KINGSTON, Jamaica — Jamaica’s political landscape has been ignited by a fierce controversy surrounding the government’s proposed extraction of billions from the National Housing Trust (NHT). The People’s National Party (PNP) has launched scathing criticism against the Holness administration’s plan to withdraw an additional $57 billion over the next five years from the housing institution, characterizing the move as “vulgar” and hypocritical.
Senator Floyd Morris, the PNP’s housing spokesperson, issued a forceful statement condemning recent remarks from Jamaica Labour Party representative Abka Fitz Henley, who had accused Opposition Leader Mark Golding of engaging in vulgar politicking for criticizing the continued drawdowns. The PNP countered that the true vulgarity lies in what they describe as the government’s “sustained assault” on the institution established to provide affordable housing solutions.
Marking the NHT’s 50th anniversary, the opposition party highlighted the absence of any commemorative statement from Prime Minister Andrew Holness, who holds the housing portfolio. Instead of reaffirming the Trust’s founding purpose, the administration has proposed yet another amendment to the NHT Act to facilitate further extractions from the fund.
Morris articulated the core of the opposition’s argument: “What is truly vulgar is depriving working Jamaicans of their chance to own a home while billions are siphoned from the very institution created to help them.” The senator referenced Holness’s 2013 position as opposition leader, when he supported taking the then-government to court over similar NHT withdrawals, arguing they violated contributors’ property rights. At that time, Holness publicly committed to ring-fencing these funds exclusively for housing purposes.
Since assuming power, however, the Holness administration has amended the legislation twice to extend annual withdrawals of $11.4 billion, resulting in approximately $114 billion being extracted over the past decade. With proposals now on the table to remove an additional $57 billion over the next five years, Morris accused the government of blatant hypocrisy.
The PNP emphasized that the NHT fundamentally belongs to its contributors, asserting that any government that raids the fund while failing to deliver affordable housing lacks the moral authority to lecture on principles or decency. The opposition party concluded that Jamaica has endured a deepening housing crisis under the current administration, which they claim has delivered the lowest level of affordable housing of any recent government.
