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...going to be ruled by violence but by heavy manners. No one can hold us back. We know where we are going." Those were the campaign promises−despite little evidence to back up any one of them−that Prime Minister Michael Manley, 53, made to Jamaica's 860,000 voters. But Manley's pitch was apparently convincing enough. Last week the Prime Minister and his People's National Party (P.N.P.) returned to power with 48 of 60 seats in the newly expanded Jamaican parliament, gaining 58% of the popular vote. Now Manley may find that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAMAICA: Castro's Pal Wins Again | 12/27/1976 | See Source »

...election campaign was the most violent in Jamaican history. It was fought between the socialist P.N.P. and the free-enterprise opposition Jamaica Labor Party (J.L.P.), led by Onetime Finance Minister Edward Seaga, 46. The J.L.P. attacked Manley for financial mismanagement and more or less accused the Prime Minister of trying to turn Jamaica into a satellite of Fidel Castro's Cuba. For their part, Manley's followers talked of "J.L.P. policy and the fascist threat," while Manley himself declared that "the capitalist system has failed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAMAICA: Castro's Pal Wins Again | 12/27/1976 | See Source »

Political chaos was made worse by Jamaica's economic disorder, for which Manley has to shoulder some of the blame. For the past two years he has been committed to what he calls "democratic socialism"−meaning buying into the island's huge bauxite industry and lavish doses of public spending on labor-intensive road building and land reform...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAMAICA: Castro's Pal Wins Again | 12/27/1976 | See Source »

Case of Jitters. Manley's new policy directions, as well as his undisguised admiration for Fidel Castro, have given Jamaica's small and relatively conservative middle class a bad case of the jitters. Many Jamaican business families have established second residences abroad. Income from tourism has dropped from $120 million in 1975 to an expected $90 million this year as a result of the violence; bauxite and sugar exports, two of the country's other major foreign-exchange earners, suffer from shrunken international markets. The upshot is that Jamaica faces a staggering $1 billion national debt. Inflation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAMAICA: Castro's Pal Wins Again | 12/27/1976 | See Source »

...remains to be seen how Manley plans to restore both prosperity and tranquillity to his troubled, gemlike country. As the campaign proved, the ultimate in "heavy manners"−a state of emergency that Manley declared last June to curb island violence−apparently failed to do much good...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAMAICA: Castro's Pal Wins Again | 12/27/1976 | See Source »

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