In a sharp rebuttal to her predecessor’s assertions, Minister of the People, Social Development and Family Services Vandana Mohit has publicly denounced claims that the ministry operated flawlessly under previous leadership. The January 12th statement directly addresses what Mohit characterizes as “misleading and factually unfounded” comments from former minister Donna Cox regarding the ministry’s operational status during her tenure.
Mohit accused Cox of engaging in historical revisionism, stating that such remarks are “politically motivated and dangerously disconnected from reality.” The minister presented counter-evidence highlighting that social services grants for January 2026 were successfully processed and disbursed by January 1st, contradicting narratives suggesting otherwise.
The current administration inherited significant systemic challenges including entrenched backlogs, obsolete operational systems, fragmented processes, and inadequate inter-agency coordination, according to Mohit. She emphasized that the previous government’s portrayal of perfect functionality ignores documented evidence of delayed grant payments, operational inefficiencies, and administrative strain that were subsequently acknowledged by that same administration.
Mohit suggested that Cox’s comments reflect “a troubling indulgence in revisionist nostalgia rather than an honest engagement with facts” and indicated that the former minister appears “hypnotized by the sustained momentum of reform work” currently underway. The ministry has reportedly achieved measurable progress in key service areas, moving from stagnation to demonstrable improvement within months.
Notable accomplishments include dramatically reducing the backlog of senior citizens’ pension payments through strategic interventions involving direct engagement with the National Insurance Board and the Ministry of Finance. These efforts resolved emergency issues that potentially threatened timely disbursement systems.
The ministry reaffirmed its commitment to protecting Trinidad and Tobago’s most vulnerable citizens while ensuring social support services are delivered with fairness, transparency, and punctuality.
