Advertisement 330
Advertisement 334
Jomo Sanga Thomas is a lawyer, journalist, social commentator and a former Speaker of the House of Assembly in St. Vincent and the Grenadines. (iWN file photo)
Jomo Sanga Thomas is a lawyer, journalist, social commentator and a former Speaker of the House of Assembly in St. Vincent and the Grenadines. (iWN file photo)
Advertisement 219

By *Jomo Sanga Thomas

(“Plain Talk” Sept. 26, 2025)

All engines go means that we are in a state of readiness. The elections are upon us. Both parties have announced their slate of candidates. The ULP is hosting Red Limes in various constituencies. The opposition NDP continues its busy electioneering with public meetings across the country. Unfortunately, we don’t know the hour. The country holds its collective breath as it awaits the decision of PM Gonsalves to prorogue the Parliament and announce the date for us to vote.

The 2020 election was held on Nov. 5. Nomination day was Oct. 20, and PM Gonsalves used the Independence Day celebration (Oct. 27), marking our 41st anniversary as a sovereign nation, to promise benefits and developments expected to transform the lives of our people. With the 2020 election timetable as a guide, the next 45 days will be a wild ride.

With the government vying for an unprecedented sixth consecutive victory, the central question facing the electorate is whether their lives have improved over the last five years. Has our country transformed in ways that will make returning Vincentians proud or marvel at foreigners visiting for the first time? We are not talking about natural beauty here.

Advertisement 271

The answer has to be a resounding “No.” It is true we now have an international airport, and a new port is about to open. The airport reduced hassle for those travelling to or from North America or Europe. However, travel across the Caribbean remains frustrating and expensive. The authorities have also failed to provide projections for what the nation will export in the next five to 15 years. 

There has been no significant increase in the export of goods from St. Vincent and the Grenadines since AIA opened in 2017. While the government claimed upwards of $5 million in profits at AIA last year, word is that the airport gets to write off millions in debt owed to the public entity, such as VINLEC and CWSA. Each year, the AIA receives budgetary support from the government. Tourism may have received a boost, but there’s no objective evidence that the opening of Sandal Resort resulted in a significant change in our economic situation.

The government’s promise to facilitate the opening of a 360-room Sandals Beaches at Mt Wynne and a 280-room Marriott hotel at Peter’s Hope. These companies demand economically crippling tax-free and other duty-free concessions. If they come to fruition, they will create at best low-level jobs. Antigua has been a mass tourism destination since the 1970s. Recently, PM Gastan Browne was particularly critical of Sandals’ greedy business model. Our government has thrown caution to the wind and seems willing to embrace whosoever will may come with little or no due diligence. Evidence of this is the empty shells left by the Canadian Developers at Peters Hope and the stalled hotel development at Ratho Mill.

Our experience with the COVID-19 plandemic, our location in the hurricane belt, and the devastation caused by Beryl should give us reason to pause regarding tourism as our central and strategic foundation for economic development. Sadly, the government appears unable to think through and devise alternative ways to move our country forward. 

The government, after two false starts, plans to open the new port next month. It’s a $700 million project that has gone into repairs before it is completed. The cost overrun is potentially massive. Last month, the government borrowed an additional $23 million for port development, despite claiming it had saved $20 million by allowing the dredging of sand locally rather than importing it. One of the justifications for snatching the lands from farmers at Richmond was that the stones from the quarry were to be used at the port. Nothing came of that, further exposing Gonsalves as a flim-flam artist.

Some of us have demanded that opposition politicians provide more information about their development plans. They say their focus would be tourism, agriculture, which the Gonsalves regime has all but left for dead, the blue economy and the new economy. 

SVG boast a national debt of over $3 billion. With a debt to Taiwan approaching $1 billion, the Labour government is working overtime to ensure that its debt trap hook is lodged deep into the national gill. 

In 2024, the national debt was 93.4%of the GDP. Between 2023 and 2024, the debt increased by 17%. We continued to borrow at breakneck speed in 2025, resulting in a debt-to-GDP ratio that exceeds 100%. 

The only people excited about this level of borrowing are the lenders who make significant amounts in interest payments alone. Last year, over $120 million went to debt servicing, including interest payments. 

What is all this borrowing for? Our lives are not improving, poverty is on the rise, the public infrastructure, including police stations, clinics, roads, schools, community centres, recreational places, hard courts and other public buildings, is falling apart. Kingstown is unattractive; different locations, which we refer to as towns, have not shown signs of development since independence in 1979.

We are basically sleepwalking into the future. With elections upon us, Vincentians have a clear choice. Having entrusted the ULP with the stewardship of our country for five consecutive terms, there is absolutely no reason why we should punish ourselves by allowing Gonsalves and his clansmen to continue to rule over us.

*Jomo Sanga Thomas is a lawyer, journalist, social commentator and a former Speaker of the House of Assembly in St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

The opinions presented in this content belong to the author and may not necessarily reflect the perspectives or editorial stance of iWitness News. Opinion pieces can be submitted to [email protected].

6 replies on “The elections are upon us”

  1. The ULP’s government’s borrowing strategy is unsustainable, failing to deliver the promised broad-based economic benefits. Major investments like the Argyle International Airport have not catalysed the promised transformation, as evidenced by no significant increase in exports and the airport’s continued reliance on government support. Similarly, the new port project symbolises fiscal mismanagement, plagued by cost overruns and additional borrowing despite claimed savings, undermining trust in Camillo Gonsalves’ planning process.

    This approach is dangerously over-reliant on a flawed tourism model. The pursuit of large-scale resorts comes with crippling tax concessions that offer primarily low-wage jobs, a concern echoed regionally. This strategy is further weakened by a track record of stalled projects like the Geo-thermal project and a failure to conduct due diligence, while also ignoring the fundamental vulnerability of a tourism-centric economy to natural disasters and global shocks, as recently demonstrated.

    Alarmingly, this massive borrowing has not translated into tangible improvements for citizens. With a national debt exceeding $3 billion and a debt-to-GDP ratio over 100%, over $120 million is spent annually just on debt servicing, benefiting lenders rather than the Vincentian people. This financial burden starkly contrasts with the decay of public infrastructure and rising poverty, proving the strategy’s failure.

    The core flaw is the absence of a diversified economic vision. There is no clear plan for future exports, and sectors like agriculture have been neglected under Saboto Caesar. Instead of funding a transition to a resilient economy, borrowing finances isolated projects and current spending. The conclusion is a resounding “No”, this government cannot expect real gain from this path, which only increases national vulnerability while offering no strategic foundation for any kind of development.

  2. There is absolutely no reason also why we should punish ourselves by allowing the untalented and “not ready” NDP and its clansmen to once again rule over us.

  3. C.Ben-David what you are indeed advocating is for Vincentians to be weight down by the proverbial albatross around the neck of to enable the them eto vote in mass to achieve six in a row. The author has succinctly pointed out the macro elements that exist when speaking about the economy of St Vincent which do not justify six in a row.

    C.Ben-David the so call Layou Jew is so brain dead and is devoid of logic for abovcating six in a row which is equivalent to a mass suicide as we have seen in Jonestown. It synonymous of a farmer taking his cow to the slaughter house or abbatoir. The abbatoir and the cow are not natural friends. The result is a forgone conclusion.

    The name or alias C.Ben-David signify convesion to the Hebrew religion. It is a truism that one is entitled to their opinion not the facts. Part of the factual matrix is that St Vincent exports have dwindled over the past two decades under the watch of the Ulp, to the extent that borrowing for the construction of a port is a no brainer. This is ideal according to the converted Layou Jew.

    I am an independent thinker and not a member or supporter of either party. However, to continue with the ULP just because the leader, in Comrade Gonsalves can make or give a telling speech at the UN is fallacious at best.

    There is an old a adage that goes like this, “Insanity is the notion of doing the same thing repeatedly and expecting a different result.” Indeed C.Ben-David is insane and should be awarded his rightful place in the mental asylum in Glen or build an equivalenti institution in the town of layou where he will be the sole occupant is my recommendation.

  4. C.Ben-David your arguments are based less. Provide me an objective analysis of why you believe one should keep ghe Ulp in power. One thing I can say the rest of us are not brain dead or having a brain fog. Are we to believe that C. Ben-David is showing early signs of senility? Are you a senior? If so check yourself for this condition his my recommendation.

Comments closed.