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Hartley Henry’s column as originally posted in the Advocate 18/07/08

Mia Mottley
Leader of the Opposition Mia Mottley

Very often I am asked to explain the nature of work of a Political Strategist, especially in what can be termed “non political season”. Most persons would associate this writer with the conduct of general elections, but in the majority of Caribbean states, elections are held once every five years. Therefore the question of how I keep myself busy and how I remain relevant to and needed by clients is frequently asked. The short answer is that during the “political down season” I focus on advising clients against actions, utterances and behaviors that could be harmful and perhaps even fatal to their chances of victory next time around.

Examples of this were in abundance during the just concluded budget debate in parliament. I have no reason to support the Barbados Labour Party or to wish to see that organization returned to office in the near future. But, as a student of politics I couldn’t help but observe some fundamental errors, the cause and origin of which would have to be placed squarely at the feet of the Leader of that party, Mia Mottley.

First, Mottley should not have attempted to reply to the budget. Receiving the mantle of leadership under the circumstances that she ought not, by itself, to be viewed as overnight acquisition of all wisdom, knowledge and understanding. Whether Mottley wishes to accept it or not, she has an image problem in Barbados. The jury is still out on whether she has the credentials to become a modern leader of Barbados. She is articulate and known for her male-like aggression in politics. But she brings much more than intellect to the table. She touts political baggage of a nature not previously associated with any aspiring leader of Barbados.

The just concluded budget was the first delivered by David Thompson since his assuming the office of Prime Minister. The state of the economy in Barbados is foremost in the minds of Barbadians at this time. One would have thought that the Barbados Labour Party would have nominated its most respected voice on economic matters to deliver its reply to the budget.

Owen Arthur might have gotten arrogant and even vindictive in his latter years as Prime Minister but he is still a respected voice on issues pertaining to the economy and the fiscal options of this country. A David Thompson budget responded to by Owen Arthur would have been an enthralling encounter from which Barbados could have benefited. Rather, because of the hasty decision by Owen Arthur to give up the leadership of his party in the wake of its defeat, he and all Barbados were forced to endure three hours of rambling diatribe that at the end of the day added nothing to the national debate of ‘whither Barbados’ in the throes of a regional and international economic, energy and food crisis.

Not only was Mottley lacking in focus, but also she ought to be tutored in the art of ‘where and when’ in politics. This was the occasion for her to be seen in a statesmanlike manner. She needed to display glimpses of her political maturity and growth in her new position. Rather, her inability to acknowledge ‘anything good’ in what her opponent does, as well as her tendency to want always to “take her opponent out”, did little for the softening of her image, which the new Vidal Sasson hair style and designer clothing are intended to achieve.

Previously I wrote on the folly of political makeovers, especially in circumstances where an individual is already defined by the public. I did not think David Thompson needed to look like anyone other than David Thompson to be embraced by the electorate of Barbados. I thought then and still feel now that Thompson was put through the hottest fires and the coldest winters by the Barbadian public, to ensure his preparedness for the job. He did not become Prime Minister of Barbados one day sooner or one day later than he deserved to.

Similarly, flashy hairstyles and designer female clothing are not going to significantly alter the image of Mia Mottley in Barbados. She is already defined. Her party will have to determine whether it can risk going into an election with her as its leader. But, dressing her like a political mannequin is not going to change the image that most Barbadians have acquired of her.

Voters in Barbados have always been very discerning in the selection of their leaders. Sir Henry Forde and Sir Harold St. John were among those rejected in the past 30 years, not because of their lack of intellect or grasp of politics, but because of other deficiencies that were no where near as damning as those associated with the current leader of the BLP.

So strategically, the Labour Party is making some errors. Its public makeover of Mia Mottley is becoming comical. The change is too drastic. She simply does not look right. Then, there is the issue of her declaration of $3.5 million in assets. That, I predict, will prove a costly political error. This is not ‘political hunting season’, therefore that stunt will be placed under the microscope at a later date.

Next week we shall analyze why Mia Mottley was unable to identify with the positives of the 2008 budget and whether her indifference to sensitive issues had anything to do with her never having caught a school bus, not being a parent and having never come face to face with poverty or other social hardships.


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113 responses to “Mottley's Budget Reply Of Errors”


  1. Dear Temohpab:

    Re: your post of July 18th at 7:21 p.m.

    “I am happy and proud to be a buller”

    There I’ve said it.


  2. @Temohpab

    Barbados National Bank is owned by Republic Bank. RBTT is a separate entity. It is RBTT that was bought by RBC which has nothing to do with BNB, so that in Barbados we now have BNB owned by Republic and RBTT which was a separate entity gobbled by RBC.

    Hope this helps!


  3. More power to you J. However as of now I will not be entertaining such trivial persuits as the homo agenda as my stand has already been made known. There are far more pressing issues affecting my people, many of whom perish, due to lack of knowledge and the heart of this problem is that many of them do not read but spend endless hours with their heads glued to a cell phone, sitting in front of the idiot-box watching and digesting American filth or playing nonsensical video games.

    Gladstone Holder must be rolling in his grave due to the stark lack of articulation and inadequate use of grammar in our nation’s news periodicals on a daily basis by journalists and the editors it seems are lacking as well for not thoroughly perusing this lethargic verbiage and putting some red ink through it. Harold Hoyte you are sorely missed.

    Now as a Barbadian I will never deposit a cent on BNB as it is not Barbadian owned. I have for years now patronised two credit unions . The credit union movement is largely responsible for so many Bajans both in the low and high income bracket being able to own property and to establish their own businesses.

    Now I’ve observed that there is a subtle force at work seeking to regulate the credit union movement. The commercial banks for years have been hellbent on muscling in on credit unions and it seems that this government is in cahoots with the robber barons towards this end.

    Wake up bajans and be very aware that our children’s legacies are threatened. Now’s not the time for divisiveness. If you are truly a Bajan, with Barbados’ interests first and foremost on your agenda, speak up and be heard, regardless of your persuasion. That’s all that matters.


  4. Insularity, Xenophobia, homophobia, myopia and ignorance is a horrible combination of issues!


  5. A phobia is a fear “me” and this man fears nothing or anyone but the Almighty who solely has the ultimate power to create and destroy.

    If I be branded a xenophobe due to my stance on maintaining the Barbadian Identity and cultural uniqueness, then so be it. It’s just a word that is as insignificant as a mote blown in the wind.

    You accuse me of being insular. So far from the truth fella. I am by no means narrow minded or do I lead the isolated existence of a recluse. I am well-read, have travelled extensively and have close friends and associates on five continents. I am also conducive to positive change, admit if I am in error but will call a spade a spade if need be.

    I am neither narrow-minded, short-sighted nor intolerant but detest those with ulterior motives and con games. I am a firm believer that a person either stands up for his beliefs and defends such with every fibre of his/her being or fall for every scheme put forward by those who imagine that they have a monopoly in cunning and all others are stupid or oblivious enough to swallow their rhetoric hook, line and sinker.

    “Ignorance?” Man please! I am a renaissance man in every sense of the term. You are an infant in intellect as far as I see. Instead of needlessly throwing words around, post something of consequence to the betterment of Barbados. If you don’t think “The Darling Of The Caribbes” is worth salvaging and preserving, I sure do.


  6. Temophab: soon you will come to realize the practice of those bent on re-engineering society’s views on devientcy, via social contruction. Some of the tools use to achieve this is to attack the objector by labeling them with these exotic terms such homophobic, xenophobic etc.. Such attacks and attempts are designed to shut you up. They can only succeed if you allow them.

    Just so you know, It’s almost 5 years now that i have been labeled as racist/xenophobe the likes of ENOCH POWELL by at least two bajans on the Barbados forum.com. I have not budge from my position on illegal immigrants and unmanaged migration.


  7. I got your back Adrian. You have to stick to your guns in these issues and believe me many are listening and taking to heart our comments. Gone are the days when a politician drops by every 5 years around election time and drops off a pint and a half bottle of rum, a few cans of corned beef and a tin can of biscuits and he or she is guaranteed the vote.

    Today’s electorate are educated not only academically but to the ways of the world and are not so easily hookwinked. Incidentally I see the practice of road-repair and construction during election time is still very much in vogue. They need to cease this nonsense now and do right by the people.

    Anyhow my brother, keep the faith and stay strong in you convictions.

  8. Wishing in Vain Avatar
    Wishing in Vain

    Much to my amusement when I read the online version of the Nation today ( I have stopped buying the Nation) there is absolutely no mention of the PM’S statement that under his watch no post will exceed the Max of 3 months after a change of Gov’t, this in itself is a massive step forward, so unlike the previous method of the last adminstration where the new Gov’t is burdened with loyal blp supporters working under a DLP adminstration.

    This is one giant step forward towards proper goverance.

    Tell me how does this compare with people given jobs for which they cannot deliver the product?

    Or a case we have before us now where Dennis Clarke can have his girlfriend being given a job that he recommends her for because Arawak had to get the rid of her for non performance in her role and the same NUPW had to get the rid of her, she kept her job intact by sleeping around with the leadership of the NUPW such as Joe Goddard and the same Dennis Clarke.

    Then maybe she should also explain how a son of the union leadership landed a job for which he is not qualified.


  9. WIV, I hope be Christ that you are a woman because if you are not lets repeat after me “I am happy and proud to be a buller” lol.


  10. Mia will not lead the BLP into the next election. No leader of the BLP who accepted leadership after it lost has ever survived! Bree St. John, Henry Forde (the best PM we never had!) and now Mia.

    Let’s not worry about her… Hammie La and George Payne will be her undoing and someone else will emerge.

  11. Wishing In Vain Avatar
    Wishing In Vain

    Hammie La and George Payne will be her undoing and someone else will emerge.

    You know that the short man not finished with her as yet, he will grind (I used that word with some care) her into submission.

  12. Wishing in Vain Avatar
    Wishing in Vain

    SO SO SO TRUE !!!!!!

    IT’S NOT MIA’S FAULT!

    Chances are twenty years from now all that will be remembered of Prime Minister David Thompson’s first budget is the removal of bus fares for school children and measures to spur the construction of low-income houses. By the same token, the reply of Opposition Leader, Mia Mottley will be recalled as the one in which she declared herself a millionaire three times over.
    In retrospect Miss. Mottley would have been better advised to associate herself with the removal of bus fares and the simplification of access to the Student Revolving Loan Fund. She should also have welcomed the removal of VAT from building materials for low income houses and shared the joy of those less fortunate groups who received significant increases in pensions, grants and other allowances.
    None of these measures can be considered the proverbial ‘silver bullet’. They will not make poor people rich. They will not guarantee citizens the standard and quality of life they aspire to and truly deserve. What they will do is signal to less fortunate groups in our society that the government is aware and that it cares. They will also create a new sense of hope in our citizens that there is a silver lining behind the dark, economic cloud that hovers over our region.
    By going out of his way to reach out to persons relying directly on the state for financial assistance and also by removing the few remaining obstacles to low income earners owning a piece of the rock, and living proudly on the rock, the Prime Minister reflected a knowledge of and appreciation for the plight of this group in our society.
    There was a time when what Barbadians would term his “light complexion” got in the way of David Thompson portraying and being portrayed as having a working class background. Few know of David Thompson as a student catching public transport or working part time for ‘next in to nothing’ to help make ends meet. But, the reality is that David Thompson is as working class as 90 per cent of the Barbadian population is.
    In recent years, we heard of another Prime Minister whose father was a shopkeeper. This reality was milked for every ounce of political capital, but clinical analysis will show that precious little was done by that individual, when he had the opportunity, to ameliorate the suffering of poor people.
    The figures revealed by Prime Minister Thompson speak for themselves. This country has been mighty cruel to its less fortunate. We gave millions and millions of dollars in tax credits and waivers to the filthy rich wanting to own homes and conduct business in our country. We permitted companies to come into Barbados and rape our treasury dry, in the construction of such notorious edifices as the new prison, the expansion of the ABC Highway and the airport. We gave million dollar jobs to contractors who, back then, could not differentiate a hammer from a chisel, but yet, the disabled child was given a $20 a week pittance as if he or she does not belong. All this was during a period of so-called unprecedented growth and prosperity.
    Partisan politics aside, an Opposition Leader, in touch and in tune with the working class, would have acknowledged the social concessions granted in the budget and would even have gone a step further to suggest that they were not enough. But not so with the holder of that office in Barbados! Those issues appear of little significance or relevance to her. She suggested that matters of global warming, climate change, East-West relations and the EPA were more deserving of attention and prominence.
    It is inconceivable for a person to speak for three hours in reply to a budget and not comment on the impact of the removal of bus fares for school children or the 500 house lots that are now available to low income earners. How can one not share in the joy and the relief of pensioners, the indigent and the disabled? How could access to $100 000 by young Barbadians wishing to study abroad be a non-issue?
    I was completely floored by this clear oversight until the Leader of the Opposition declared her assets. Still six years short of age fifty, Miss. Mottley boasted to the country that she has amassed $3.5 million. Working class Barbadians spend their entire lives trying to amass a net worth of $0.5 million. But Mia Mottley, with half her working life still ahead of her, is already where 90 per cent of Barbadians will never reach.
    She could not identify with the social benefits of the budget, because, with $3.5 million in assets, they mean nothing to her. She is not a parent. She did not have to take out a loan to acquire her tertiary education. She has never had to share a bed or a bedroom involuntarily and her address has always been that of a suburb.
    Owen Arthur’s father was a shopkeeper. David Thompson’s father was a painter. They each boast a working class background. So too did Erskine Sandiford.
    The point here is that Barbados is at both a fortunate and an unfortunate stage in its development where some of its aspiring leaders have not a clue what ordinary, everyday Barbadians encounter and endure. We must think on these things!

  13. From North of the Salt Pond Avatar
    From North of the Salt Pond

    Funny this thing call politics before elections and there was a funeral, you would be seeing representatives of both political parties vying to be seen as the caring person and the attentive one.

    Now as was the case today they still continue to bury the dead but no longer are we seeing people like the former PM , the former Deputy PM or the former AG at funerals any longer or trying for that Kodak moment, today was a classic example of this new style when in the parish of St.Peter a very loyal son of the soil was laid to rest and other than a Minister of this current Gov’t Mr Haynesley Benn and a Senator not a single member from the opposition showed up, not even the Former PM who knew this deceased person extermely well and in whos constituency this person resided up until his untimely passing.

    Elections and politics have a way of extracting the worst out of some.

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