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Opposition Leader Statement on Extending to Third-Gen Turks & Caicos Islanders

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Retaining and Returning before Expanding

 

#TurksandCaicos, December 16, 2022 – In their recent town hall meetings, interviews, and on news channels abroad the Hon. Premier and his Government have been announcing their plan for their Population Growth Strategy which is to simply provide citizenship by right to third-generation and further descendants as Turks and Caicos Islanders living abroad, particularly targeting the TCI’s Diaspora of the Bahamas.

As a matter of public policy and first instinct, the Official Opposition supports any idea that would empower Turks & Caicos Islanders, but this plan needs to be properly thought out with the right implementation strategy to go along with it. Unfortunately, it seems that this idea comes across as a Vote Grab, a Knee jerk initiative, and not well thought out.

A careful look at the current PNP government’s election manifesto would show that this issue was not even listed. What about consultation? This requires a summit with our people and a serious round of talks to get their views on it. Let us hear from all stakeholders. The Opposition is willing to join this process as long as it is open and transparent, and has the full support of our people.

Any government democratically elected by the people of the Turks and Caicos Islands should first strongly focus on stopping the exodus of our citizens from the Turks and Caicos. Next, focus on getting our students and other citizens who left the country to want to return. Thereafter we can start the debate of second and third generations in the diaspora having Turks and Caicos Islands citizenship by right.

Our number one job as representatives of the people is to protect the rights of those same people who elected us. If we don’t stop the bleeding of our cherished citizens now, our country as we know might be in jeopardy of being completely shifted away from us.

We don’t have time to wait for a 10-year population plan to materialize. For now, we have to stop the bleeding and retain and return the people we have today.

The PDM Opposition is willing to work with any Government to achieve the following objectives

  1. Identify the reasons and motives for our people who are currently leaving the Turks and Caicos, and the reasons for those who left a few years ago.
  2. Execute initiatives to properly address and eradicate those identified issues and restraints.
  3. Ensure that there are policies, programs, and funding in place to empower our people and to stop the current brain drain of our Youth to other nations, especially the UK.
  4. Identify and categorize the factors that would attract our people back to our shores.
  5. The Turks & Caicos Islands need a period of stabilization where serious money, through which effective measures and initiatives could be designed to empower this generation of Turks and Caicos Islanders.
  6. To halt and reverse the reality where this generation feels as if “there is nothing in this Country for them” but that this Country is open to all but our people.

 TO ACHIEVE THESE ENDS

  1. We urge a tightening of the Reserve Category of Business Licensing
  2. The establishment of a Development Facility that would Enable(a.)  Low-interest finance for Turks & Caicos Islanders seeking to enter the area of owning businesses for themselves. (b.) Protectionist legislation would protect local businesses. (c.) Expansion opportunities in agriculture, fishing, and light manufacturing.
  3. Elimination of work permits for any area that locals are experienced and skilled in. We have to stop playing Games with our People.
  4. Remove Stamp Duty altogether in land and house investments for our people.
  5. Give the Youth and the Turks & Caicos Islanders something to look forward to.

Let it not be confused that we oppose giving our people who are descendants the right to live and work here. In sum, we must choose who will outnumber us.  The Government needs to do the following:

  1. Consult with the public.
  2. Publish a comprehensive Policy and
  3. Realistic Legislative Proposals. Otherwise, this is nothing but a shot in the Dark and a Glorified Vote Grab.

Our country is hurting and we need strong leaders, leaders who will stand up for them, leaders who seek to improve their employment, business, life, and living conditions.

People who were doing great 4 years ago now find that their homes, prized belongings, and good standards of living are but distant memories now, and now lost in time.

A lot of these losses could have been prevented if this current Government knew how to stop the bleeding from our country.

A lot of people would have remained home if this current government was putting our people’s interests above their own.

A lot of people would return home if there was something for them to return to.

This current PNP administration is not really trying to deal with the problems we are facing, and it really shows the ineffectiveness of this administration to impact change.

The Peoples’ Democratic Movement is hard at work creating strategies that will allow the bleeding of human capital to stop. We are fully committed to stemming the tide of our people leaving the Turks and Caicos.

The PDM is committed to having strategies ready for implementation that would allow for effective measures, inducements, and incentives aimed not only to make our people want to return home but also to have them excited and enthusiastic about returning home.

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Bahamas News

Halkitis: Don’t Expect 90 Percent Turnout for 2026 Vote

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The Bahamas, May 29, 2026 – As debate continues over voter participation in the 2026 General Election in The Bahamas, Finance Minister Michael Halkitis is urging Bahamians to adjust their expectations, suggesting the days of 90 percent voter turnout may be behind us.

Speaking to the Nassau Guardian in its analysis of official election results, Halkitis said he believes voter participation is settling into a new reality, with turnout more likely to remain in the 60 and 70 percent range than return to the lofty levels seen decades ago.

His comments come as newly released Parliamentary Registration Department figures reveal that 69,021 registered voters did not cast ballots in the May 12 election — roughly one-third of all eligible voters.

The data paints a striking picture across several New Providence constituencies.

In Bain Town, turnout fell from 60 percent in 2021 to 55 percent in 2026, with 2,018 registered voters staying home. St. Barnabas recorded the same 55 percent turnout, down from 63 percent in 2021, with 2,165 registered voters not voting.

Centreville also saw participation decline, slipping from 62 percent in 2021 to 59 percent this year. According to the figures, 1,978 registered voters did not cast ballots.

In Englerston, turnout dropped from 61 percent in 2021 to 57 percent in 2026, with 2,028 registered voters choosing not to vote.

By contrast, Nassau Guardian reporting showed constituencies such as Killarney remained among the country’s stronger performers for voter participation, highlighting a widening gap in electoral engagement between communities.

Halkitis pointed to the permanent voter register as one possible factor. Prior to the introduction of the permanent register, voters had to actively register before each election, effectively signaling their intention to participate.

He also noted that residents frequently move between constituencies such as Englerston, Centreville, Bain Town and St. Barnabas without transferring their registration.

“The last thing on your mind is going to transfer,” Halkitis told the Nassau Guardian.

But the minister acknowledged a deeper concern may be voter apathy.

“I think nationally, we’re probably going to be in the 60s and 70s and not so much in the 90s,” he said.

Halkitis suggested stubborn concerns over the cost of living, housing affordability, healthcare and security may be contributing to voter disengagement, particularly in communities facing economic challenges.

Former Minister of State for Finance and economist Zhivargo Laing offered a similar assessment. Speaking to the Nassau Guardian, Laing said disappointment may hit hardest in less prosperous communities where residents are already struggling with economic and social challenges.

The figures underscore a growing question for Bahamian democracy: if voter turnout in some constituencies is now hovering in the mid-50 percent range, is the country witnessing a temporary dip in participation — or the emergence of a new electoral normal?

Angle by Deandrea Hamilton. Built with ChatGPT (AI). Magnetic Media — CAPTURING LIFE.

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Bahamas News

Davis Unveils One Of The Largest Cabinets in Modern Bahamian History

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The Bahamas, May 22, 2026 – Just days after securing a commanding re-election victory, Prime Minister Philip Davis has unveiled what appears to be one of the largest Cabinets in modern Bahamian political history — fueling debate over government spending, parliamentary independence and the concentration of executive power.

The new administration now includes 29 members of Cabinet, counting the Prime Minister himself, following the swearing in of 21 Cabinet Ministers and eight Ministers of State.

The appointments come after the Progressive Liberal Party secured 33 seats in the country’s expanded 41-seat Parliament.

Critics are already pointing to the math.

Had all Cabinet appointees been selected strictly from elected Members of Parliament, only four PLP MPs would have remained outside government. Instead, several Senate appointments were used to fill ministerial posts, slightly widening the governing bench but still leaving a comparatively slim independent backbench on the government side of the House.

That reality matters constitutionally and politically because Cabinet Ministers are members of the Executive branch and are bound by collective responsibility and confidentiality rules once sworn into office.

In Westminster parliamentary systems like The Bahamas, backbench MPs traditionally provide an additional layer of scrutiny, debate and independent thought — even within the governing party.

Some observers now question whether a Cabinet of this size reduces the room for dissent or independent legislative oversight inside government ranks.

Others are raising concerns about costs at a time when Bahamians continue facing affordability pressures, rising utility bills and broader economic uncertainty.

The expansion also follows recent changes to constituency boundaries which increased the House of Assembly from 39 to 41 seats — meaning additional MPs, additional parliamentary costs and now a larger executive structure.

Historically, Bahamian Cabinets have fluctuated in size depending on administrations and political strategy, but governments traditionally operated with significantly smaller executive teams than the one now assembled.

The Davis administration, however, argues the country’s development agenda requires expanded leadership portfolios and specialized oversight.

Among the changes are re-engineered ministries and at least one newly created portfolio.

The full Cabinet includes:

Senior Leadership

  • Hon. Philip Edward “Brave” Davis — Prime Minister
  • Hon. Isaac Chester Cooper — Deputy Prime Minister & Minister of Education

Cabinet Ministers

  • Hon. Michael Halkatis — Finance
  • Hon. Wayne Munroe — Attorney General & Legal Affairs
  • Hon. Frederick Mitchell — Foreign Affairs
  • Hon. Glenys Hanna-Martin — Tourism
  • Hon. Michael Darville — Health
  • Hon. Clay Sweeting — Works & Family Island Affairs
  • Hon. Keith Bell — Housing & Land Reform
  • Hon. Jo-Beth Coleby-Davis — Energy, Utility & Aviation
  • Hon. Ginger Moxey — Grand Bahama
  • Hon. Mario Bowleg — Youth & Sports
  • Hon. Jomo Campbell — Agriculture & Marine Resources
  • Hon. Pia Glover-Rolle — Labour, Public Service & National Insurance
  • Hon. Zane Lightbourne — Environment & Natural Resources
  • Hon. Myles Laroda — National Security
  • Hon. Leon Lundy — Transport
  • Hon. Lisa Tammy Rahming — Urban Renewal & Community Relations
  • Hon. Leslia Miller-Brice — Culture, Arts & Heritage
  • Hon. Jerome Fitzgerald — Economic Affairs
  • Hon. Barbara Cartwright — Social Services
  • Hon. Sebastian Bastian — Innovation & National Development

Ministers of State

  • Hon. Omar Rolle — Social Services
  • Hon. Wayde Watson — Innovation & National Development
  • Hon. Leonardo Lightbourne — Agriculture & Marine Resources
  • Hon. Kirk Cornish — Office of the Prime Minister
  • Hon. McKell Bonaby — Office of the Prime Minister
  • Hon. Darren Pickstock — Immigration / Foreign Affairs
  • Hon. Owen Wells — Health & Wellness

The appointments are expected to shape the PLP’s second consecutive term, making the Davis administration the first Bahamian government in nearly 30 years to secure back-to-back election victories.

But the size of the executive team is likely to remain part of the national conversation — particularly as Bahamians await details on government spending priorities, ministerial budgets and the overall cost of governance under the new administration.

Angle by Deandrea Hamilton. Built with ChatGPT (AI). Magnetic Media — CAPTURING LIFE.

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Caribbean News

Browne Wins Fourth Term in Antigua & Barbuda Landslide

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Antigua & Barbuda, May 4, 2026 – Prime Minister Gaston Browne has secured a historic fourth consecutive term in office, leading the Antigua and Barbuda Labour Party to a commanding victory in the country’s snap general election held April 30, 2026.

Preliminary results show Browne’s party capturing 15 of the 17 seats in Parliament, tightening its grip on power and dramatically weakening the opposition.

The main opposition United Progressive Party was reduced to just one seat, held by its leader, while the Barbuda People’s Movement retained its single constituency in Barbuda.

The result marks a major political turnaround for Browne, whose party had won a much narrower 9–7 majority in the 2023 election before rebuilding support through defections and by-elections.

Voter turnout figures vary in early reports, with initial estimates indicating participation of around 35.8 percent, or roughly 22,700 voters out of more than 63,000 registered. However, broader election data suggests overall turnout may have exceeded 60 percent, reflecting steady engagement despite political tensions.

The election, called nearly two years ahead of schedule, was shaped by concerns over the cost of living, global economic pressures and fallout from U.S. visa restrictions linked to the country’s citizenship-by-investment programme.

Despite those issues, Browne campaigned on economic stability and continued development, pointing to a strong tourism recovery and ongoing infrastructure expansion.

The decisive victory now strengthens his mandate, but also raises questions about the future of the opposition, which faces internal challenges after significant losses at the polls.

Angle by Deandrea Hamilton. Built with ChatGPT (AI). Magnetic Media — CAPTURING LIFE.

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