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Fellow Citizens,
It is a
great honour to me to address this morning the citizens of the Independent
Nation of Trinidad and Tobago as their first Prime Minister. Your National
Flag has been hoisted to the strains of your National Anthem, against
the background of your National Coat of Arms, and amidst the beauty of
your National Flower.
Your Parliament has been inaugurated by Her Royal Highness the Princess
Royal, the representative of Her Majesty the Queen. You have your own
Governor General and your own Chief Justice, both appointed on the advice
of your own Prime Minister. You have your own National Guard, however
small.
You are now a member of the Commonwealth Family in your own right, equal
in status to any other of its members. You hope soon to be a member of
the World Family of Nations, playing your part, however insignificant,
in world affairs. You are on your own in a big world, in which you are
one of many nations, some small, some medium size, some large. You are
nobody's boss and nobody is your boss.
What use will you make of your independence? What will you transmit to
your children five years from today? Other countries ceased to exist in
that period. Some, in much less time, have become totally disorganised,
a prey to anarchy and civil war.
The first responsibility that devolves upon you is the protection and
promotion of your democracy. Democracy means more, much more, than the
right to vote and one vote for every man and every woman of the prescribed
age. Democracy means recognition of the rights of others.
Democracy means equality of opportunity for all in education, in the public
service, and in private employment--I repeat, and in private employment.
Democracy means the protection of the weak against the strong. Democracy
means the obligation of the minority to recognise the right of the majority.
Democracy means responsibility of the Government to its citizens, the
protection of the citizens from the exercise of arbitrary power and the
violation of human freedoms and individual rights. Democracy means freedom
of worship for all and the subordination of the right of any race to the
overriding right of the human race. Democracy means freedom of expression
and assemble of organization.
All that is Democracy. All that is our Democracy, to which I call upon
all citizens to dedicate themselves on this our Independence Day. This
is what I meant when I gave the Nation its slogan for all time: Discipline,
Production, Tolerance. Indiscipline, whether individual or sectional,
is a threat to democracy. Slacking on the job jeopardizes the national
income, inflates costs, and merely sets a bad example. The medieval churchmen
had a saying that to work is to pray. It is also to strengthen our democracy
by improving our economic foundations.
That democracy is but a hollow mockery and a gigantic fraud which is based
on a ruling group's domination [of] slaves or helots or fellaheen or second
class citizens or showing intolerance to others because of considerations
of race, colour, creed, national origin, previous conditions of servitude
or other irrationality.
Our National Flag belongs to all our citizens. Our National Coat of Arms,
with our National Birds inscribed therein, is the sacred thrust of our
citizens. So it is today, please, I urge you, let it always be so. Let
us always be able to say, with the Psalmist, behold, how good and how
pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity.
United at home in the common effort to build a democratic Nation and ostracize
outmoded privileges, let us present to the outside world the united front
of a Nation thinking for itself, knowing its own mind and speaking its
own point of view.
Let us take our stand in the international family on the basic principles
of international rectitude. When our time comes to vote, let it always
be a vote for freedom and against slavery, for self-determination and
against external control, for integration and against division.
Democracy at home and abroad, the symbol of it is our Parliament. Remember
fellow citizens, we now have a Parliament, we no longer have the colonial
assemblies which did not have the full rights of a Parliament of a sovereign
country. The very name "Parliament" testifies to our new Independent status.
By the same token, however, we at once become the object of comparison
with other Parliamentary countries, inside and outside the Commonwealth.
This is a consideration which involves not only the Members of Parliament
but also the individual citizen. The Members of Parliament have the traditional
Parliamentary privileges guaranteed in the Constitution. The Speaker,
the symbol of the power of Parliament, has his status guaranteed in the
Order of Precedence. We shall soon have a Privileges Bill protecting and
prescribing the powers of Parliament itself. Measures are being taken
to establish the responsibility of Parliament in the field of external
relations.
The Constitution recognises the position of the Leader of the Opposition
and the normal parliamentary convention of consultation between Government
and Opposition are being steadily developed and expanded. The Constitution
itself, Independence itself, represent the agreement of the two political
parties on the fundamental question of national unity. The ordinary citizen
must recognise the role of the Parliament in our democracy and must learn
to differentiate between a Member of Parliament, whom he may like or dislike,
and the respect that must be accorded to that same Member of Parliament
ex-officio.
I call on all citizens from now on to accord the highest respect our Parliamentary
system and institutions and to our Parliament itself.
Democracy, finally, rests on a higher power than Parliament. It rests
on an informed and cultivated and alert public opinion. The Members of
Parliament are only representatives of the citizens. They cannot represent
apathy and indifference. They can play the part allotted to them only
if they represent intelligence and public spiritness.
Nothing has so demonstrated in the past six years the capacity of the
People of Trinidad and Tobago than their remarkable interest in the public
affairs. The development and expansion of that interest is the joint responsibility
of the Government, the Parliament, the political parties and relevant
civic organisations.
Those, fellow citizens, are the thoughts which, on my first day as Prime
Minister, I wish to express to you on Independence Day. Your success in
organising the Independence which you achieved will exercise a powerful
influence on your neighbours with all of whom we are likely to have close
associations in the next few years, the smallest and nearest, as part
of our Independent Unitary State, the larger and more distant as part
of the wider and integrated Caribbean community. Problems of difficulties
there will be. These are always a challenge to a superior intelligence
and to strength of character.
Whatever the challenge that faces you, from whatever quarter, place always
first that national interest and the national cause. The strength of the
Nation depends on the strength of its citizens. Our National Anthem invokes
God's blessings on our Nation, in response to those thousands of citizens
of all faiths who demanded God's protection in our Constitution. Let us
then as a Nation so conduct ourselves as to be able always to say in those
noblest and most inspiring words of St. Paul, "By the Grace of God we
as people are what we are, and His Grace in us hath not been void."
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