
RT. HONORABLE
NORMAN WASHINGTON
MANLEY
Norman Washington Manley
was born at Roxborough, Manchester, on July 4, 1893. He was a brilliant
scholar and athlete, soldier (First World War) and lawyer. He identified himself
with the cause of the workers at the time of the labour troubles of 1938 and donated time and advocacy to the
cause.
In September 1938, Manley founded the People's National Party
(PNP) and was elected its President annually until his retirement in 1969, 31
years later.
Manley and the PNP supported the trade union movement, then led by Alexander Bustamante, while leading the demand
for Universal Adult Suffrage. When Suffrage came, Manley had to wait ten years
and two terms before his party was elected to office.
He was a strong
advocate of the Federation of the West Indies, established in 1958, but when Sir
Alexander Bustamante declared that the opposition Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) would take Jamaica out of the Federation, Norman Manley,
already renowned for his integrity and commitment to democracy, called a
referendum, unprecedented in Jamaica, to let the people
decide.
The vote was decisively against Jamaica's continued membership of the
Federation. Norman Manley, after arranging Jamaica's orderly withdrawal from the union, set
up a joint committee to decide on a constitution for separate independence for
Jamaica.
He himself chaired
the committee with great distinction and then led the team that negotiated the
island's independence from Britain. The issue settled, Manley again went to the people. He lost the ensuing
election to the JLP and gave his last years of service as Leader of the
Opposition, establishing definitively the role of the parliamentary opposition
in a developing nation.
In his last public address to an annual
conference of the PNP, he said: "I say that the mission of my generation was to
win self-government for Jamaica, to win political power which
is the final power for the black masses of my country from which I spring. I am
proud to stand here today and say to you who fought that fight with me, say it
with gladness and pride, Mission accomplished for my
generation.
"And what is the mission of this generation? ... It is...
reconstructing the social and economic society and life of Jamaica". Norman Manley died on
September 2. 1969.