FIND THE LATEST NEWS UPDATED EVERY DAY AT CARIBBEANLIFENEWS.COM 
 Vol. 31, Issue 40  BROOKLYN EDITION Oct. 2-8, 2020 
 NO T&T  
 MAS  
 NEXT  
 YEAR 
 Bermuda fears low covid  
 elections turnout 
 By Bert Wilkinson 
 Apart from the protracted  
 closure of borders, fewer tourist  
 arrivals  and  perhaps  the  
 unprecedented  disruption  of  
 economic activities, the COVID- 
 19 pandemic continues to  
 blight the Caribbean Community  
 with  major  developments  
 in the past week including the  
 cancellation of Trinidad’s world  
 class and iconic annual carnival  
 celebrations that should  
 have been held in mid February  
 of next year being among the  
 biggest of them. 
 Clearly frustrated with a  
 steady increase in positive cases  
 and  deaths  from  the  virus,  
 Prime Minister Keith Rowley  
 this week called off next year’s  
 edition of the event just at a  
 time when preparations would  
 have  been  cranking  ahead  of  
 the season even. He basically  
 said  that  it would be an act of  
 madness to even think of staging  
 the major foreign exchange  
 earning event noting the country  
 would be flirting with danger  
 to think otherwise. 
 “I see no future for carnival  
 in Trinidad and Tobago in the  
 months ahead. And today I can  
 put everyone on notice that  
 unless there is some dramatic  
 wind  that  will  blow  across  us  
 whereby  by Christmas, COVID  
 would be a thing of the past  
 — carnival 2021 is not on. It’s  
 just not on. Let us be thankful  
 we’re still alive to see each  
 other’s face.” 
 As the announcement sank  
 in, Opposition leader, Kamla  
 Persad  Bissessar,  the  carnival  
 commission  and  fundamentalist  
 islanders who play mass  
 ritually, immediately switched  
 their focus to organizing carnival  
 in virtual form in a bid to  
 generate what little economic  
 activity there could be from a  
 Rep. Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., speaks during the House Judiciary Committee hearing on  
 oversight of the Justice Department and a probe into the politicization of the department  
 under Attorney General William Barr, in Washington, U.S., June 24, 2020.   Susan  
 Walsh/Pool via REUTERS 
 ‘Donald Trump continues to take a  
 blow torch to our democracy’: Jeffries 
 By Nelson A. King 
 House  Democratic  Caucus  
 Chairman  Hakeem  Jeffries  
 (D-NY) and Vice Chair Katherine  
 Clark (D-MA) on Wednesday  
 held a House Democratic  
 Leadership press conference,  
 where they outlined the new  
 Democratic  relief  effort  to  
 aid Americans suffering from  
 the pandemic, while blaming  
 President  Donald  J.  Trump  
 for undermining the nation’s  
 democracy. 
 “Last  night,  we  witnessed  
 a debacle as it relates to our  
 democracy,”  said  Jeffries,  
 whose 8th Congressional District  
 comprises parts of Brooklyn  
 and Queens, referring to  
 the first of what is expected to  
 be  three  presidential  debates  
 in  which  Trump  constantly  
 and rudely interrupted former  
 Vice President Joe Biden, the  
 Democratic Party nominee for  
 the Nov. 3 Presidential Elections. 
 “Donald Trump continues  
 to take a blow torch to our  
 democracy,”  Jeffries  added.  
 “Our  democracy  is  on  life  
 support.  Only  we  the  people, 
   at  this  point,  can  turn  it  
 around.” 
 Clark said: “What we saw  
 last  night  is  underscoring  
 what  we  already  knew:  the  
 president is going to continue  
 to stand back as the American  
 people suffer, as he stands by  
 white supremacists and those  
 who threaten our very democracy. 
 “But, here, in the Democratic  
 House  Caucus,  we  are  
 renewing  our  commitment  
 to the American people,” she  
 added. 
 House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, 
  D-Calif., expressed irritation  
 Wednesday  over  Trump’s  
 constant  interruptions  at  
 Continued on Page 12 Continued on Page 12 
 
				
/CARIBBEANLIFENEWS.COM