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Wow, who said a week is a long time in politics?

The emergence of Ralph Thorne if nothing else has spiced up the political pot in Barbados. Until his crossing of the floor about two weeks ago it was all negative political chatter and bleak outlook mostly directed at the Democratic Labour Party (DLP).

Chances are – we will know in the fullness of time – if Ralph Thorne’s attempt to breath political life into a moribund DLP may yet come to nought. Lest we forget the DLP was decimated in the 2018 and 2022 general elections, losing all 30 seats contested. By any measure it was an unequivocal and unprecedented rejection of the DLP continuing to struggle with recovery.

It is obvious, even to a casual observer, Thorne was strategic in his decision making to return to the DLP although his reentry was not the smoothest. All things concerned his initial objective appears to have been achieved – we will have to wait to observe what backroom deal was negotiated between the old and new guard. Clearly Thorne has the upper hand as the sitting member of the House of Assembly, however, Yearwood’s effort at makeover of the party, ‘control’ of the DLP Executive and the public’s continuing negative perception of the DLP post 2018 would have given him some leverage at the negotiating table after retired trade unionist and DLP stalwart Bobby Morris had to be parachuted in to navigate a truce between the old and new guard that threatened to derail Thorne’s plan.

No doubt Thorne’s plan was to use earned media created by the 2024-2025 Estimates. and to a large extent he has achieved the objective. Thorne’s acerbic interventions during the Estimates debate has added to the theatre of local politics, however, the polity remains critically compromised. It is still a concern our governance system remains severely hobbled by the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) winning all seats in parliament.

It is early days how the Thorne dynamic will influence DLP politics to treat with a wounded member of the duopoly, clearly attempts to create a third party political movement continues to fail in Barbados. Thorne may not be the one but many are fervently praying his action will be the catalyst of good things to come to improve governance in the country.

Although early days, Thorne’s political style and approach on the opposition bench starkly contrasts with Joe Atherley who attempted a similar action in 2018. Atherley’s laid back style and lack of a mass party support has ensured relegation to being a political footnote.

After years of Barbados’ electoral system being considered one for others in the global community to emulate, the first past the post system has been exposed as wholly inadequate to support a relevant system of government. Mottley despite her performance in the international arena has been the predictable political animal on the home front by showing little appetite to throw a bone at the political opposition. An example is her refusal to amend the rule to allocate subvention monies to struggling political parties.

We will have to wait for the script Cometh the hour, cometh Ralph Thorne to play out. The blogmaster suspects a critical piece of the puzzle will be how the general membership reacts at next year’s DLP annual conference as it prepares for another general election.

The Barbados Parliament


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63 responses to “Thorne a thorn”


  1. Funny, I didn’t get that suggestion at all. I thought it had something to do with four-legged behaviour.

    Hmmmmm.


  2. @ Enuff:

    It seems that turncoat Ralphie is becoming more than a Thorn in your RED side.

    He is actually putting you in the ‘well of embarrassment’ by asking ‘Quo Vadis’ the Hyatt Ziva for Bridgetown?

    Using his insider information he quite aware that the Hyatt is nothing more than a land-grabbing scam of speculative proportion similar to the Vaccine scandal.

    Are you going to respond to the eloquently verbose Thorne now in the position of the LoO?

    After all, the man called MAM No.2 is nothing more than moneymaking carpetbagger.

    Don’t be surprised if the Hyatt proposal is turned into another project of townhouses geared towards the expected arrival of ‘nouveaux Barbadians and for the Digital Nomads.


  3. Thorne is in good company. Talking about outsiders……………


  4. Some of of us, like our DJ friend from London would call this background noise. I wonder if Mia ever walks along the streets in camouflage whilst listening to the voice of the masses. Or does she isolate herself within her citadel where she will never be questioned and always indulged?

    https://www.tiktok.com/@leautono/video/7331033081115053318


  5. Thanks to Ralph Thorne, Barbados is no longer a de facto one party state.


  6. @ GP,
    I was not talking about an exodus of Bajans. However, it is inevitable that there will be a mass exodus of Barbados youth population in the very near future. Donna understood my point.

    There was a famous film in the early seventies called Logan’s run in which a society made it mandatory that a human being had to forfeit their life at age 30. Barbados youth have to develop their own strategy to ensure their survival. The middle age and the elderly appear to lack the fight and the motivation to improve the lot of their countrymen and women. Haiti may be an outlier as to what may become of us throughout the region unless the nature of our governments drastically changes. The drums of war may not be too far off!


  7. Is the issue about a mass exodus or an exodus of our most qualified people; including young people. Is there the same demand for immigrant labour to compare with the 60s and 70s across the globe?


  8. @ David,
    One does not need to be a clairvoyant to see and analyse the demographic trends of Barbados. The weakest and the least well educated will have to seek greener pastures. As to the “skilled” workers…..will they have the financial capacity to be able to afford to live on an island in which their president boasted that she would like the country to become a Monaco or a Singapore! I visited Monaco several decades ago. It is off the scale for all but the wealthiest. Residential swimming pools and high end cars were as common a sight as a KFC outlet in Bimshire. I enjoyed the brief time I was there but did not spend a single franc, well apart from on a cappuccino!

    Even if we were to witness a boom in service orientated jobs such as maids, butlers, cleaners, etc. There is no guarantee that Bajans would be the recipients. Not when an oversea worker can be so easily recruited.


  9. Another insightful piece by Joseph.

    DLP’s possible futures

    SINCE THE CROSSING over by Ralph Thorne from the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) into the role of Democratic Labour Party (DLP) Opposition Leader, it is being over-hastily assumed that Barbados Labour Party political dominance will be overturned.

    Indeed, much of the jubilation that has attended the Thorne crossover has come from those who were hoping for the slightest crack in the 30-0 electoral wall.

    Long before the Thorne events, a key tactic of the DLP was to stoke any development that could weaken the BLP’s 30-0 stranglehold. Recently, a DLP operative even attempted to ignite a discussion around a two-term limit for Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley, even suggesting that she should consider the post of UN Secretary General. The aim has been to grab onto anything that can change the current landscape, to achieve the minimal goal of avoiding extinction. Thus, the Thorne crossover came like manna from heaven.

    However, it would be a grave error if the DLP assumed that the mere crossover of Thorne would automatically signal the decline of the BLP. There are several possible futures of the DLP depending on how the Thorne entry is played out, all of which will be revealed through the outcome of the next General Election.

    The worst-case scenario for the DLP will be for a third 30-0 election. This will surely mark the end of the DLP and may give rise to the complete re-writing of the post-colonial landscape of Barbados. This scenario may occur if the Thorne entry DLP fails to resolve the current leadership challenges, and if the new leadership configuration is unable to cross the hurdle of winning at least one seat. At the risk of making political predictions, such a scenario may not be likely given the natural attrition which the BLP is expected to experience following two terms in office, and given the evidence of at least three seats being under threat in the last election.

    The most urgent task facing the DLP is to resolve its current internal leadership dilemma.

    The current situation of “dual power” shared between administrative and parliamentary leader is a recipe for disaster and if extended, might guarantee another electoral defeat. Significantly, it is only under the current situation of “dual power” that the DLP president Ronnie Yearwood has seen it fit to apologise for the past errors of the DLP, in particular the removal of free education. Unless resolved, the next few months will see a jostling for leadership, rather than a preparation for elected office.

    When the dust settles on the Thorne crossover, the challenges will remain the same: the need for a leader who will first win his/her seat, and secondly encourage the voters to elect other DLP candidates to office.

    Any future considerations of the future of the DLP can only be undertaken when these minimum requirements are met.

    Tennyson Joseph is Associate Professor of Political Science at North Carolina Central University. Email tjoe2008@live.com

    Source: Nation


  10. “Recently, a DLP operative even attempted to ignite a discussion around a two-term limit for Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley, even suggesting that she should consider the post of UN Secretary General.”

    I was the first to suggest that she would be large on the world stage post her interview on Breakfast TV regarding Reparations post the George Floyd murder that had whites reviewing their racist ways for 400 years.

    But, I regress the point I was going to make is Mia has already said she will not run again. Barbados politics is a little pond and why be a big fish in a little pond when you can move into the bigger ponds or even cross over to the sea.


  11. https://www.instagram.com/p/C4bZhKrAwdP/

    Conspicuously absent are members of Yearwood’s faction. You cannot make this stuff up.


  12. No words.

    “ Thorne calls for DLP unity to fight ‘enemy’
    Democratic Labour Party political leader Ralph Thorne has urged the opposition party to unify in order to “rescue poor people from an oppressive” government.
    The unity plea came as talk of a party divide surfaced yet again with the emergence of a viral video on social media.
    Speaking Sunday night at a DLP St Peter branch meeting, Thorne told Dems that it was time to focus their energies and efforts on saving the country from the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) administration, referring to the government he was a member of until last month as an “enemy”.
    Now opposition leader after an abrupt crossing of the floor of the House of Assembly last month, the Christ Church South MP told a packed meeting at the All Saints Centre, Mile and a Quarter, St Peter, that supporters must act in defence of the people.
    He said: “There is an enemy lurking in the halls of government. It has to be our mission to remove that enemy from places of power.
    They only understand power but they don’t understand the word responsibility. The government has a responsibility to protect the most vulnerable, not to protect the rich alone.
    This is not a government that is compassionate.
    “Let us not do it in defence of low office in this party. Let us not do it in defence of low office in this party. Let us do it in defence of the people of this country. It is our duty to the people of this country.”
    Thorne encouraged both supporters of himself and DLP President Dr Ronnie Yearwood to work hand in hand.
    “Don’t come to me about fractions. Don’t come to me about old guard and new guard.
    Come to me and tell me we are taking fresh guard. Wherever the fractions reside, there is a wicked government in place. Wherever the fractions meet when they come out of those meetings, there is a government that is oppressing the people of this country. It must be our mission to rescue the people of this country,” he said.
    The opposition leader charged that millions of dollars are being spent annually on wasted trips while Bajans are suffering.
    “I want to raise my voice in defence of the poor people of this country. Thousands of them were sent home and the money that could have paid them is paying the airlines. It is paying consultants, some of them making as much as $15 000 and $20 000 a month.
    “Do you have a voice in defence of the poor people in this country? Do you put a child to bed at night hungry? Are you the parents of one of those children who go to school and fall asleep at 10 o’clock because they are hungry? Bright children who are not being given a chance like the children of those who literally fly high.”
    Thorne punctuated his remarks by acknowledging the presence of key members of the party and repeatedly urging them to work as a unit.
    The comments follow indications of persisting party fracture at the highest levels of the party, which has returned to the House of Assembly after two general election defeats that locked them out of Parliament.
    In a viral video that surfaced over the weekend, DLP member Paul Gibson was trying to speak to General Secretary Steve Blackett.
    In the under three-minute video, Gibson said the president had directed him to speak to Blackett. Repeated attempts by Gibson to speak to Blackett proved futile as he was not acknowledged.
    Gibson addressed the video at the meeting, saying that in many ways, he regrets doing the recording which was created months ago.
    At Thorne’s invitation, Pastor David Durant called on key members of the party in a prayer for healing and unity. He also asked that there be no disrespect shown to either leader.
    Former agriculture minister and DLP candidate for St Peter, Haynesley Benn told an emotional gathering that it was now time to move forward.
    “If we can swallow our pride and hold hands and go forward we can make it. I want you to come with me out of the past called yesterday and walk with me to the future. Tomorrow is waiting, let us journey there together.”
    The other speaker for the night was Kemar Stuart. The meeting was attended by present and past officers and candidates: Senator Ryan Walters, Yearwood, Blackett, Neil Marshall, Pedro Shepherd, Walter Maloney, James Paul and Randall Rouse, Felicia Dujon and Tyra Trotman. (IMC)”

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