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ANTIGUA | Budget Debate Chaos: PM Browne’s Power Play Leaves Ministers Muzzled

Admin by Admin
December 13, 2024
in Regional
Prime Minister Gaston Browne and Opposition Leader and head of the United Progressive Party, Jamaie Pringle

Prime Minister Gaston Browne and Opposition Leader and head of the United Progressive Party, Jamaie Pringle

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ST. JOHN’S  Antigua  – Chaos erupted in Antigua’s Parliament on Thursday as Prime Minister Gaston Browne brought the Budget Debate to an abrupt halt after just two presentations, both of which challenged his budget proposals.

The presentations came from Opposition Leader Jamale Pringle and MP Richard Lewis, but what followed would leave both government ministers and opposition members stunned. These included MP Trevor Wakler from Barbuda; Deputy Political Leader and St Philip’s South MP Sherfield Bowen, St George’s MP Algernon Watts and St Mary’s South MP Kelvin Simon.

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At the heart of the controversy lay a clash over parliamentary tradition. Opposition members, ready with their budget presentations as shadow ministers, insisted on following the established protocol where each opposition shadow would speak after their respective portfolio minister.

Browne, however, had other plans. In an unprecedented move, he demanded opposition members speak first or not at all—then instructed his ministers to remain silent when his ultimatum wasn’t met.

The ramifications of this political power play were immediate and far-reaching. Key ministries—Education, Health, Security, Water, Agriculture, Sports and Tourism—were left without any accounting for their performance.

The silence from these vital portfolios left not only opposition bench members disappointed but also sparked quiet rebellion within Browne’s own ranks, as government ministers privately expressed their disgust at being muzzled.

Opposition Leader Pringle who represents All Saints East and St Luke, didn’t mince words in his response. “We cannot just cower down to the Honorable Prime Minister and his government because they want to dictate!” he declared, emphasizing that while his opposition colleagues stood ready, the onus lay with the government to explain their stewardship to the people. “If they don’t want to give an account to the people while manning the respective ministries, then we need to get rid of them!”

Barbuda’s representative, MP Trevor Walker, delivered perhaps the day’s most scathing rebuke. “The Prime Minister only made himself look small,” Walker asserted, dismissing Browne’s apparent attempt at political grandstanding.

“When you have such a huge budget and the Prime Minister, the leader of this country, is instructing his ministers to not present and not give account of all the monies allocated to them, it’s a sad day for this country.”

Walker’s criticism cut deeper still, framing the day’s events as symptomatic of broader governance issues. “This man is saying to us, by his actions today, that he is not responsible, he doesn’t care to give an account of how the people’s money is being spent,” he declared, characterizing the move as “absolute disrespect to the tax-paying people.”

The contrast between Browne’s economic optimism and opposition scrutiny couldn’t have been starker. In his budget presentation, the Prime Minister had painted a rosy picture, projecting “remarkable real GDP growth of at least 6 percent in 2024″—nearly double the IMF’s global growth projection of 3.2 percent.

Browne boasted of outperforming major economies like the United States, the Euro area, and the United Kingdom, claiming an impressive three-year average growth rate of 7.4 percent for Antigua, second only to oil-rich Guyana in the region.

However, Opposition Leader Pringle quickly punctured this narrative of prosperity, pointing to a stark reality gap between statistics and street-level economics.

“While a select, well-connected few seem to be prospering, the majority of Antiguans and Barbudans struggle from paycheck to paycheck, with their dignity tested by mounting bills, dwindling resources, and increased taxes,” he countered.

Pringle’s critique cut to the heart of the nation’s economic divide, painting a stark picture of everyday hardship.

“We face a scenario where working mothers struggle to put food on the table, where children risk hunger and malnutrition, and where even those fortunate enough to have employment find their paychecks inadequate to meet their basic needs,” he explained.

The opposition leader pointed to an increasingly insufficient minimum wage buckling under inflationary pressures.

But it was his analysis of the national debt that delivered the most damaging blow to Browne’s economic narrative. While the Finance Minister acknowledged a national debt of 3.9 billion dollars, Pringle revealed the devil in the details: debt servicing would consume a staggering 798 million dollars—nearly a quarter of the total debt—by the financial year’s end.

The mathematics painted a grim picture. When combined with the 478 million allocated for wages and salaries, these obligations would swallow 1.276 billion dollars of the projected 1.41 billion total revenue.

“The budget is essentially gone, depleted, finished,” Pringle declared, dismissing the government’s financial planning as “Gaston Brown voodoo economics”—a statement that visibly rankled the Prime Minister.

The day’s events laid bare not just a parliamentary procedure dispute, but a deeper crisis of governance and economic management in Antigua and Barbuda. With ministers silenced, debt mounting, and economic inequality widening, the budget debate’s premature end may have revealed far more about the state of the nation than any planned presentation could have.

The day’s events laid bare not just a parliamentary procedure dispute, but a deeper crisis of governance and economic management in Antigua and Barbuda. With ministers silenced, debt mounting, and economic inequality widening, the budget debate’s premature end may have revealed far more about the state of the nation than any planned presentation could have.

All eyes now turn to Opposition Leader Pringle, his United Progressive Party colleagues, and Barbuda’s Representative Trevor Walker as they face the challenge of compelling the Gaston Browne administration to complete the budget presentations.

The people of Antigua and Barbuda await their next move, their right to hear a full accounting of their nation’s financial stewardship hanging in the balance. WiredJA

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