KINGSTON, Jamaica — Jamaica’s main opposition political bloc, the People’s National Party (PNP), has ramped up pressure on the ruling administration led by Prime Minister Andrew Holness, demanding full public disclosure of the details surrounding Ambassador Anthony Anderson’s appointment as chief executive officer of the National Reconstruction and Resilience Authority (NaRRA).
Shortly after the government made the appointment public on Wednesday morning, the PNP released an official statement outlining a series of unresolved questions that demand immediate, open answers. At the top of the opposition’s inquiry is a key probe: did Major-General Anderson submit an application for the top leadership role through the standard, initial public recruitment process that was advertised for the position?
While the PNP explicitly stated that it expects Anderson to carry out his duties in line with the strict standards of transparency, integrity and accountability that the critical NaRRA post requires, the party emphasized that if Anderson did not participate in the open recruitment process, Jamaican voters are owed a thorough, straightforward explanation for why the initial search failed to turn up a qualified candidate from the original applicant pool.
The opposition argued that a completed recruitment process that fails to produce any candidate deemed suitable for appointment is far more than a minor bureaucratic hiccup. Instead, it serves as a clear warning that deep, foundational flaws exist in the governance framework that regulates the authority, the statement noted.
The PNP reminded the public that it has repeatedly flagged governance gaps baked into the original NaRRA legislation since the body was established, and the latest appointment has done nothing to ease those longstanding concerns. In fact, the opposition says the appointment has only reinforced its skepticism.
The party pointed to a telling detail that supports its criticism: Anderson, a sitting ambassador to Jamaica’s most critical international partner, the United States, has only held that diplomatic post for 12 months. The fact that the government turned to him to fill the role, the PNP argues, strongly implies that qualified, credible candidates from the relevant domestic professional sectors opted not to apply, deterred by the flawed structural and governance arrangements the opposition has repeatedly called inadequate.
In the opposition’s view, installing a loyal military and policing technocrat to lead this civilian-focused reconstruction authority — under circumstances where the standard recruitment process did not follow its normal, open procedure — does nothing to fix the core governance problems already plaguing NaRRA.
Closing its statement, the PNP repeated its call for full transparency, urging the ruling government to lay out every detail of Anderson’s appointment to the Jamaican public. The party also called on the administration to introduce amending legislation to address the well-documented governance weaknesses that have eroded public trust in NaRRA, and to move without further delay to place the authority on a solid, publicly accountable foundation.
