Edward Seaga


Edward Philip George Seaga was a Jamaican politician and record producer. He was the fifth Prime Minister of Jamaica, from 1980 to 1989, and the leader of the Jamaica Labour Party from 1974 to 2005. He served as Leader of the Opposition from 1974 to 1980, and again from 1989 until January 2005.
His retirement from political life marked the end of Jamaica's founding generation in active politics. He was the last serving politician to have entered public life before independence in 1962, as he was appointed to the Legislative Council in 1959. Seaga is credited with having built the financial and planning infrastructure of the country after independence, as well as having developed its arts and crafts, and awareness of national heritage.
As a record producer and record company owner of West Indies Records Limited, Seaga also played a major role in the development of the Jamaican music industry. Seaga died on 28 May 2019, on his eighty-ninth birthday.

Early life

Edward Philip George Seaga was born on 28 May 1930, in Boston, Massachusetts, to Philip George Seaga, who was of Lebanese Jamaican descent, and Erna, who was Jamaican of African, Scottish and Indian descent. Erna was the daughter of Elizabeth Campbell, daughter of John Zungaroo Campbell. Phillip Seaga had moved to the US seeking to take advantage of the prosperity of the Roaring Twenties, but the Wall Street crash of 1929 scotched those dreams. Three months after Edward's birth in Boston, the Seagas returned to Jamaica. He was baptised in Kingston's Anglican Parish Church on 5 December 1930.
Seaga was educated at Wolmer's Boys', one of the Wolmer's Schools in Jamaica. He went to the United States for higher education, graduating from Harvard University in 1952 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in social sciences. Before embarking on his political career, Seaga was a music producer and promoter. He subsequently took a research post at the University of the West Indies.

Music industry career

Seaga's research led to an interest in popular Jamaican music. In 1955, he supervised the recording of an album of ethnic Jamaican music. He continued to produce recordings by other artists and in the late 1950s set up West Indies Records Limited, releasing early recordings by artists such as Higgs and Wilson and Byron Lee & the Dragonaires. Beginning in 1961, Seaga lived in West Kingston. He became deeply involved in its music scene and recorded some of its artists.
West Indies Records Limited became the most successful record company in the West Indies. After being elected in 1962 as a Member of Parliament, representing the Jamaica Labour Party, he sold the company to Byron Lee. It was renamed Dynamic Sounds.
Over 16 years, Seaga worked on compiling a collection of Jamaican music covering the period from the mid-1950s to the early 1970s. This anthology, Reggae Golden Jubilee Origins of Jamaican Music, was released on 6 November 2012 in celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of Jamaican independence.
In February 1981, while serving as Jamaican Prime Minister, Seaga would award Bob Marley with a designated Order of Merit, Jamaica's highest honor related to people involved with either the arts, literature or science.

Early political career

Seaga's political career began in 1959 when Alexander Bustamante, founder of the JLP, nominated him to serve in the Upper House of the Jamaican Parliament, the Legislative Council. His appointment at the age of 29 made him the youngest member ever appointed to the Legislative Council. While he was in the Senate, Seaga made his well-reported speech about the "haves" and the "have nots".
As one of the founding fathers in the framing of the Jamaican Constitution in 1961, Seaga spearheaded far-reaching constitutional reforms. He initiated a re-write of the human rights section of the Constitution, to provide for a Charter of Fundamental Rights and Freedoms; creation of the post of Public Defender; and curtailment of some of the powers of the Prime Minister to provide a better balance of power between the executive and the parliament in the Jamaican system of governance.
In April 1962, Seaga was elected Member of Parliament for West Kingston, the waterfront area in the capital city. Historically, it has been the oldest settlement in Kingston for poor, working-class residents, many of whom are unemployed. Employment is largely petty trading with some semi-skilled craftsmen. He held that seat for 43 consecutive years, until he retired, making him the longest-serving Member of Parliament in the history of Jamaica and the Caribbean region. He is the only person to have been elected as Member of Parliament for West Kingston for more than one term, and won 10 consecutive terms.
Immediately after winning his seat in 1962, Seaga was appointed to the Cabinet as Minister of Development and Welfare, with responsibility for all areas of planning, social development and culture. He initiated the redevelopment of Back O'Wall, a notorious large slum in West Kingston, and its replacement by housing, schools and community amenities, which was named Tivoli Gardens.
Seaga also used his position to continue to promote Jamaican music.
Following the 1967 general election, Seaga was appointed Minister of Finance and Planning. In 1964, he advocated for the transfer of the remains of political activist Marcus Garvey from London, England to Jamaica. However, four years later, Seaga was a part of the Cabinet of prime minister Hugh Shearer that banned Walter Rodney from Jamaica for allegedly inciting racial hatred.
In the 1972 general election, the People's National Party led by Michael Manley won 37 seats to the JLP's 16, and Shearer and Seaga were swept out of power. In 1974, he became Leader of the JLP, a post he held for 30 years; he was also Leader of the Parliamentary Opposition in various periods. In the 1976 general election, the PNP won another landslide, winning 47 seats to the JLP's 13. The turnout was a very high 85 percent.
There was considerable political violence in the 1970s. This allegedly started in 1975, after Henry Kissinger failed in his attempts to get Manley to stop his support for Cuba and Angola, and their fight against the armies of apartheid South Africa. According to former Central Intelligence Agency case officer Philip Agee, the CIA supplied arms to supporters of the JLP, and there was a significant upturn in political violence; Seaga repeatedly denied the accusation. The 1980 general election was marked by widespread violence including running gun battles, and would be won by the JLP in a landslide.

Prime minister

Seaga became Prime Minister of Jamaica following the 30 October 1980 general election, when the JLP won a landslide victory over the incumbent PNP, with the largest mandate until 1993, when the PNP surpassed that total. Out of 60 seats contested in 1980, the JLP won 51 to the PNP's nine.
Seaga and the JLP won the 1983 general election. The JLP ran unopposed, as the PNP boycotted the elections in protest of the JLP's refusal to update the voter register system amid allegations of voter fraud. He continued as prime minister until February 1989.
Widely regarded as one of the most influential Jamaican prime ministers, Seaga was a controversial figure. His supporters claim that he 'saved' Jamaica from communism, while others assert that he 'mashed up' Jamaica. Columnist and attorney-at-law Daniel Thwaites said that while these diametrically opposed sentiments run to the extremes, both are surprisingly prevalent. "It is a barometer of the lasting contentiousness and potential divisiveness of any appraisal of Papa Eddie", Thwaites said, arguing that the only other figure in Jamaican political history who could possibly be as controversial as Seaga would be his nemesis, the late former Prime Minister Michael Manley. Thwaites said, "because of their titanic decades-long confrontation, they will be forever – and, perhaps ironically – inextricably linked".

Economic policies and IMF agreements

During his tenure as premiership, Seaga implemented free-market economic policies, including agreements with the International Monetary Fund. His administration embraced neoliberal reforms, reducing government intervention in the economy and privatizing state-owned enterprises. While these policies stabilized Jamaica’s economy, they also led to austerity measures, high unemployment, and social unrest. Critics argue that Seaga’s economic approach disproportionately affected the working class, deepening inequalities.

Foreign policy

A staunch anti-communist, Seaga reversed the diplomatic engagement that Manley had pursued with Cuba and Grenada, two countries that had adopted strong anti-American stances following the Cuban Revolution in 1959 and the 1979 Grenada Revolution, respectively. Seaga formed a close relationship with United States President Ronald Reagan and British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Seaga cut ties with Cuba shortly after winning the 1980 election, and sent a small contingent of forces to support the U.S. invasion of Grenada in October-November 1983. By 1983, Jamaica had become the third largest recipient of U.S. aid per capita after Egypt and Israel.
In the 1980s, the Seaga administration became embroiled in accusations of a dark circle of narco-banking involving the Contras of Nicaragua, the CIA and the Israeli money-launderer Eli Tisona. Seaga's Agro 21 programme was accused of involvement in cocaine trafficking from Colombia, and its Spring Plains project employed Shower Posse's Lester Lloyd Coke, also known as Jim Brown, as head of security. However, these allegations went unproven, with all investigations coming up blank.

Leader of the Opposition

Seaga first served as Leader of Opposition from 1974 to 1980. The JLP was defeated in a landslide by Manley's PNP in the 1989 general election, by a margin of 45 seats to 15, and Seaga resumed the role of Leader of the Opposition, a position he held until 2005.
Seaga led the JLP to defeat in a number of subsequent elections against a PNP led by P. J. Patterson. In the 1993 general election, the PNP won 52 seats to the JLP's eight seats, while in the 1997 election, the PNP won 50 of 60 seats. Patterson's third consecutive victory came in the 2002 election, when the PNP retained power but with a reduced majority of 34 seats to 26. Patterson stepped down on 26 February 2006, and was replaced by Portia Simpson-Miller, Jamaica's first female prime minister.
During this period, Seafa suffered leadership challenges from a number of his colleagues, such as the "Gang of Five" of Errol Anderson, Edmund Bartlett, Karl Samuda, Douglas Vaz, and Pearnel Charles. In 1995, Bruce Golding left the JLP to form a new party, the National Democratic Movement.
In 2002, Golding rejoined the JLP and in November 2003 was again elected chairman of the party. On February 20, 2005, he was elected leader of the JLP, succeeding Seaga as Leader of the Opposition.