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Constitutional Reform Commission (CRC)
Constitutional Reform Commissions delivering the final report to a small audience at the Frank Collymore Hall

It was a long-anticipated wait and the thought that Barbados’ move to a Republican status would have been the foremost on the Commissioners’ mind, with them delivering meaningful changes to governance that align with a republic.  With expectancy ripe, Barbadians anticipated changes to the conduct of business in the highest offices in the land.  In reality, after more than 15 months of consulting the Commissioners appear to have updated the Westminster Parliamentary System in their constitutional reform report as well as created a new institution named the Constitutional Offices Commission providing jobs for those who will sit at its helm.  

One wondered if the Terms of Reference was vague. However, on review of the Letter of Transmittal it stated that the Commission had fulfilled its mandate.  The first item of the Terms of Reference is shown below:

  • Examine, consider and inquire into the Constitution of Barbados and all related laws and matters with a view to the development and enactment of a new Constitution of Barbados.

In essence, the scope of the commission was quite broad.  However, when Ronnie Yearwood criticized the Report in an article in Barbados Today on November 23, 2024, stating that there was no meaningful change, Chairman of the Constitutional Reform Commission (CRC) dismissed the “criticisms stating that the report reflects public submission and aligns with Barbados’ Parliamentary System.”  Clearly Mr. Blackman misunderstood the assignment because the Terms of Reference infers a move away from the old Westminster Parliamentary system which is a vestibule of colonialism that the Republican system is replacing.  In addition, why else would the review have been commissioned at this time if not for a Republican Constitution? 

 It has left one to think that the island is a Republic in name only, and that the change to a republic was birthed through political expediency and not for meaningful change in the lives of the people of Barbados. 

In summation, since the CRC failed the most important part of the assignment which was on Governance and Institutions, the recommendations for all other sections of the report pales into insignificance.  

Some Thoughts for a Republican Constitution 

Most persons alive today have lived in the era of conceptualizing or birthing or, lived under the impact of the Westminster Constitution of Barbados. Almost six decades later, they have known and experienced the short comings and challenges of a document that was created without the input of the people or tailored to suit the former slave colony.  The present constitution has been a breeding ground for political corruption and dependence of the masses on politicians and political parties, in addition it has represented the perpetration of systematic inequalities.

The new constitution of Barbados must be fit for purpose, tailor made, unique, addressing the political, economic and social governance needs of all Barbadians. 

1.The Constitution

For the Barbadian context, there should be 4 arms of the Constitution.  These are:

 1. The People

2. The Executive/ Legislative

3. The judiciary

4. Local Government

2.The Sovereignty of the People

The draft preamble does not state who controls power in the Republic. In its opening it should state clearly that power is vested in the people and they delegate this power by a democratic process and can change this delegation by the power of recall. The draft preamble uses philanthropic action words and has no political, economic or constitutional actions for the people to undertake and without this, a heading of “we the sovereign people of Barbados” is meaningless. For example, we the sovereign people of Barbados must have the right to peaceful protest.

3. The Establishment of Local Government

For the Barbadian context, Local Government should not be an act of Parliament but the 4th arm of the Constitution.  This would provide the people with direct representation and access to Parliament.  Within the Commission’s Report, there is no structure by which the people can express their sovereignty. This will be a way for the people to have their voices heard in Parliament and not only the grandiose babbling of politicians.  It would create a way for propositions for new laws to reach Parliament.  The law would finally be able to embrace the needs and wants of what really matter to the people.  It is a means of quantifiable public participation in the political process.  In essence, local government can work side by side with state elected government.

4. Decolonizing Political Structures

Term Limits -Term limits must be a requirement for Prime Ministers.  They will know that their time is finite in that position and will not seek to hold on to power.

Checks and Balances – There must be checks and balances on the Executive.  The people must control how power is acquired and how public funds are spent.

Elections – There must be a fixed election date. The Diaspora must have the right to vote where they reside, whether they choose to exercise it or not.

Proportional representation – There must be proportional representation in Parliament by political parties based on the number of votes they obtain at election time. This should also be a feature of the Senate.  Hereby every party that gets a percentage of the votes are both represented in both houses.

Elections of judges – The people must be given to opportunity to decide who dispenses justice over them and their children.

Election Manifestos

The Constitution must set out specific action to be taken if Election promises are not kept. Even if this means a vote of no confidence and or the power of recall or impeachment.  This action should be taken through local government.

Decolonizing Economic Structures

Debt

Caribbean Democracies are insolvent. One of the biggest failures of the present Administration centers around Debt or indebtedness.  The specific purpose for which the country can seek to obtain foreign debt should be contained in the Constitution, inevitably, foreign debt should only be for development purposes. It must be illegal to rack up debt without any means of repayment, and from which the country may never recover.

Revenue and Development

Revenue and spending change with each administration and so do development plans.  The Constitution must guide on what the portion of the taxpayers’ money should be spent on development of the island.   

Removal of the Auditor General’s Office from Under Government. It is an exercise in futility to ask the government to investigate itself.  Placing the Auditor General’s Office in an autonomous position in the 5th arm of the Constitution will place it in a better position not only to investigate financial crime but also to bring charges.

Other

  1. Land Court.  It is also time for a Land court to be set up.  The problem of land disputes goes back several generations and no one wants to touch them.  Perhaps they should be forced to.
  2. Ownership of the Beaches.  The time has also come whereby the sovereignty of the people be extend to all beaches in Barbados and this be placed in the Constitution, that all beaches are public property owned by the people of Barbados.
  3. The Right to Peaceful Protest. This is self-explanatory and without approval of the police.

In summation the report of the CRC was an epic failure.  With one of the most frequently words in the draft constitution being “retained” the recommendations are for the preservation of the current Westminster Constitution.  One cannot claim to be moving forward by changing the name to a republic and yet cling to an outdated colonial structure.  A real Republican Constitution is required not sleight of hand.  The people have always been governed and never part of the process of governance. At this point in time political and economic change must include the people in the Constitution. 


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162 responses to “The EPIC FAILURE of the CRC”


  1. The state of the Barbadian republic

    By Ralph Jemmott

    Depending on where you sit or stand, it is possible to be in two diametrically opposed minds about the current state of the Barbadian Republic. For some, it would depend on which side of the great political divide one places one’s allegiance.

    It is possible that some may still be able to look at our circumstances with some measure of conscientious objectivity and see the economic, social and political realities in Barbados for what they are without some degree of partisan squinting.

    Admittedly, our republic is very much in its infancy. This should not inhibit us from trying to make an informed opinion about where we see the country going at this moment in time.

    The economy

    Unquestionably, the Barbados Labour Party inherited a very problematic economic situation marked by a high level of indebtedness, a weak foreign exchange position and incapacity to access loans on the open international markets except at disastrously ruinous rates.

    In spite of a number of set-backs including COVID, the ash fall, bad weather and high inflation caused by supply challenges, high oil prices and high interest rates, the Barbadian economy has emerged on a fairly sound footing.

    Economy pros and cons

    One of the more objective commentators on the state of the Barbadian economy is Carlos Forte, a Barbadian economist living in Canada. In a recent article published in another section of the press, Forte delineates both the positive and the negatives in the local economy.

    He points out the first Barbados Economic Recovery and Transformation programme (BERT 1) negotiated with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) programme initiated by the BLP Government could be termed a success, having achieved its “core objectives”. Inheriting a precarious position in 2018, the Mia Amor Mottley-led administration was able to effect a number of corrective measures with appreciable success.

    1. The BERT 1 programme has to an appreciable degree succeeded in restoring prudence to Barbados’ public finances, creating some measure of fiscal space, thus stabilising the Barbadian economy.

    2. Perhaps, more significantly, it has served to unlock access to loan capital from the various multilateral lending institutions. These foreign loans plus the IMF loans have boosted the foreign reserves considerably, which means that there is diminished risk of our ability to finance imports, repatriate profits to foreign capital investors and repay foreign debts and interest when creditors have to be repaid.

    3. The financial restructuring has also put the debt-to-GDP ratio on a downward trajectory as required under the IMF mandate.

    As is often said, particularly by those not given to unwarranted optimism or slobbering sycophancy, Barbados is by no means out of the proverbial woods. There are those who can remember the days when it was claimed that the local economy was “geared for take-off”. If it ever lifted, it was questionable whether it ever soared.

    The inconvenient truth may be that as a small open economy the Barbadian economy will for a long time be fragile and extremely vulnerable to external shocks.

    Forte points to a number of deficiencies in the workings of the Barbadian economy.

    • The much promised reform of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) as an imperative in reducing spending has not taken place. To all intents and purposes, that process has been placed on the proverbial “back-burner”. Agencies such as the Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation and the Transport Board continue to leak revenue. The truth may be that reforming SOEs is very problematic. They run up against many vested interests within both labour and capital and among those who have invested partisan political capital and do not now want to be divested of their petty sinecures.

    • The Government remains heavily reliant on foreign loans and foreign debt. It is for this reason that one finds it difficult to understand Forte’s contention that we do not need a BERT 2 intervention as he makes bold to state, “Barbados no longer needs to be in an IMF programme”.

    One would assume that if Barbados cannot as yet pay its way, that it in fact is not of and by itself earning enough foreign currency to pay its debt, it has to borrow and that capacity to borrow on the various markets is still contingent on IMF backing.

    What the Government has called its Resilience and Sustainability Facility and the Extended Fund Facility to combat the effects of climate change requires IMF support. There is no way that the Government can impose increased taxes on an already overburdened populace unless it wants to slowly kill us off and replace us by 80 000 new immigrants.

    • We boast of the state of the foreign reserves, but the truth is that much of the foreign reserves is really borrowed monies, loans that have to be repaid no matter how favourable the interest rates at which they were acquired.

    • The quality of many of the public services being delivered still leaves a lot to be desired. Whether these deficits relate to deficiencies in the structure of the Public Service itself or the quality of the personnel employed, it is difficult to know for sure.

    One hears much talk about the ease of doing business and that it can’t be business as usual, but nothing seems to change to any appreciable degree and the complaints persist.

    Sustainable growth

    • Forte reserves his most severe critique for Government’s growth policy. He sees little evidence of real sustainable growth, development and prosperity. Every country in the Western world is seeking growth.

    The recently elected Keir Starmer Labour government in Britain is desperately in search of “growth”. Growth through a diversification of the economy has been the clarion call for decades. Both have proven painfully elusive.

    For all the talk about tourism’s fickleness, it remains our best bet in terms of foreign currency earnings and the one area in which we have something of a comparative advantage.

    Apart from its so-called fickle nature, there are two substantive concerns about tourism. One is that it is questionable exactly how much of the profits from the hospitality industry comes ashore and remains on shore to the extent that it contributes to substantive growth and development.

    The second question is at what stage does tourism reach a point of diminishing returns, where the gains from hospitality are exceeded by the harms done to the host society.

    A Bajan once said that he would like to see Barbados look like Monaco. The English novelist writer/novelist Somerset Maughan once remarked that Monaco was “a sunny place for shady people”.

    Ralph Jemmott is a retired educator and social commentator.

    Source: Nation


  2. COLLEGES ON HOLD

    No buy-in for two-tier system, says education reform chief

    By Sherrylyn Toppin

    sherrylynclarke@nationnews. com

    Plans for the two-tier Colleges of Excellence, announced more than a year ago as part of sweeping changes to Barbados’ education system, have been put on hold.

    After extensive consultation and some push back, the Ministry of Education went back to the drawing board to find an alternative. The system was to be in place for the start of the 2025 academic year.

    Director of Education Transformation, Dr Idamay Denny, said nothing from the October 2023 media conference was cast in stone.

    “A whole lot of people in the country were not buying it because we are married to the school system as it is right now. A lot of us do not consider that as the school system is structured right now, it does not cater for a lot of our children. A lot of our children who sit on the street corners or who engage in the crime and violence, they have been created in large measure by the school system we have at the secondary level,” Denny said.

    “We have a lot of children who are going to school and who are bored as hell because what’s happening in school is not of interest to them. We have to have those children engaged and there are things that a lot of those children would like to do that the school is not doing. So we have to have programmes that are engaging and that when children get up in the morning, they want to go to school . . . ”.

    When she made the announcement in 2023, Denny explained the Junior Colleges of Excellence would be equivalent to what is now the lower school of the secondary system with children typically between the ages of 12 to 14 years old. The Senior Colleges of Excellence would cater to students from age 15 to 18, but with flexibility for those who demonstrate academic and maturity capability of stepping up prior to reaching 15 years old.

    Denny said by engaging in discussion with other stakeholders, the general public and focus groups, rather than taking the position that the ministry had all the answers, they tried to meet Barbados halfway.

    “So we modified what we did originally and we believe that it is more acceptable now, but that it still caters to all of the children. It is going to create a brighter future for every child. We looked, for example, at the future of work.”

    There will be a review of the curriculum to put programmes in place to attract the children. Teachers will undergo extensive training to prepare children and the ministry has teamed up with Columbia University to seek assistance.

    “So the curriculum is going to be very enhanced. It is going to be of interest to the students. We are going to focus on a lot of areas that the children like but that we do not consider important in school,” she added.

    Denny said the proposed changes would also provide a path for those who are sportsoriented as the current system did not meet their needs, despite the clear link between sports and development.

    “If we were able to organise our schools in such a way that our young people, some of those young men who are at risk of going and sitting down on the street corners, if you could get them involved in some programmes that they could have a future in areas like the NBA [National Basketball Association] and the NFL [National Football League] . . . there are a lot of people who would be surprised at how these students would go to school and they would achieve because they see a future for themselves.

    “All of these changes, of course, hinge on the future of the Barbados Secondary Schools’ Entrance Examination and what will replace it.”

    Denny said the ministry had completed the Cabinet Paper relative to these changes, adding it would soon be presented. Once that was done and approval given, then the general public would hear of what was in store.

    Source: Nation


  3. At the crossroads with new Constitution

    Last Sunday, the Constitutional Reform Commission and its report came under further public scrutiny which saw members of the commission under public opprobrium. The public should know that every idea cannot be in a constitution.

    This situation further compounds the difficulty being faced by Government which sought to declare a republic without first having the Constitution changed to reflect the new status. It has now reached an embarrassing position where the country is operating under the 1966 Constitution though designated a republic.

    As expected, in these kinds of exercises it is impossible to reach consensus and it is unlikely that continued dialogue will produce full agreement on any topic or subject area. The importance in any democracy is the concept of majority rule with minority rights.

    So long as that principle is maintained, the commission needs to conclude after extensive and sometimes exhaustive consultations across the diaspora in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom and all were given an opportunity to make recommendations or to put them in writing.

    We have been declared a republic now for three years and are nowhere near a constitution. One of the major areas of division seems to be the role of the President of Barbados under the new Constitution. Surprisingly, there has not been a constitutional challenge in the courts.

    Now that Barbados is a republic, the President is appointed by the Prime Minister presumably in consultation with the Leader of the Opposition. So far in our Independence history, we have had no issue or controversy about any such appointment. That is not to say it may not happen.

    The Democratic Labour Party spokesperson on the Attorney General’s Office, Verla De Peiza, reportedly speaking in her personal capacity, said she was disappointed that under the new Constitution, the President was merely a figurehead instead of carrying out a “meaningful function” and should be elected.

    We are at the crossroads of history and this would be a novel position, somewhat an executive president. Given our history where the head of state is insulated from the politics of the country, we believe it is a convention that has worked well and so far there is no compelling reason to change it.

    We have adopted the constitutional history of the United Kingdom and with all its imperfections, it has served us relatively well and we have had no real constitutional crisis to speak about thus far. We would like to say it speaks to our maturity as a people.

    It is now fair game to want to overthrow all pre-independence political conventions in the name of progress and anti-colonialism so as to assuage the ideologies of the most vociferous among us. We should not take our relative political stability for granted, but should strengthen our institutions and insulate them from political interference, It is always prudent to note that sometimes the values we have taken for granted for many years suddenly become things we must now fight [as in war] to maintain; otherwise some would believe that civilisation, as we have come to know it, will cease to exist.

    National Hero Errol Barrow, Father of Independence, in his address to the Barbados Constitutional Conference in London in July 1966, made many salient points about the Cabinet system, independence of the judiciary, inter alia – the very problems facing the Constitutional Reform Commission.

    The idea of a republic was first mooted sometime around 2008 and a song was penned by Senator John King. It was formally declared in 2021 without any input from the citizens. As a consequence, democracy was not well served.

    We are now in a second rendezvous with destiny since Independence 1966 and it’s time we get it right.

    Source: Nation Editorial


  4. The attempt to change the Constitution has absolutely nothing to do with the Republic which some want.

    It is all to do with legitimizing the 30-0 result which is a nullity.

    That’s why its criticism is so roundly applied by so many because no thought has been put into the Republic, just how to get over the immediate hurdle of no opposition and hence no opposition leader.

    So, the written words just do not make sense to so many people who have been brought up hearing about the need to become a Republic and believing all the clap trap about colonialization and its evils.

    Take a look at any successful country and you will find colonization is part of its history.

    India, Singapore, USA, Canada, Australia etc. were all at one time colonized.

    The people of Barbados are being taken for a ride by a pretender Government and its pretender members.


  5. David
    January 12, 2025 at 5:30 am
    Rate This

    The state of the Barbadian republic

    By Ralph Jemmott

    Unquestionably, the Barbados Labour Party inherited a very problematic economic situation marked by a high level of indebtedness, a weak foreign exchange position and incapacity to access loans on the open international markets except at disastrously ruinous rates.

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

    All of these ills are entirely of its own and the DLP’s making.

    Did you know there is a place name in Barbados known as Less Beholden which says everything you need to know about Barbadians of a former era?


  6. We are ffing around with a totally useless piece of paper while our country heads into oblivion.


  7. What else could have been expected. Very few things, systems, in this country – this world, work anymore.

    And here is Donald Trump, chanting on a microphone – pun intended, swaging like a little girl from side to side and threatening the Iranians like he did to North Korea with the nuclear destruction of Iranian cities, entirely based on the provable lie that they tried to kill him when he should have known, even as he himself claimed to have murdered the Iranian general Solemani and his companions on a peace mission five years ago, that the Iranians have no such interest, that his real enemies are closer to him than his jugggler vein.

    What a sick braggart!

    Therefore we should have expected nothing more from the commission.

    https://youtu.be/ORZLBbPws8g?si=ZXE-0w6Ja2q4HRjC


  8. Swaying


  9. System Design and Development
    Modifications, Upgrades for Compliance – Estimate 1-2 years
    Replacement System, Design, Build, Sign Off – Estimate 5-10 years
    Ongoing Change Maintenance is required for both

    Each Subsystem, Rules, Laws, Processes need upgrading/replacing
    1. The People
    2. The Executive/ Legislative
    3. The Judiciary
    4. Local Government
    5. The Sovereignty of the People


  10. I do not presume to be able to draft a perfect constitution on my own. Those who think they can may be a bit delusional.

    Manmade constructs will always prove deficient. Because we are deficient.

    We have always been deficient. We will always be deficient. Our realistic goal should be to minimise the deficiencies.

    But, one thing I say – On principle, I am still against large numbers of those who do not live here potentially deciding the outcome of the elections that decide who will govern ME and not them. I am FOR them having one representative to express their views. However, exceptions could made for those who invest their money, time and talent into the development of Barbados. That, of course, will have its issues. But nothing will ever be perfect. If you come home and vote, that would at least require some real effort.

    Go ahead and cuss muh! But don’t let it devolve into an Us vs Them. Mek it short!


  11. One thing that must be said about BB Titanic…
    The Band has an extensive repertoire and they are ‘doing the dog’ on the top deck.

    Their range and variety of music are capable of keeping the brass bowls distracted right up to the point where their donkeys hit the water…
    Mercifully, it won’t be too long before the end comes after that point.

    The most engaging melody by far however is the Eddykashun tune, played to a reggae beat…
    This last verse (so far) about ‘Junior colleges of excellence’ was a classic.
    How the SAME circle of jokers are able to invent such new classes of shiite – and promote it with a straight face (while collecting salaries, fees, consultancies and grants) is BEYOND Bushie’s comprehension….
    The previous verse – where architects were asked to design completely new schools that would solve all of our problems, appears to have ended on a low note, and Bushie predicts that the next verse up will be something to do with a new method of cleaning the classrooms to prevent sick building issues – perhaps something like buying brooms….

    Not even to mention the Constitution calypso that recently ended on a sour note…
    From the time that particular band assembled, Bushie expected a flop.
    We ALL know the calypsonians that have the ability to sing the praises of the party in power… so their lirics were completely predictable, and were VERY LIKELY prewritten for them….

    Meanwhile…
    Potholes
    Water woes
    Casualty woes
    Crime crisis
    Garbage crisis
    ZR mess
    Transport issues
    Sugar issues
    Housing madness with STEAL, HOPE, Hard wood,
    Sewage – both solid and liquid
    PAC shutdown
    Auditor General on gag orders
    …are all among upcoming tunes to be replayed …over and over.

    What a place!!!


  12. Murdah Bushie

    Yuh killing muh wid laughter!


  13. @Heather Cole Jamaica now owned by Chinese https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=59NifmFxxbk


  14. Bushie

    Did you ever consider that dey might have learnt all this shiiite from your main shiiite?

    There certainly are straight and parallel lines common to both!


  15. @Heather

    There is agreement in the thrust of your submission re lack of transformation of CRC recommendations but several of your suggestions can be covered by statute.


  16. @ Pacha
    Boss, be careful how you are pointing a finger at Bushie’s ‘shiite’ yuh… Check that FOUR other digits are point back at Pacha’s….

    Have you noted the ACADEMIC qualifications of these various Bands and Choirs?
    Bunch of DOCTORS and academics who are well researched and read – like yourself…

    In fact, THAT certification seems to be the qualification for these high offices – EVEN THOUGH THE APPOINTEES NEVER DID ANYTHING SUCCESSFULLY – EXCEPT TO PASS SHIITE EXAMS…
    Most of them never even got to run a successful conkie or snow cone business, …far less become ‘world travelers’ such as yourself and Bushie LOL..

    THESE ARE YOUR PEOPLE Pacha …not stinking Bushie’s…
    Which of dem would even know what to do wid a stinking whacker???!!!

    LOL, like you, they just read shiite books written by equally clueless academics, and then write long reports using big-ass words that need to be googled… which are left unread by our idiot politicians – who then configure the idea to get some kickbacks…

    All Bushie is qualified to do, is ‘whack’ nuff bush, snails, frogs and even dog shiite … till the place look level… anything more complicated, Bushie refers to the step-father for instructions….
    LOL
    murda!!!
    BTW…
    (Asking fuh de step-dad…)
    Why don’t YOU apply for the MoE pick, and see if you can help we out…?
    ..or you is bare talk..?
    🙂


  17. Bushie

    You have well described the miseducated as produced by industry.

    And true, it’s very possible to be a well credentialed idiot, most are.

    However, one must never forget self learning, the concentration on intuition and not knowledge, or gut and not head. Oral traditions, other structures.

    Still, formal schooling is not without some advantages – knowing how to find information, storage and retreival, basically.

    Beyond that, courage and creativity must then be superimposed.

    Not the religious obeisance to dogmas of doubtfiul providence.


  18. Allow me to offer a much simpler explanation of this failure than what you will read from others.

    I start at a point that is much different from their starting point. They would start at the ‘beginning’ and work their way through a crooked path and at the same time attempt to overwhelm you with fancy phrase and words.

    My starting point:
    I suspect that I will disappoint you, for instead of giving you the national dish (a word salad), I will get directly to the point. You got what you paid for.

    Throughout the region, there has not been one original thought since the 1960’s.

    Creating a sound constitution is a complicated and intelligent task and requires an element of originality. To assemble a bunch of cut and paste artists and send them off on trips and luncheons and expect an original document is a bridge too far. This exercise was mainly about paying someone to throw stuff on the wall. You got what was paid for … stuff on the wall.

    I am not angry at the CRC or their product, but I am angry with you. Yes, you! You know the game, you know the routine, you know the players and yet you will lament and act surprise when the product is handed over. Be honest with yourself.

    You got what you paid for. You got what the team was capable of. Stop acting surprise and cut out the palaver.

    No in-depth analysis is required. You must forgive me if I repeated what someone said. I do not read half of what is written.


  19. @The OG
    The explanation for this failure is even simpler than you postulate.

    It is not the job of some government appointed committee to craft a new constitution, it is the job of citizens. It is your job. It is my job.

    We have seen the enemy, and he is us.


  20. This is the list of ills that we want constitutional reform to help cure:

    1. The Executive arm of government in Barbados lacks checks and balances.

    2. Much of the citizenry feels that the political process is unresponsive.

    3. The political process has become unrepresentative and calcified under the dominance of the two major parties with no openings for the evolution of new voices.

    4. The political and governance processes are dominated by those with deep pockets and corruption that’s endemic in these systems.


  21. 1. The Executive arm of government in Barbados lacks checks and balances.

    Under a new Constitution only the Prime Minister and Deputy Prime Minister will be from members of the Legislature. The Prime Minister will be accountable to Parliament as head of the Cabinet and removable by a vote of no confidence in the usual way. The PM will be the person who commands the confidence of the House. The Deputy will be whosoever the PM designates. The PM assembles a Cabinet to wield Executive power from among non-politicians with expertise, capacity and patriotic spirit. Therefore Cabinet Minister does not become a career, it is instead a highly respected function taken on by people who want to contribute to the common good. The Legislature is then independent of the executive and can function as an effective check and balance.


  22. 2. Much of the citizenry feels that the political process is unresponsive.

    The power of the Presidency should not be limited to the power to decline to proclaim legislation, thereby exercising a veto, or to call an election if there is no PM who can command the confidence of a majority in Parliament. The Presidency should also have the authority to initiate referenda (referendums?). This can be in response to a Parliamentary request *or* in response to a request coming from a sufficient number of ordinary citizens through a clearly defined process. The President should also appoint the Speaker of the Hose of Assembly so that position ceases to be so nakedly biased. The Presidency can be popularly elected and be the head of State and Commander in Chief of the Defence force, but all day to day executive power should remain in the hands of Cabinet or Bajan culture will create gridlock.


  23. 3. The political process has become unrepresentative and calcified under the dominance of the two major parties with no openings for the evolution of new voices.

    It is a ludicrous travesty that 30% of the Barbados electorate are unrepresented in the House of Assembly. Scrap all constituencies and elect Parliamentary representatives by national proportional representation from party lists. This breaks the calcified stranglehold that the BDLP exercises over our current reality and allows small parties to have a realistic probability of Parliamentary representation. With proportional representation we would have Parliamentary voices which loudly keep critical issues like corruption, the Auditor Generals Report, environmental protection gender violence, youth unemployment, etc on the National agenda. The BDLP perpetually used part discipline to marginalise and sidetrack such concerns.


  24. PLT 12:13

    And where are these elements being practiced, even if in any constitutional framework?


  25. @Peter

    If you want citizens to drive constitutional change a good place to start will be to assist them to disassociate from engaging in idolatry of politicians.


  26. 4. The political and governance processes are dominated by those with deep pockets and corruption that’s endemic in these systems.

    *All* political campaign finance should be provided from public revenue with strict audit processes and harsh punishments for any individual and party which violate the rules. This is to remove the place where corruption germinates in our system. No “campaign contributions” means radically reduced opportunities to bribe politicians. Campaign finance should include *any and all* expenditures that a politician or party incurs within 12 weeks before an election. No exceptions for travel, office staff, office rental, advertising, communications with citizens, entertainment, meetings… None. Everybody running for office has equivalent resources whether they are a millionaire or a pauper.
    In addition to national proportional representation which does away with local constituencies, we also need to eliminate private, corporate, or union donations to political campaign funding. *All* political campaigns for public office should be funded with public money. Any violations of this should be heavily fined and punished by the judicial system.

    Campaign finance should be defined as *all* party money expended within 3 months prior to an election day… the quantity of public funding should be directly proportional to the party’s standing in an audited nationwide sample poll and then all expenditures audited post election with the entitled amounts being corrected to being proportional to the actual election vote percentages.

    But if politics is no longer a route to further enrichment, then such people will have no interest in it. In fact, with anti corruption legislation in place, such people will not touch politics with a ten foot pole because it makes them a politically connected person having to disclose everything about their nefarious affairs.


  27. @Patchamama 12:20 pm
    Where is it written that we are condemned to be followers in perpetuity?… Why do you not aspire to lead the rest of the world in democratic innovation?


  28. PLT

    Yes, weee admire your constructive approach as always. We’re like-minded. Totally agree!

    For a republic should have real meanings, especially given our history, be a measurable departure from the past.

    Absolutely!


  29. The OG,

    There has been original thought. Sadly, it has not been from those in office or thereabouts. You are correct. The Commission did exactly what it was capable of doing.

    We kept the system, simply changing the colour of the actors. The Westminster system is not serving the people, even in the UK.

    Sadly, I am not the one with original thoughts on government and politics. I do not have that capacity.


  30. Good luck with the new constitution.

    duck://player/efmiutIr97c


  31. David
    January 12, 2025 at 12:21 pm
    Rate This

    @Peter

    If you want citizens to drive constitutional change a good place to start will be to assist them to disassociate from engaging in idolatry of politicians.

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

    Good luck with that!!

    The problem is the citizens funnily enough.

    The GOB has them by the balls!!

    How many rely or GOB for wages and salaries?

    How many rely on contracts from the GOB?

    Citizens get the Government they deserve.


  32. @ John 1:56 pm

    Thank you for your contributions, but you can do better. Cynicism is the refuge of those who do not have the intellectual resources for critical thinking. We are poles apart on the political spectrum, but a constitution needs to be able to be comfortable for both of us to live within, so I am honestly and humbly asking for your most incisive critique of what I briefly proposed above. Please.


  33. The effort of PLT as and others have shown the great difference between heavy lifters (PLT …) and light lifters like myself. Their contributions are remarkable and should be admired.

    However, I think they will eventually ask the question I start with … “Where’s the beef?” I will save them time in getting to the answer … “There’s no beef”. Everything is one big scam, con or heist of the people’s money. Start there.

    I do not listen to their commissions, initiatives, reasons or explanations. I do not trust a single number, not even the population size… PR and puff pieces, lies and more lies


  34. David Avatar
    David
    January 12, 2025 at 8:38 am
    Rate This

    @Heather

    There is agreement in the thrust of your submission re lack of transformation of CRC recommendations but several of your suggestions can be covered by statute.
    +++++++++++++++
    @David, which recommendations should be covered by statute why?


  35. 1. “The PM assembles a Cabinet to wield Executive power from among non-politicians with expertise, capacity and patriotic spirit.”
    The PM becomes somewhat like a USA President? Are they elected similarly?
    What is a non-politician in a community of 270,000. Would Rudy Grant, Gregory Nicholls, Hal Gollop, Mark Maloney et al be non-politicians.
    The Legislative branch, a la the USA again, is the Congress? Do they run as Independents or under some Umbrella group?
    Does the Senate still exist?

    2. Later

    3. Ahhh, you were listening to Trudeau’s ONE regret (jokingly). He couldn’t get it through. There was too much vested in the PARTY machinery.
    While it makes sense, unsure it produces what you claim it might. It does permit broader representation in the ?? Legislature?

    4. Sounds good….but…
    One needs to influence the ‘assembled Cabinet’? That is where the power lies. And they are not elected. So the bribes don’t begin until after their ‘assembly’. And since the PM determines who is assembled, that seems where the elective dollars should flow?
    Do ‘concerned citizens’ now develop PAC’s, and I mean political action not public accounts, to push their agendas.


  36. @Hearther

    For example you can’t legislate election manifesto promises not made in a Constitution. Changing circumstances on the economic and social landscape can and does impact whether promises can be implemented.


  37. @Grant 4:05 pm

    Not imitating the USA. All Cabinet members must put all their assets into a blind trust for the duration of their service in cabinet.

    Only the political parties oppose proportional representation… here and in Canada.


  38. @Grant 4:05 pm

    No Political Action Committees… all elections finance by all parties strictly controlled (see point 4).


  39. @Grant 4:05 pm

    The Senate still exists as an appointed body. The House of Assembly is elected from party lists and the Prime Minister is the leader of the party with the most seats in the house of assembly.


  40. We absolutely need to hold public officials more accountable. For example working committees of parliament must work as intended. Documents must be laid before parliament in the stipulated time. Campaign reports must stand up to scrutiny and submitted in required timeframes. If not heads must be chopped of. We have to move to a performance culture of excellence.


  41. “We have to move to a performance culture of excellence.”

    I agree with the emphasis on ‘have to move to..’

    Trying to go all the way

    1.373 billion vs 281,995

    Africa
    Continent
    Africa is the world’s second-largest and second-most populous continent after Asia. At about 30.3 million km² including adjacent islands, it covers 20% of Earth’s land area and 6% of its total surface area. With nearly 1.4 billion people as of 2021, it accounts for about 18% of the world’s human population.


  42. @Donna January 12, 2025 at 8:04 am “I am still against large numbers of those who do not live here potentially deciding the outcome of the elections that decide who will govern ME and not them.”

    I agree with you.

    And some of the over in away Bajans are my beloved children, siblings, nieces and nephews etc. I would happily give anyone of these people a kidney, but a vote here, NO.


  43. I’ve a sibling who has lived outside of Barbados since 1960, should this sibling get a vote?


  44. Obviously the issue of Barbadians living overseas allowed to vote has pros and cons attached. If we accept that there are Barbadians, how about investigating how to make it possible. A recommendation could be any Bajan living overseas who owns property in Barbados with assets greythan x dollars and has visited x number of times in a defined period. We can’t expect members of the diaspora to answer the call to invest and rubbage their heritage.


  45. Voting rights for Barbadians who do not live in Barbados is not an important problem to solve. I lived overseas for 40+ years and it was seriously never an issue.

    We have problems that need solutions. Let’s not invent new problems that are simply distractions.


  46. Do you realise that no one, except for me has spoken about the opposition and its function.

    The best we get is from Heather Cole with this cryptic paragraph.

    “Now that Barbados is a republic, the President is appointed by the Prime Minister presumably in consultation with the Leader of the Opposition. So far in our Independence history, we have had no issue or controversy about any such appointment. That is not to say it may not happen.”

    PLT has not even mentioned the word “opposition”.

    Could anyone point me to the part in the constitution which supposedly underpins this imaginary republic that tells us what the function of the opposition is?

    Does such a constitution even exist?

    It isn’t possible to change the constitution that Ms. Mockley came and found in 2018 because it is not possible to get a constitutional parliament with no opposition.

    We are living in a fool’s paradise, well it is no longer a paradise with all of the ills it possesses but whatever the appropriate word it is full of fools.


  47. “Now that Barbados is a republic, the President is appointed by the Prime Minister presumably in consultation with the Leader of the Opposition. So far in our Independence history, we have had no issue or controversy about any such appointment. That is not to say it may not happen.”

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

    How do we even have a president with no opposition?!!

    30 -0 is a nullity to a realist, a landslide to a bunch of fools and pretenders.

    The Empress is naked without the authority of a constitutional parliament.

    It is completely unbelievable we would debate as simple a reality as this.


  48. How can supposedly highly educated people miss this simple point?

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