LETTER: Open Letter to the Prime Minister | Time for Reflection Before Early Elections

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Dear Prime Minister,

I write to you not out of curiosity but out of deep concern for the direction of this nation under your leadership. You continue to flirt with the idea of calling early elections as though the people of Antigua and Barbuda are eager to reward you and your party for what has been, by all honest measure, a period of frustration, neglect, and disillusionment.

Before you once again place the country on edge with talk of an early poll, perhaps you should first answer a very simple question. What exactly have you and your administration done since the last general election that gives you the confidence the people should vote for you again?

What tangible progress can you point to? What promises have been fulfilled? What hardships have been eased? From where the ordinary man and woman stand, the struggling families, the jobless youth, the overtaxed workers, and the small business owners fighting to stay afloat, things have only grown harder, not better.

We see a government drunk on self-praise but starving for results. We see communities still waiting for the roads you promised, the housing you boasted about, and the jobs you swore would come.

We see an education system in crisis, a healthcare system gasping for air, and a police force demoralized and leaderless. We see rising crime, shrinking opportunities, and a growing disconnect between those who lead and those who suffer under their leadership.

So again, I ask, what have you done for the people of Antigua and Barbuda that would make them line up to give you another term?

Early elections are not a game. The people are not pawns in your political chess match. Leadership is not measured by how often you manipulate the electoral calendar but by the quality of life you deliver to those who entrusted you with power.

If you truly believe the people are ready to reward you again, then let it be on the strength of real achievement, not empty rhetoric. Let it be on genuine progress, not propaganda. Let it be on trust earned, not fear manufactured. The days of bluff and bluster are over. The people are watching, and this time, they are ready to answer you.

Sincerely, Antiguan and Barbudan