Senior Reporter
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Opposition Leader Pennelope Beckles has condemned the Government’s October 2025 national recruitment drive as a “farce” and “publicity stunt,” as she noted the Kamla Persad-Bissessar administration had hired a mere 1,801 people despite promising 20,000 jobs.
Beckles said this has come even while the Government had put 70,000 citizens on the breadline.
In a scathing statement yesterday, in response to an exclusive Sunday Guardian report which detailed the figures, Beckles accused the Prime Minister of using the promise of thousands of jobs as a smoke screen to mask what the Opposition describes as “the most severe economic downturn in the nation’s history.”
Beckles said, “After firing over 70,000 honest people in just ten months, and hiring only 1,801, this UNC Government has created the most severe economic depression our nation has ever seen. The Government’s much-publicised National Recruitment Drive has been a catastrophic failure, delivering only 1,801 jobs out of the 20,000 promised to the people of Trinidad and Tobago in October 2025 and some 50,000 jobs to win the election.
“The Prime Minister had vowed that young people, those who had been fired, and the nation at large would benefit, but this PR stunt has delivered almost nothing. When this Government stood before the nation in October and made grand promises of 20,000 jobs, they created an expectation that thousands of hopeful citizens believed. Over 110,000 people applied, convinced that real relief was finally underway. Today, less than two per cent of applicants have been hired, exposing the recruitment drive as a farce designed to deflect attention and mislead the most vulnerable.”
Beckles also bashed Persad-Bissessar for describing the Community-Based Environmental Protection and Enhancement Programme (CEPEP) and Unemployment Relief Programme (URP) as “slavery” while doing nothing to support those left unemployed in the aftermath of their shutdown.
Beckles said citizens now feel betrayed by the Government, as the cost of living continues to rise, describing the Prime Minister’s promises as “depression deception.”
She added, “The human cost of this “depression deception” is severe. Every unfulfilled promise affects families unable to pay rising rent, parents struggling to provide for their children, young people unable to start their lives, and workers denied dignity in honest employment as the cost of living rises. When the Government presented its budget, I described it as fake and fraudulent. The so-called recruitment drive was nothing more than a publicity stunt, with no real funding, no proper structure, and no credible plan to hire 20,000 people.
“While members of this Government disgrace themselves on Hyatt stages, record empty, insulting videos through their ministries, censor truthful calypsonians, travel on exotic trips, and hire UNC ‘big boys’ and ‘big girls,’ the people of Trinidad and Tobago remain in the dark, struggling, waiting, and abandoned. The Government must account to the tens of thousands who were fired and who applied for their fake recruitment drive. The people of Trinidad and Tobago feel betrayed and deceived by the UNC’s empty job promises and continue to face growing hardships and rising living costs.”
Meanwhile, political analyst Derek Ramsamooj is warning young voters hoping for opportunities that they will be left disappointed.
Speaking to Guardian Media via telephone yesterday, he said the Government simply does not have the finances to meet the expectations of the population.
Ramsamooj said, “There is a historical challenge between promises made on a political campaign and the reality the government confronts. The number of young voters and perhaps unemployed voters who cast their ballot with an expectation of a better quality of life would be sorely disappointed by the lack of opportunities. This is because the financial reality is that the Government of Trinidad and Tobago does not have the financial resources to meet the expectation of the population. This is and has been our reality for quite a couple of years.”
He added, “The present Government does not have the capacity to produce campaign excuses. They are now the Government and must utilise the resources of the country to minimise the public’s hurt. The blame game, the political blame game, is now irrelevant as the cost-of-living increases and as the middle-class live-in fear of poverty.”
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