LETTER: Weapons of excuses as UPP chair fails to deliver any winning solutions

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D Gisele Isaac

Dear Editor,

A week after the by-election, one might expect a heartfelt public thank-you letter to the voters of St. Peter from the United Progressive Party’s leadership.

Instead, Gisele Isaac’s latest op-ed serves as yet another desperate attempt to spin a disastrous campaign into something worth celebrating. Let’s be real: the only thing “historic” about George Wehner’s candidacy was the magnitude of its failure.

Where were Isaac’s insights when the UPP needed them most? Nowhere. She’s quick to commend Wehner’s discipline, but neither he nor the party demonstrated anything resembling a coherent, winning strategy.

Now, Isaac is fighting shadows—deflecting blame, conjuring excuses, and avoiding the hard truth: the UPP’s decline under her leadership is both undeniable and inexcusable.

From the moment Wehner’s name was announced, it was clear the campaign was doomed. His rhetoric may have stirred a handful of supporters, but it lacked substance, vision and solutions.

His opponent, Rawdon Turner, released a comprehensive 26-page manifesto, while Wehner’s policy platform was nonexistent. Unless you attended the UPP rallies or caught the odd radio interview, his message was impossible to discern.

Where were the official articles, the campaign materials, the structured communication strategy? Isaac, the supposed architect of the UPP’s “near election victory” in 2023, was conspicuously absent when it came to providing any of this support.

And then there’s the timing. Why did the UPP wait until the eleventh hour to name Wehner as their candidate? Isaac, instead of stepping up to guide the party through a critical period after Asot Michael’s passing, jetted off to Ghana.

When the UPP desperately needed strong leadership, it was left floundering, scrambling to assemble a campaign. With maximum of 120 days to call the by-election, a candidate should have been in place before the end of November.

But Isaac’s lack of urgency derailed any chance of success. In September, the Political Leader, Jamale Pringle, announced that he was ready to announce 10 candidates. So why was the Party caught flat footed and scrambling to name a candidate?

The election itself was an unmitigated disaster. Wehner didn’t just lose—he failed to secure any meaningful votes from Asot Michael’s base. The outright rejection of the UPP is a damning indictment of the party’s inability to connect with voters.

Voter turnout was abysmal, highlighting a glaring failure to motivate the electorate. Where were the efforts to encourage re-registration or engage the community effectively?

Isaac’s attempt to blame ABEC’s infractions is laughable. These very issues have plagued elections for years, yet the UPP has done nothing meaningful to address them.

How many times must we hear the same tired complaints before the party takes action? Pointing fingers at ABEC won’t solve these problems. The ABLP was known for filing injunction after injunction while in Opposition.

The real question is: what is the UPP doing to address these electoral issues as well as its own organizational chaos?

Let’s talk strategy—or rather, the lack thereof. Where was the UPP’s campaign infrastructure? Who was managing canvassing, data collection, PR and outreach? Why wasn’t there a solid plan in place for election night?

In fact, where was Gisele Isaac on election night? The UPP’s leadership failed at every turn. Isaac, as chair, should have been the driving force behind a cohesive, effective campaign. Instead, she stood by as the party floundered, and now she is ready to offer excuses instead of solutions.

Isaac’s delusional praise for Wehner’s “performance” only underscores her disconnection from reality. Her claim that a small executive team nearly delivered …

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11 COMMENTS

  1. Having “MORE BALLS” is what the leader is out to prove to everyone! especially the “weak men” who resigned from the party. She run things, things nah run she.

  2. Murdah!

    Me belly a hat me!

    Unfortunately writer, making these reasonable observations to the CEOs of the UPP delusion factory is futile.

  3. I hope in jetting off to Ghana the Chair of the Party at least will begin to consider herself African. She is a most backward thinking person. Her colleague Franz or Ralph Bowen need to educate her.

  4. Look at that nice, beautiful, soft, feminine smiling lady?? Are you sure she is the horrible person others paint her to be???

    Then again she’s wearing a PENTAGRAM around her neck so………CHAOS DEMON might be a fitting name for real.

  5. The UPP does not need to do any introspection. The introspection has been done and DEM NAR MOVE. It is that simple since the Convention has spoken. We must all have patience until the electorate speaks.

  6. She had to support Whenner because he was the main architect in fiddle-faddling and delivering the convention victory to her and her poodle. He did most of the underhand work.

    This woman is a menace to the UPP. How long will it take her die-hard fans to see that she is a stumbling block?

  7. Why would Giselle listen to Taddy when she also has bigger balls than him. The CHAOS DEMON listens to no one. However, perhaps she would listen a girlfriend in bed.

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