Submitted by Roland R Clarke PhD (UPenn 95), Caribbean Energy Consultant, Member of the Private Financing Advisory Network (PFAN), Barbados – www.linkedin.com/in/rolandclarke

A solution is only required when there is a problem for resolution.  It seems to me that the kernel “problem” in Barbados’ governance arrangements at this time, is the failure of the President to act with timeliness in using the power bestowed to that office under the current Constitution.  For me, this is not a problem per sec, but rather a potential lost opportunity.

In order to resolve that particular “problem”, all that needs to happen is that: 

(a) The President should reach out to those who are known to be in opposition to the Government within the context of our recent national general elections; or 

(b) Politically active “individuals” from the known non-government political parties could/should offer themselves to the President to serve as Opposition Senators. This notwithstanding that any “qualified person” can offer themselves to the President irrespective of party affiliation or otherwise; AND

(c) The President shall use her best judgement to make the final decision and selection of two Opposition Senators.  

One more thing, the Prime Minister (PM) must select one more “qualified” individual to be a Government Senator. The notion of “keeping a seat” for an unqualified individual is untenable.  That problem could easily be fixed after the fact.  It is also recognised that not all qualified individuals may be available right away to take the oath of office and sit in the Senate.  The key is for the PM to make the selection NOW. 

Once the Parliament is fully “constituted” as per the argument of at least one constitutional lawyer of national repute, then any and all constitutional changes could be properly laid before the Senate AFTER the fact. 

In sum, the current impasse is artificially and prematurely created. It only serves to potentially lay bare an intent to insert “political parties” into the Constitution of Barbados for the first time at least since 1966. So far, I have not heard any objections from any political party (as a corporate person in its own right) to the proposed change to the Constitution regarding the insertion of a role for political parties. The silence of the political parties speaks volumes.

Clearly, the solution has predated the problem!

I assert that the premature creation of the problem above also lays bare the potential for a qualified citizen and resident of Barbados to seek leave of the President to bring a Constitutional motion against the President, if such a motion cannot be brought immediately and directly before the High Court of Barbados. Surely all concerned citizens and residents of Barbados would wish for the most vaunted governance institutions of Barbados to be protected at all times. We must protect the King of our National Chest Board, should we not?

The constitutional basis for my analysis above is given in alphabetical listing as follows:

A. Choosing the Leader of the Opposition in the Lower House of Barbados:

Section 74(2) of the Barbados Constitution states in part:

“(2) Whenever the Governor-General has occasion to appoint a Leader of the Opposition he shall appoint the member of the House of Assembly who, in his judgment, is best able to command the support of a majority of those members who do not support the Government, or if there is no such person, the member of that House who, in his judgment, commands the support of the largest single group of such members who are prepared to support one leader:

Provided that this subsection shall have effect in relation to any period between a dissolution of Parliament and the day on which the next election of members of the House of Assembly is held as if Parliament had not been dissolved…” etc..

B. Two Senators to be Appointed by the Leader of the Opposition. I took the liberty of pre-supposing that these two Senators would be “in opposition” to the Government. However, the Constitution is silent on my supposition. See

Section 36 of the Barbados Constitution states:

“36. (1) The Senate shall consist of twenty-one persons who, being qualified for appointment as Senators in accordance with the provisions of this Constitution, have been so appointed in accordance with the provisions of this section. 

(2) Twelve Senators shall be appointed by the Governor-General, acting in accordance with the advice of the Prime Minister, by instrument under the Public Seal. 

(3) Two Senators shall be appointed by the Governor-General, acting in accordance with the advice of the Leader of the Opposition, by instrument under the Public Seal. 

(4) Seven Senators shall be appointed by the Governor-General, acting in his discretion, by instrument under the Public Seal, to represent religious, economic or social interests or such other interests as the Governor-General considers ought to be represented:

Provided that before appointing any person under this subsection the Governor-General shall consult such persons as, in his discretion, he considers can speak for those interests and ought to be consulted.”

C. The two Houses of Parliament “may” meet at the time for a limited purpose at the time of writing this article.

Section 50(1) of the Barbados Constitution states:

“50. (1) Subject to the provisions of this Constitution, each House may regulate its own procedure and for this purpose may make Standing Orders. 

(2) Each House may act notwithstanding any vacancy in its membership and the presence or participation of any person not entitled to be present at or to participate in the proceedings of the House shall not invalidate those proceedings.”

D. The issue of a quorum is only relevant during the “sitting” of the Senate. It seems to me that a “sitting” can only occur after the initial establishment of the Senate. See –

Section (52) of the Barbados Constitution states:

52. (1) If at any time during a sitting of the Senate objection is taken by a member that there is not a quorum present and, after such interval as may be prescribed by the Standing Orders of the Senate, the person presiding ascertains that there is still not a quorum present, he shall thereupon adjourn the Senate. 

(2) For the purposes of this section a quorum of the Senate shall consist of eight Senators besides the person presiding.

E. The President is “required” to act in lieu of the Leader of the Opposition, “under the current circumstances in Barbados” at the time of writing this article (at least in my opinion given the use of the word “shall” below). 

Section 75 of the Barbados Constitution states:

“75. During any period in which there is a vacancy in the office of Leader of the Opposition by reason of the fact that no Leader of opposition. person is both qualified in accordance with this Constitution for, and willing to accept, appointment to that office, the Governor-General shall- 

(a) act in his discretion in the exercise of any function in respect of which it is provided in this Constitution that the Governor-General shall act in accordance with the advice of the Leader of the Opposition; and

(b) act on the recommendation of the Prime Minister in the exercise of any function in respect of which it is provided in this Constitution that the Governor-General shall act on the recommendation of the Prime Minister after consultation with the Leader of the Opposition.”

Reference: Do note that the quotes above are taken from the full text version of the Barbados Constitution, posted on the web site of the Organisation of American States (OAS). Since the posting of this full text document, the Barbados Parliament has recently documented thirty-six (36) instances of constitutional amendments in a piecemeal fashion on their website. My current understanding is that the thirty-six (36) documents speak to amendments having to do with the recent transition to republic status by Barbados. See the full text version of the Barbados Constitution at – https://www.oas.org/dil/the_constitution_of_barbados.pdf

My two bits,

172 responses to “Evidence of a Solution Seeking a Problem in the Current Governance Arrangements of Barbados!”


  1. Correction – CSI crap IN my head.


  2. Even the Reverent Joe knows Ms. Mockley is gaslighting Barbados!!

    https://barbadostoday.bb/2022/02/17/house-of-assembly-should-delay-meetings-atherley/


  3. Followed a link, saw this and placed it here.. Will not comment.

    “I know a young, rather successful Barbadian who says that he ‘thanks God’ that his ancestors came to the island as slaves, as he dreads to think of the lifestyle he would be experiencing if he was living in the African town his forefathers came from. He added that he felt more affinity to Britain than he does to Africa.”


  4. Constitution ? what constitution ? dere is oil in dem dar seas.

    Guyana our new best friends. lol


  5. TheOGazertsFebruary 17, 2022 7:42 PM

    Followed a link, saw this and placed it here.. Will not comment.

    “I know a young, rather successful Barbadian who says that he ‘thanks God’ that his ancestors came to the island as slaves, as he dreads to think of the lifestyle he would be experiencing if he was living in the African town his forefathers came from. He added that he felt more affinity to Britain than he does to Africa.”

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    I am not the young rather successful Bajan but the reason I am grateful my slave ancestors came to Barbados is because had they been in the consignment of the African chief which he sent to Arab lands in the East, all of the males would have had all of their manly parts removed and I would have in Arab blood.

    The females would have gone east as concubines for their Arab owners.

    Not that I have anything against having in Arab blood, just that I would not be who I am today!!

    I don’t feel any affinity to Britain or Africa but plenty to Barbados.

    Thank God they were in the consignment of slaves earmarked by the African chief to go west, to the New World.

    In fact, come to think of it, I have ancestors who were Sephardic Jews from Spain and Portugal so it is very possible I may have in some Arab blood from the trans Sahara trade in African slaves which predated the transatlantic slave trade by over a millennia.

    I don’t feel any affinity to either Spain or Portugal either even though they are both offering me reparations for kicking my ancestors out.

    I don’t have any plans to claim those reparations for the simple reason that my navel string buried in Barbados..

    https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/spain-is-inviting-back-jews-expelled-from-the-country-in-the-16th-century-but-don-t-mention-the-muslims-9322518.html


  6. @John
    I was not expecting a reply as I just wanted to show some of the silly thinking that is ongoing.

    Your reply, though horrible is somewhat better as you were comparing two different types of slavery.

    Somehow the youngster seem to think that slavery was an all expense paid, all inclusive vacation for his ancestors.

    If necessary, I would thank God for being who I am, but there would not be one word of thanks for enslavement of my ancestors.


  7. How silly! In different circumstances, your parents would not have met and so there would have been no YOU.

    No logic whatsoever!


  8. It is possible you missed my point.

    If necessary, I would thank God for being who I am, but there would not be one word of thanks for enslavement of my ancestors.


  9. “I know a young, rather successful Barbadian who says that he ‘thanks God’ that his ancestors came to the island as slaves, as he dreads to think of the lifestyle he would be experiencing if he was living in the African town his forefathers came from. He added that he felt more affinity to Britain than he does to Africa.”

    if you watch Amazing Grace about Abolition of Slavery that was also an argument used by British parliament to continue their trade

    Africa had 14,000,000 taken as Slaves and double that for those who died on the slave ships, they were bred for 20 generations up to 15 generations

    as the resident Bu mathematician could you work out a rough estimate of the total number of slaves whose lives were a living hell

    if you ain’t sulking


  10. The Human Race
    Africa was ahead Europeans made it behind
    now Africans think they are lesser than Europeans
    The Man has played a number on your mind


  11. bred for 20 generations up to 15 children per mothering slave


  12. TheOGazertsFebruary 18, 2022 9:43 AM

    @John
    I was not expecting a reply as I just wanted to show some of the silly thinking that is ongoing.

    Your reply, though horrible is somewhat better as you were comparing two different types of slavery.

    Somehow the youngster seem to think that slavery was an all expense paid, all inclusive vacation for his ancestors.

    If necessary, I would thank God for being who I am, but there would not be one word of thanks for enslavement of my ancestors.

    ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    Slavery is slavery.

    I would suggest every one alive today is more than likely a descendant of slaves.

    … quite apart from the fact that we have been/are all slaves to sin.

    Nothing a human can do about the past except move on and thank God for whatever circumstances placed him/her on this earth at this time and in this place.

    It is the freedom to choose to accept the free gift of redemption He has provided for which He must be thanked.

    Everyone has that freedom including slaves, and there are more slaves today than at any time.


  13. Best things in life are free, regardless of your circumstance.


  14. It is good to know that the minister wants to build 10000 new houses in the next 5 years for the impoverished masses.

    With this, Lord Maloney, the master of the plantation called Barbados, can easily compensate his loss from his patriotic deal with this company with the disreputable name.


  15. “Nothing a human can do about the past except move on and thank God for whatever circumstances placed him/her on this earth at this time and in this place.”

    We have a slight difference of opinion here. I believe we can thank the Good Lord for our existence and that we can separate that from how we got here (through the horrific suffering of others).

    We are here.. we cannot change that.
    Our fore-parents suffered to come here
    … we cannot change that. We don’t have to sing the same song for both events.


  16. TheO,

    That was meant for John.


  17. 10,000 at $100 each is $1M dollars.
    10,000 at $1,000 each is $10M dollars.
    You can do the rest for yourself


  18. Thank God for giving me life? Why should I do that?

    If I wasn’t here then I wouldn’t know that I wasn’t here.

    Therefore, I could miss nothing.

    Do people even think about what they say?

    “The best things in life are free!”

    You have the heart to say that?????????????????????????????????

    Oh dear!


  19. @Donna,
    Good morning,
    How are you today?
    I was not expecting a response from anyone but it appears as if I gave 🐇/🐰 rabbit a carrot.


  20. TheO,

    Good morning to you too! I am doing fine and hope that you are too.

    My responses were meant for John.


  21. DonnaFebruary 18, 2022 9:53 AM

    How silly! In different circumstances, your parents would not have met and so there would have been no YOU.

    No logic whatsoever!

    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

    It is only Grasshopper, relax.

    But you have a point, those going East got the cruelest cut.

    Thank God my ancestors got taken west.


  22. Good news!

    Our Honourable Lord Marshal Dale will soon appoint a grand constitutional reform commission. I ask him to send us the drafts in advance so that we can ensure that the pre-eminent position of our Supreme Leader and her movement, as well as the Mottley Youth, are properly reflected in the Constitution.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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