KEJAN HAYNES
Lead Editor – Newsgathering
Minister in the Office of the Prime Minister Nicholas Morris has dismissed as "fake" screenshots circulating on social media which purport to show messages calling on Government communications personnel to coordinate online attacks against the Opposition People's National Movement (PNM).
The first screenshot, attributed to Morris, reads: "Everyone here is paid 20,000 plus to be a voice against the PNM. Find a propaganda angle and push it out."
A second purported message says: "Colleagues who are unafraid of the PNM, those who wish to undertske (sic) the Job the PM give them, please proceed to create an issue from this article. Those who wish to take Mr. Youngs feelings to play. Do as you wish."
Neither image contains a date and it is unclear which article is referenced in the second message.
Guardian Media contacted Morris, who immediately rejected any association with the screenshots.
"That is not true," he said.
Morris said he has repeatedly been the subject of false claims on social media and described the screenshots as another attempt to target him. He also denied any group chat existed to coordinate such activities.
This combined image shows the social media posts being attributed to Minister in the Office of the Prime Minister Nicholas Morris. [Source: SOCIAL MEDIA]
SOCIAL MEDIA
Guardian Media understands from multiple sources, however, the group chats themselves are legitimate and comprise communications specialists, communications officers and communications managers employed across various government ministries. The sources said the reference to a $20,000 salary aligns with the salaries of some communications personnel.
The allegations come amid previous scrutiny of the Government's use of communications personnel and social media.
In May, Guardian Media revealed the Water and Sewerage Authority (WASA) had hired nine out of a proposed batch of 12 social media influencers, with combined monthly salaries totalling $85,398.92.
The influencers were among 416 people hired by the Authority between April 29 and November 30, 2025, shortly after the April 28 general election.
Informed sources told the Guardian Media Investigations Desk 12 influencers were identified, nine hired and placed under ordinary job titles with salaries of up to $12,500 a month. They were assigned to corporate communications roles to defend the Government online and respond to critics.
Similar allegations surfaced more than a decade earlier.
In 2011, Campus Chronicle, a now defunct publication of Caribbean Communications Network revealed an organisation known as "tntgoodblogs" was allegedly paying university students to inundate newspaper websites and internet chat forums with pro-government sentiment.