, is still perceived as more focused on social programs than the slightly more conservative Labor. There are no longer stark ideological differences between the two clan-like factions that have dominated Jamaican politics since the onetime British colony began self-rule in 1944. Jamaica became independent within the British Commonwealth in 1962.
___
Associated Press Writer Howard Campbell in Kingston contributed to this report.
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
17 Responses to “UPDATE: Jamaica’s opposition wins elections in a landslide”
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my yute sister P win tis ting
congrats Ms. Miller
we want ah change just like we did in Tola
hope when you grt the change, you and your pose dem go home
Yes Portia win this thing! The strength and courage of a woman never let them keep you down! She’s Royal!! Women rule for 2012!! Love you Portia, keep it real.
wow women power…sorry we could not have our own dancia in the BVI
Awesome news! Congratulations not only for this achievement but also looking so well at 66 Y/O.
Jehovah bless and keep.
Partna look like he could be Kartel daddy lol
Seems like change is taking over the Caribbean, St. Lucia, Trinidad, BVI now Jamaica!!!!
was too soon to have elections Holness pulled a Patrick Manning like T&T and lost…let the thing run its course people!
okay jamaicans you all can go back home now
Congratulations to lady Miller and her party. 41 out of 63 seats won in the Parliment is a resounding victory for the PNP and a clear rejection of the JLP ……go girl!!!
guess they are recycling leadership just like the VI. jamaicans aint going a darn place. Most prefer to die here than live jamaica. trust me on that.
so with Dancia gone bvi will never get a female Premier
“just an idea” what happen to Alvera and Delories???????
what is your point???? we will make Alvera the Premier and Deloris the deputy…hahaha hehehe
The old people say what God doesn’t want, the angels wouldn’t carry. The angels couldn’t carry Dancia no place close to the House of Assembly again because she had ebbil in her heart. Don’t worry; there are some strong females coming. Dancia ain’t worthy to unbuckle the latch on their high heels. There are some strong Virgin Islanders in the grooming stages for the next time around. They are educated; they are smart; they love the country and the people and they are kind to all walks of people. God looking out for us. Only a matter of time. When they begin to speak, you will know them. Take a little time; it’s not an overnight thing. Dancia only was paving the way. God knows he couldn’t let her add this ‘first’ to her padded resume. Since she half-paved the way. The others to come will pave the entire roadway for other women. We will have a female prime minister one day.