Opinion
Has the time come for Caribbean republics?
Several referenda have failed in other Caribbean countries to alter the constitution to allow the Privy Council to be replaced by the Caribbean Court of Justice.
By Ronald Sanders
In 1994, shortly after Antigua & Barbuda and Cuba established diplomatic relations, Fidel Castro and Antigua & Barbuda’s Prime Minister Lester Bird had a memorable conversation in Havana.
The conversation is worth recalling in the context of the 3rd announcement by a gGovernment, that of Barbados, that by November 2021 it intends to become a republic, shedding monarchical status and Queen Elizabeth II as head of State.
The conversation between Bird and Castro, at which I was present as a member of the Antigua & Barbuda delegation, started with the revolutionary Cuban leader asking Bird what big plans he had in mind for Antigua & Barbuda. Bird told Castro that he was contemplating moving to make Antigua & Barbuda a republic. Castro’s response stopped Bird and the entire Antigua & Barbuda delegation in our tracks. “Why?” asked the legendary revolutionary. “Does she interfere with your government?”
Bird explained that she did not and that, in a real sense, while Antigua & Barbuda, like many other Caribbean countries, was one of The Queen’s realms, her role in the government of the country was performed by a local representative and, apart from assenting to legislation, which could not be withheld, was only ceremonial, having no executive authority.
“In which case,” Castro responded, “you might consider remaining as you are. The Queen doesn’t interfere with your government and she provides to foreign investors and others a level of confidence in the constitutional arrangements of your State.”
The surprising conversation did not go much beyond that. It was staggering to the Antigua & Barbuda delegation, but it demonstrated the practical sense of Fidel Castro, which might account, in part, for the survival of Cuba despite the punishing embargo by the United States.
That 1994 conversation between Castro and Bird took place at least 9 years before Owen Arthur, as prime minister of Barbados, first proposed republican status for Barbados in 2003; 18 years before Jamaican Prime Minister Portia Simpson-Miller suggested it in 2012; 21 years prior to Prime Minister Freundel Stuart echoing the proposition in 2015 for Barbados; 22 years before Andrew Holness as prime minister repeated it in 2016 for Jamaica; and 26 years before the latest announcement by the Barbados Government of Prime Minister Mia Mottley on September 15.
So far, none of the countries in which this proposal has been made has gone through with it.
While the Throne Speech, in which the most recent Barbados announcement was made, referenced Barbados’s first prime minister, Errol Barrow, cautioning against “loitering on colonial premises”, there would be many who would draw a distinction between seeking independence from the colonial authority of the British – which was the context of Barrow’s remarks – and retaining Queen Elizabeth II as head of State.
Both Owen Arthur and Freundel Stuart might have retreated from the idea not because they did not believe it to be right, but because within the Barbados society, including the business community, a great value is placed on The Queen as a symbol, if nothing else, of stability and maybe even of unity above the fray of politics.
This is probably true, too, in the case of The Bahamas, Belize, Jamaica, Antigua & Barbuda, and the 5 other independent countries of the eastern Caribbean where the Queen is still head of State.
In any event, the present government of Barbados has the greatest chance of success in achieving the objective of becoming a republic by next year.
Unlike the remaining independent countries of the Caribbean of which the Queen is head of state, the Barbados constitution allows for this significant change in constitutional status by “votes of not less than two-thirds of all the members of the House”. No referendum of the electorate is required. Given that the present Mottley administration controls 29 of the 30 seats in the House of Assembly, achieving the vote should be easy.
The one obstacle would be how intense, if at all, will be resistance by elements of the Barbados society and the business community against the idea, and how much it threatens to divide the country. This was a matter that clearly influenced both Arthur and Stuart during their premierships, not to press ahead with the idea.
Antigua & Barbuda, The Bahamas, Jamaica and the other 6 independent Caribbean countries require not only a two-thirds majority in the House of Representatives, but also a majority vote by the electorate in a referendum. Winning referenda in the Caribbean has proven to be as difficult as pushing a boulder up a mountain. In 2009, a referendum in St Vincent & the Grenadines rejected the proposal to oust the monarchy and substitute it with a republic. And several referenda have failed in other Caribbean countries to alter the constitution to allow the Privy Council to be replaced by the Caribbean Court of Justice, signifying a reluctance by the majority of the electorate towards radical change.
While becoming a republic is regarded by Caribbean intellectuals as “rounding the circle of independence”, the argument is not as much about the head of State not being a white woman living in a distant former colonial power; it is more about confidence in good governance when institutions perceived as beneficial are changed.
That argument can only be won by political parties in every Caribbean country demonstrating that they will maintain the rule of law, civil and political rights, and democratic principles, including non-discrimination, particularly in race and religion.
However much ruling political parties might wish to join the Barbados government in pursuing republican status, “the matter is really in the hands of the Caribbean people” as the Queen said in 2012 when Portia Simpson-Miller declared: “I love the Queen, she is a beautiful lady, and apart from being a beautiful lady she is a wise lady and a wonderful lady. But I think time come.”
Antigua & Barbuda’s Ronald Sanders is currently Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the United States and the Organization of American States.
