These two charismatic leaders were clever politicians. Universally, politicians extend themselves to the limits, embracing even impropriety to win. Politics is not a profession of saints. My reliable information was that it was the troubleshooter Janet Jagan who made the suggestion that their supporters should be told to embrace the elections as a racial issue. They were numerically superior. The idea was swiftly approved though, with some reservations, as this concept excluded blacks. For instance, the deputy leader of the party, Brindley Benn, was black, and so were many members of the party. This could have been counterproductive! The slogan would be Apen Jhaat. Translated from Hindi, it means "vote for your own." Clearly, because it would be to his disadvantage, Burnham appealed to all at a public meeting that danger lurked within this racial division. He'd sooner have voters support him because of his belief and not because of his race. This was interpreted by many to mean that he was less concerned about the damage of racial division than losing the elections. However, Apen Jhaat, that seemingly innocuous gem of an idea, gave birth to the racial disease that prevailed forty-six years later in the year 2001. That conflict had intensified.