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JAM | Aug 8, 2022

Opposition calls for more ‘full disclosure’ of Finn Partners’ public relations contract for Commonwealth Secretary General campaign

/ Our Today

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Senator Donna Scott-Mottley, opposition spokesperson on information,

The Opposition has called for full disclosure of the US$100,000 contract entered by unknown persons with the Jamaica Tourist Board’s US public relations (PR) agency, Finn Partners, to execute PR activities for the Kamina Johnson Smith campaign for Secretary General of the Commonwealth.

Senator Donna Scott Mottley, opposition spokesperson on information, said this information was necessary for the public and for a full detailed analysis to determine if Jamaica’s foreign affairs and foreign trade policies have been in any way compromised by the acceptance of undisclosed funds from local or international private sector interests.

In a statement today (August 8), Scott Mottley argued that the failure of the Government to disclose the details and the “evasive posture” of de facto Information Minister Robert Morgan Minister in a radio
interview this morning make disclosure an imperative.

“These disclosures must include names and amounts given by donors, the name of the person or persons who entered the contracts, and whether the contract was filed under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, oversighted by the United States Justice Department.”

Senator Donna Scott Mottley, opposition spokesperson on information

She said undisclosed private donations to pursue the Minister of Foreign Affairs’ objectives are fraught with danger and could open the door to compromising Jamaica’s established international affairs principles.

“These disclosures must include names and amounts given by donors, the name of the person or persons who entered the contracts, and whether the contract was filed under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, oversighted by the United States Justice Department,” Scott Mottley said.

She added that the PNP considers this extremely important as using private individuals to execute such a contract could be seen as an attempt to circumvent US law.

The Opposition Spokesperson said unless there is disclosure, a private company which donates money in secrecy could demand a benefit or other reciprocity without the public ever knowing.

“The Minister’s stubborn refusal to disclose brings into question the credibility of the information he has disseminated to the Jamaican people and the reasons he provided for the failure to disclose,” said Scott Mottley.

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