Paula Mae Weekes (1958- )

September 23, 2018 
/ Contributed By: Euell A. Dixon

President Paula-Mae Weekes

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Paula Mae Weekes is the current and sixth President of Trinidad and Tobago. With Weekes’s inauguration, Trinidad and Tobago becomes the only nation in Latin America and the Caribbean to currently have a woman head of state.

Paula Mae Weekes was born in Trinidad and Tobago on December 23, 1958. She attended Tranquility Government Primary School and Bishop Antsey High School in Port of Spain, the nation’s capital. Weekes earned her Bachelor of Laws degree at the University of the West Indies, Cave Hill in 1980, and a Legal Education Certificate from the Hugh Wooding Law School (HWLS), St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobago, in 1982.

Beginning in 1982, she worked in the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions as State Counsel I for 11 years. She resigned in 1993 and went into private law practice. She was appointed a Judge at the Criminal Division of Trinidad’s High Court in 1996, making her the fifth female judge elevated to the position. Weekes was appointed Judge on the nation’s Appeal Court in 2005 and served in that position until her retirement in 2016. Weekes served briefly as acting Chief Justice of the Trinidad and Tobago Supreme Court in August of 2012. She was then invited to join the Appellate Branch of the Judiciary of the Turks and Caicos, making her the first woman to serve in that capacity. She resigned in January of 2018.

Additionally, Weekes has served as Chancellor, the highest position, to the Anglican church for the past twenty years, and Superintendent of Sunday School at the All Saint’s church she attends in Port of Spain. Justice Weekes was made a Fellow of the Commonwealth Judicial Education Institute in 2000. She also served as Executive Director of PMW Criminal Justice Consultancy and Training and Course Director for Ethics Rights and Obligations of the Legal Profession at her alma mater, Hugh Wooding, from 2010 to 2016.

On January 5, 2018, Weekes was put forward as a presidential candidate by the People’s National Movement government of Prime Minister Keith Rowley in hopes of reaching a consensus with the United National Congress-led parliamentary opposition of Kamla Persad-Bissessar, which later endorsed her nomination.

As Weekes was the only nominated candidate on election day, she was deemed elected without the need for a vote. She took office on March 19, 2018, and became the first woman to hold the office of President and the nation’s second female head of state, after Queen Elizabeth II. Currently, Weekes is a Diego Martin resident. She is single and has no children.

Despite making history, Weekes is taking office at a challenging time for the nation. She replaces Anthony Carmona who left the nation facing an extremely high murder rate. Nearly 400 people in Trinidad were victims of homicide in 2017, according to the local newspaper, the Trinidad Guardian. She’ll also have to tackle a growing unemployment rate which rose to 5.3 percent in the second quarter of 2017.

Author Profile

Multiple business owner Euell Dixon (formerly Nielsen) was born on November 3, 1973, in Sewell, New Jersey. The youngest daughter of scientist and author Eustace A. Dixon II and Travel Agent Eleanor Forman, Euell was an early reader and began tutoring at The Verbena Ferguson Tutoring Center for Adults at the age of 13. She has owned and operated five different companies in the past 20 years including Show and Touch, Stitch This, Get Twisted, Dimaje Photography, and Island Treazures.

Euell is a Veteran of the U.S. Army (Reserves) and a member of the Order of Eastern Star, House of Zeresh #103. She is also the 3rd Historian for First African Presbyterian Church, the nation’s oldest African American Presbyterian church, located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Additionally, Euell is also a photographer, storyteller, fiber artist, and a historical re-enactor, portraying the lives of Patriot Hannah Till, Elizabeth Gloucester, and Henrietta Duterte. Euell has been writing for Blackpast.org since 2014 and was given an award from the site in 2016 for being the only African American female who had almost 100 entries at the time. Since then, she has written over 300 entries. Euell currently lives in St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Dixon, E. (2018, September 23). Paula Mae Weekes (1958- ). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/global-african-history/weekes-paula-mae-1958/

Source of the Author's Information:

The Presidents Profile, https://otp.tt/the-president/thepresident/; Micia G., “Paula Mae Weekes makes history as first woman president of Trinidad & Tobago,” livingcivil.com, March 2018, http://livingcivil.com/paula-mae-weekes-makes-history-as-first-woman-president-of-trinidad-and-tobago/; Tiffany McGee, “Paula Mae Weekes, the 1st woman president of Trinidad and Tobago, takes office,” Goodblacknews.org, March 2018, https://goodblacknews.org/2018/03/20/paula-mae-weekes-the-1st-woman-president-of-trinidad-and-tobago-takes-office/.

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