Banner promoting anonymous crime reporting with a phone and contact number 1 800 TIPS (8477), featuring the Crime Stoppers logo and a QR code for submitting tips.

← Back

Your message to the BLOGMASTER was sent

Submitted by Ziggy Greene

 

Voter annihilation
The Democratic Labour Party (DLP) was wiped out in the 2018 general elections in Barbados. It lost all 30 seats that constitute the House of Assembly. So devastating was the defeat that the DLP won only one or two of individual constituency voting boxes. Previous strongholds of St John and St Lucy were swept away like coastal lands in a tsunami. Many pundits, political and otherwise, have prophesied, more in hope than serious thought, that the DLP is now dead and defunct. It is deceased they declare; it cannot rise again. Good riddance to bad rubbish was how one Barbados Labour Party supporter, a friend, framed it.

And so it seems after the election if one drove along George Street, Belleville, the headquarters of the DLP affected a forlorn and shabby appearance, a reflection of the state of the party. For weeks nothing was heard from former Cabinet Members. Not even from the former PM Freundel Stuart; he remained as silent after the loss as he had been during his leadership.

The show must go on
Nevertheless after sometime, an election for party leadership was held. It pitted Guy Hewitt, former UK High Commissioner from 2014-2018 against Verla De Peiza, a previous unsuccessful candidate for the party. Hewitt represented a break from the past and De Peiza a continuation thereof albeit one who was never in government. Without going into the reasons why, De Peiza won.

Can DePeiza make the DLP viable again?
That is question on the lips of party faithful and Barbadians who want to see a robust opposition. After two years in the leadership role it is difficult to tell if the question has been answered. What comes out of George Street is an amalgam of worn out political utterances and defensive statements that give no clue to the personal political underpinnings of Miss De Peiza or what a DLP Administration under her leadership would portend. There is no inkling on where she stands on the pressing issues that plagued Barbados, whether it is crime, social or economic concerns.

Every party suffers defeat
At some point a party will lose an election. At some point the political philosophies of a party will clash with the wishes of voters. Between 1932 and 1952 during and after the great depression, and the Second World War Americans favoured the Democratic Party for its social policies. Between 1980 and 1992 the Democratic Party was in opposition to the Republicans in presidential elections when Americans opted for the conservative policies of Ronald Reagan. At home, the DLP won 24-3 over the BLP in 1986. In 1999 the BLP defeated the DLP 26- 2 and in 2018 30-0.

It ought to be pointed that the Democratic Party in the US began life as a conservative party and the Republicans as more liberal per the America definitions of those terms. They flipped ideologies around the 1970s although it can be argued that the change started around 1932 when FDR instituted social and welfare reforms to combat the great depression. In Barbados, there is no defined political ideological demarcation between the DLP and the BLP. Demonstrably, political parties form and reform or reinvent themselves according to the philosophies of their leaders and members, and the voting tendencies of the public.

The DLP Party must reform
Without doubt it must. But how is that to be achieved? My advice would be to first apologise to the citizens of Barbados and to DLP members if there is a distinction or if such a specific apology is warranted. Sorry for not living up to expectations of those who voted for the DLP, Sorry for besmirching the values and name of Errol Walton Barrow and those who started the Party and carried its banner for many a year, Sorry for the failures of the past 8 or so years. Pledge that it would never be repeated. That would represent a break from the past and signal a new dispensation. One rightfully may argue that it may anger some members not least the old guard from the previous administration and that may be true. I say so what? But an apology is not the end all.

Political reform – a review
Jose Moroni in a 2009 paper about Brazilian politics considered the question of political reform and advanced seven basic but fundamental challenges, that any serious attempt at political reform must overcome.

There are to quote Maroni:-

  • Male dominance: Any system of political, economic, industrial, financial, religious or social organization in which the vast majority of the senior positions in the hierarchy are held by men.
  • Patrimonialism: Political conduct on the part of dominant elites in the exercise of public government functions whereby public resources (of the State and/or its institutions) are appropriated as if they belonged to these elites.
  • Oligarchy: A form of government in which power is concentrated in the hands of a small number of individuals who are in many cases united by family ties or political connections, and who belong to privileged social classes. Typically, oligarchies tend to be dominated by men and to function in a patrimonialist way.
  • Nepotism: The practice of individuals in positions of executive power in the State apparatus granting favours by awarding jobs to their relatives.
  • Cronyism: The exchange of favours and mutual preferential treatment by individuals in executive positions in State structures and public services.
  • Personality cults: Creating cult status for individuals in the political sphere, which leads to the devaluation of political debate and the de-politicizing of conflicts.
  • Corruption: When individuals appropriate or re-allocate public resources for private ends and are able to act with impunity and maintain themselves in power. Another aspect of corruption is that it is a way of usurping the power that rightly belongs to the people.


For ease of reference, Moroni succinctly explains those challenges. To varying degrees and deferring terms, these are comparable issues that plagued Barbados.. Nevertheless this is by no means an exhaustive list. There are other issues like encouraging a more broad-based economy, debt and debt financing, the welfare state, civil service reform, crime, targeted free university education, technical and vocational schools or studies, same sex marriage, school zoning, legal reform, and single sex schools. Coterminously, there is the matter of in- house DLP recalibration surrounding attracting new members, candidate selection restructuring, and maintenance of party headquarters.

Back to Moroni
Addressing the political scene in Brazil, Moroni offers up more incisive guidance for reform, which on examination has exogenous appeal. He advises reformers to-

  1. Strengthen direct democracy;
  2. Strengthen participative democracy;
  3. Improve representative democracy (the electoral system and political parties);
  4. Democratize information and communications;
  5. Democratize the judicial system

How germane, given what has been trending in Barbados. The President of the Senate recently resigned and has been replaced by a party insider, with no reason given for the particular appointment. The Chief Justice has retired and advertisement for a replacement has been broadcasted. Despite that, critics are confident that a party affiliate is a surety for the post.

And with the recent Throne Speech and the intent of the Government to implement measures towards same sex civil unions and republicanism, there has been some furore over whether Government should proceed unilaterally in the case of becoming a Republic or by way of referendum, as it has for same sex marriage notwithstanding the civil union stop gap.

Such political angst is ubiquitous in democratic forms of government but there are lesson to be learnt here for the DLP. Changes are not easy. They are disruptive and divisive, but they are inevitable.

My Advice to DePeiza
Scrutinize these political reforms posited by Maroni. Juxtapose them against the political landscape of Barbados and your ideals for the DLP. In detail, pen how you would realign the political principles of the DLP taking into account this framework. Promulgate it to the public along with any other reforms that you deem necessary under the circumstances.

Above all, mean it, and demonstrate that you do. We must know where you stand. We must know where you intend to take us and above all we must believe you. You may not win the next election and you may not win any election but you would have propelled the DLP into the future and perhaps ensure its existence.


Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

262 responses to “Reform or Die”


  1. Pacha…check out the parallels..

    https://youtu.be/S1L8OuhFxGA


  2. @Tron

    Well defined. De face of bajans on de book will have motivated direction.


  3. @ William Skinner September 20, 2020 7:18 PM

    The outspoken senator shot down the anti-corruption law almost single-handedly. Integrity and honor look somewhat different to me. The outspoken senator only defends the interests of overpaid workers and civil servants instead of taking care of the national debt and employers as well. For me, our Leader Mia Mottley alone has the common good of all in mind.


  4. Arthur did his damnedest to ensure that Mia wouldn’t ascend to the leadership of the BLP. After Mascoll had his falling out with the DLP Arthur brought him over and gave him a fancy title in addition to naming him an Associate Finance Minister (I think that is what it was). Arthur ganged up with some BLP members of the H of A to remove her as Leader of the Opposition when he thought that the BLP stood a chance of winning the 2013 Election.

    If Arthur had his druthers, Mia wouldn’t be leader of the BLP.


  5. The PM is spending a lot of her time on Atherley. No mention of Verla and DLP.


  6. William Skinner
    But you’re still a deposit loser and fossil posting shite from up in Georgia, a state that supports Trump overwhelming from the state legislature to Washington DC. But you ain’t leffin. A well entrenched duopoly political system; but you are not leffin. A whole black man got pursued and shot; but you ain’t leffin. Yet Bdos is everything that is wrong. Hypocrisy you say?


  7. @ Enuff
    “ Yet Bdos is everything that is wrong. Hypocrisy you say?”
    You can search the whole of BU and you would never find that I have ever written and or implied that “everything is wrong in Barbados.”
    You are a political hypocrite and you are now a political liar as well. I don’t need the “respect” of political liars and hypocrites. Wherever I am , I am a proud Barbadian. You or nobody can’t change that. Anyway, you can rest assured that the Mia I know , would never poison the kool aid. So, drink up!!


  8. Waittttttt
    When president made a speech tonight and the BU DEMS not picking it apart yet? not even talk bout her hands? WOW


  9. SargeantSeptember 20, 2020 7:55 PM Arthur did his damnedest to ensure that Mia wouldn’t ascend to the leadership of the BLP. A…. Arthur ganged up with some BLP members of the H of A to remove her as Leader of the Opposition when he thought that the BLP stood a chance of winning the 2013 Election.

    +++++

    Yup, a lot of people forget that his spitefulness to her (or opportunistic move for him) was the cause of the morons winning a second term. The second term is where is all went to hell in a handbasket (he was an advisor then too). Was running on idle, but then someone let go the handbrake, downhill.


  10. William Skinner,

    I never had a party preference. I have a people who lead the party preference. I have no love for the institution past its usefulness.


  11. Pacha…the narrative is changing..

    “Dear African governments
    It is not enough to call back home those Africans who were forcefully taken away from the Continent during the era slavery because of their dollar!
    You must give them lands and their share of the African resources instead of distributing those African value to the very people who enslaved and colonized us.
    These people were part of the African society, they had natural and legal rights to the ownership of the African good untill they were forcefully taken away leaving behind all that belong to them. Time does not erase Injustice nor does it expire crime done to our people.
    If you are calling them back home, then give them what belong to them! They dollar you think they have is no value nor an empowerment! The real value and empowerment is their share of African society which they have been deprived of for several centuries and you must give it to them.
    If we wish to bring back the golden days of African, then, this is the time to begin undoing the harms done to the African, restoring and empowering every African! Africa cannot be prosperous when the African everywhere is in systemic chains ⛓!
    Injustice there: Injustice here! Don’t just call them to come home because of their dollar, do the right thing!


  12. A picture they say is worth a thousand words.

    Old DLP guard vying for posts

    [caption id="" align="alignleft" width="485"] THE OLD Democratic Labour Party guard is back out and ready for the upcoming annual general conference. Henderson WIlliams ( left), Ronald Jones (second left), Dr Dennis Lowe ( right), James Paul (second right) and Steve Blackett (third right)have all thrown their weight behind former general secretary George Pilgrim (third left) for party president. (Picture by Jameel Springer.)[/caption]

    The announcement was made last night at a St Michael West branch meeting at St Leonard’s Boys’ School.

    Paul and Carrington join former Minister of Education Ronald Jones and former Minister of Environment Denis Lowe among those vying for the four vice-president positions.

    A well-placed source also told the DAILY NATION that former Attorney General Adriel Brathwaite, party treasurer Henderson Williams and president of the Young Democrats, Kemar Stuart, are contesting the position of general secretary.

    The highlight of the elections will be the battle for the presidency between incumbent Verla De Peiza and former general secretary George Pilgrim.

    Although the number of people contesting each post was unavailable, it is understood that at least four people are vying for general secretary.

    In providing an update on the conference ahead of last night’s meeting, general secretary Guyson Mayers said that all positions on the executive council were being contested. He also said that “workers have been selected and briefed”, they have “established protocols to ensure a fair process and set out how the COVID-19 protocols will be enforced”.

    The election of officers and members of the general council will take place on Friday between 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. and again on Saturday from 9 a.m. until 5 p.m. according to the published agenda.

    Additionally, said Mayers, there is no quota related to the number of representatives per branch. As is customary, there will be a religious service on Sunday, the final day of the three-day conference, themedReimaging A New DLP.

    A press conference will be held later this week.

    It is understood that the change in the conference date from August to this month was due in part to the COVID-19 pandemic and the inability of the branches to hold meetings for their internal elections at their regular locations, namely schools. Meetings were therefore held at party headquarters and wrapped up last month. (RA/GBM)

    Source: Nation News


  13. ^The chairman has an unhealthy obsession with the internal workings of the DLP. He needs counselling.


  14. @Greene

    Interested in getting your view of what is conveyed in the above BT story.

    Also, having listened to Senator Caswell’s view about the DLP being Barrow’s party and it has never recovered. What next?

  15. Piece the Prophet Avatar

    @Greene you said and de old man quotes

    “… Greene September 20, 2020 8:06 AM

    it is a well known secret that Gline Clarke will take up the post that Reg Farley relinquished recently and that the Min of Tourism is the preferred BLP candidate for St George North, which has become a BLP safe seat…”

    Is this seat “safe”?

    You are of this opinion why?

    I, Piece the Prophet, put it i you that THIS IS THE MOST UNSAFE SEAT that the BLP WILL EVER HAVE!

    And, further to that, should the PdP put Senator Caswell Franklyn to run for this seat, it will win this seat.

    I however fear that Reverend Atherley may not promote thus strategy AS HE SHOULD

    Barbadians have a major fear about this one party state and the Dictator Mugabe Mottley

    The BLP WILL NOT WIN THIS SEAT!


  16. All of them are a bunch of balless frauds…according to Comissiong…”de white people made them all do it” from 1966….people who number less than 8,000 while the Black majority number over 260,000 …sell out negros…from 1966..

    shame and disgrace…i won’t vote for not one of them, it’s an insult and very disrespectful to our ancestors..


  17. Has Senator Caswell indicated that he will be offering himself as a candidate? If he is interested why would the PDP sacrifice him in a BLP stronghold? Gline Clarke et al boasted last night the SGN has never dropped out of the top five in BLP performance nationally.


  18. Piece has a point. With such a majority, the electorate may only vote to strengthen the opposition, knowing that it will not change the government. Add, that many young people who have never voted, now can vote. Times change.

    Mind you, it may be a one term seat, very likely. When the vote counts, they likely will revert to the BLP, unless the then incumbent does a great job.

    Senator Franklyn would be a great choice, because people know that he is unafraid and willing to speak out.

    Piece…the political strategist.

  19. Piece the Prophet Avatar

    @ my dearest SSS

    I pray you and baby are doing well.

    Must be 1 year old now and moving around fast and keeping you vigilant

    De ole man grans dies keep me busy too heheheheh

    You said and I quote

    “…What the DLP did while in power pushed Barbados to the brink [OF DUSASTER – my words] and made them infamous.

    To remove that dark stain, every single one of them, including Verla, must go.

    There can be nothing gained from going back to recycle waste or reusing garbage. That is how the SSS feels about a party she once supported.”

    Only a dog goes back to its vomit AND IF BAJANS GO BACK TO THE DLP, they deserve what they get!

    The issue is not so much what they go back to, but what they go forward to!

    This by-election will define the coming General Election because it will show how ready 3rd parties and independents are AND HOW FEARFUL THE BAJAN ELECTORATE IS of a one woman dictatorship!

    This election IS NOTHING ELSE but what bajans are afraid is happening!

    It will be the test if if people live Mugabe Mottley or if they frighten if she!

    Nothing else!

    The problem is that the PdP’s election machinery is obviously not optimalized up to now

    We will see how they ruse to the occasion

    Mugabe Mottley jes pretend to launch an ecinomic stimulus of $300 million of the people’s money to fund thus by election.

    But the PdP and others still grappling with their national distribution mechanisms


  20. Morning peoples, how about some light hearted fun? Verla an dem getting sting. In de heart a de country, St.Garge Narf.


  21. If the DP lose this seat, then carry close the doors at George Street. Tell Verla an dem guh long home.

    If dem cyan win dis, dey cyan win nuttin!


  22. The DLP campaign for St.George North.

  23. Piece the Prophet Avatar

    @ Crusoe

    As usual you can be relied in fir your clinicsl remarks.

    You saud and de ole msn quotes

    “…Mind you, it may be a one term seat, very likely. When the vote counts, they likely will revert to the BLP, unless the then incumbent does a great job…”

    De ole man would agree with you that it would be a one term seat, WERE IT NOT FOR COVID and the fact thst this BLP government has shown that, were it not for its public relations trickery, IT IS AS DEVOID OF IDEAS AS THE THOMPSON/STUART bunglers of the Lost Decade!

    Dem ent got a clue about how to run the country and that is why Mugabe Mottley change dem round in she cabinet reshuffle!

    Especially Oblong Head Kerrie Simmonds who was fvucking up tourism, the Covid Infected and Affected mainstay of the economy

    You continued

    “…Senator Franklyn would be a great choice, because people know that he is unafraid and willing to speak out…”

    That single characteristic is enough to overcome any campaign thst Mugabe runs SHIRT OF RIGGING THE BALLOT BOXES!

    A thing that she is getting ready to do anyways

    But a significant amount of Bajans are still of the type that want good honest politicians who will speak their minds IN THE FACE OF SUCH DESPOTISM!

    He can stay there because his currency would be secure if only for those reasons BACKBONE & BALLS!


  24. So Mia was on stage last night telling to same ole lies about the last decade
    The dlp turn will come and proved her lies to be unfounded and simply based on political propaganda
    I think Mia served over 100 gallons of koolaid last night
    Early political campaign it certainly was


  25. Waru

    Thanks
    Thanks


  26. @Crusoe

    You have to spend money in a campaign, Caswell will not engage in the behaviour he is on record as criticizing. We know the young people on the bloc have to see blenzers passing. They will not vote against the government because of wanting to strengthen the opposition. This is SGN you are talking about.


  27. as much as i like Caswell he could not beat a BLP candidate running in SGN. i reiterate, for the moment, it is a BLP stronghold. Gline Clarke made it so.

    the BLP is still v popular and its faults, such as they are, havent redounded to the general populace yet


  28. The chairman has an unhealthy obsession with the internal workings of the DLP. He needs counselling.

    Hal Austin

    What happens in the DLP should interest everybody.

    But you know, um is funny you say that, because you got an unhealthy obsession with focusing all you attention pun what the chairman say and do. Now that is something you definitely need counseling for.

    Or maybe um is time you stop being on the down low and come out the closet.


  29. The St. George seats are also bellwethers.


  30. We are seeing superior political strategy being played by Mottley’s BLP. Switching out a candidate whose shelf life has expired wth a youthful candidate at midterm to ready for 2023. In the process she gets a chance to test the political climate based on the result. At the same time it creates a headache for the DLP leadership.


  31. i will get back to you re George Pilgrim. i have to see and digest what he said.

    yes, back in the day St George were bellwether seats but no more. they are solidly Blp until…


  32. On the eve of an AGM it was interesting to note the sparse audience.


  33. Robert,

    So true. We should all be interested in the inner workings of political parties. The inner workings reveal the character of the politicians and the culture of the party.

    No serious journalist would be unaware of that. He is not unaware of that.

    So the question is – why does he make such inane statements?

    The man is an enigma. Strangely contradictory in many ways.


  34. BU too sweet. Caswell win what? You ever hear Caswell advance a policy yet?🤣🤣🤣


  35. what is so exciting about a party which seems to think its future lie in the past? these blighted ex ministers need to move on. work behind the scenes if they wish but step out of the way. time for some newish faces and new ideals. reform or die


  36. @David
    Re picture
    What is wrong with those folks taking an interest in the activities of the party? You encourage the elderly to come out and vote yet you want some people to stay at home, they have every right to support the candidate of their choice even if it is the wrong candidate.

    There are many people who just don’t know their history even if it is recent history e.g. I was hearing about Johnny Cheltenham when I was a schoolboy and yet he was/still active as a BLP member; Henry Forde was around until recently and if memory serves he was a member of the “Under Forties” group that had reservations about Barbados Independence yet not a peep about that segment of “old guard”.

    The DLP needs every member it can muster it can’t afford to jettison or sideline members because they are seen as members of an “old guard” whatever that means.


  37. @Sargeant

    The point being discussed is about presenting as candidates.


  38. @David
    The point on many topics on the blog is whatever you make it….. and I defer to you
    REFORM 😊


  39. @Sargeant September 20, 2020 7:55 PM “If Arthur had his druthers, Mia wouldn’t be leader of the BLP.”

    Wha’ you meaning?

    You din hear Mia say at Arthur funeral that “Owen is the best thing that ever happened to me”

    i am not sure if she meant the living Owen.

    Or the dead Owen.


  40. @Greene September 20, 2020 7:08 PM “Caswell said that before he died, Arthur and him mended fences to the extent that Arthur told him some of the reasons he opposed MAM ascension to the leader of the BLP and PM. that is quiet interesting. he also said the DLP and Barrow are one and the same and after Barrow died ”

    Since Barrow died more that 100,000 Bajans of his and subsequent generations have followed him to the Great Beyond.

    Since Barrow died more than 100,000 new Bajans, mostly black have been born. Tens of thousands of these new black Bajans have no experience of Barrow.

    Time for the old guard to get out of the way and let the young people who never knew Barrow get on with things..

    As I said recently about Tom and Owen and David and now about the Dipper.

    Barrow d’ed. He int coming back. We can’t have government by duppy.

    My father died a generation after Barrow, and I have long got over his death.

    Stupssseee!!!

    Lotta old people who want to live in the past.


  41. @Simple Simon

    Is it about old people living in the past or those in positions too lazy to massage the philosophy and plans to make the party for purpose.

    >


  42. I say mostly old people living in the past.

    I the last election of the two DLP people who came to my door, one was well over 80. He was a married man when I was in class 3, I know because I used to buy lunches from his mummy’s shop. The other was like me a 60+ retiree.

    If the DLP is to revive, and I hope that it does revive, It has to get plenty of young people on board.

    As I said before, we can’t have government by duppy.


  43. “You ever hear Caswell advance a policy yet?🤣🤣🤣”

    yeah…the whole world watched Caswell advance the policy that made all the lawyers in the parliament LOOK LIKE IDIOTS…cause they cannot adequately interpret law…and he ain’t even a lawyer….short memory already forgot the 2nd Assistant COP brouhaha.

    people Enuff want nothing to do with Bajan lawyers since then…


  44. Salemite
    You proved my point Guh so👉🏽!!


  45. @David, I know that you appreciate the implications of what you said.

    Money has to be spent, blenzers pass.

    Yet we wonder why things cannot improve morally and ethically?

    Didn’t Grynner say that ‘no corned beef an’ bicuits, cyan swell up my brain’?

    Yet here we are in 2020, vote buying a norm and yet we scratch our heads in despair, at a collapse in ethics?

    We do not need a bright light and a hallelulah moment to understand what the issue is, do we?


  46. Fowl slave…it was not Caswell looking like the idiot…ya can’t change reality with slave philosophy…


  47. @Crusoe

    The blogmaster is very aware of the current state of things. It is why we are manipulated as a people. How many blogs have been posted on cultural relativism?


  48. The dlp cannot survive soley on the youth a mix blend is more appropriate
    People tend to ask for change but take plenty time to accept it
    It seems as if the party faithful has fallen into the trap of egos
    One should take note that the most noise being made about the old Guard is coming from the blp camp


  49. Since fowl Enuff is starting to sound like Comissiong, it’s obvious the whole political system including the business model on the island needs to be overhauled, stripped bare and rebuilt, since the black leaders are so weak they could not jail those nasty minorities whom Comissiong claimed controls the economy, he should be ashamed to say that, he should have added that it could never have happened if the same black faces in the parliament did not allow it, if they had JAILED the tiefing, racist minorities for violating the Black population’s rights and stealing from the treasury and pension fund and fro the racism and apartheid, which are also crimes….but they could not do that could they, because they were all tiefing too.

    Black people in Barbados have to TAKE BACK THEIR COUNTRY…from all these frauds and crooks..

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

Trending

Discover more from Barbados Underground

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading