LETTER: Time for the Old Guard to Step Aside

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Dear Editor,

Harold Lovell’s announcement of his return to elected politics may have stirred nostalgia in some quarters, but it should also trigger a deeper, more uncomfortable question for Antigua and Barbuda: How long will the old guard hold the reins, and at what cost to our nation’s future?

Our political landscape has been dominated for decades by the same familiar faces and the same tired playbook. Sir Molwyn Joseph, Sir Cutie Benjamin, Sir Robin Yearwood — names that have been etched into our parliamentary benches since the 1980s and 1990s — still stand at the forefront, steering the country with the same ideas, strategies, and mindsets they honed decades ago.

While their contributions to nation-building in earlier years are undeniable, there comes a point when experience morphs into entrenchment, and legacy becomes a stumbling block to progress.

The truth is, Antigua and Barbuda can no longer afford to be governed by a political philosophy frozen in the last century. We live in a different world — one shaped by rapid technological change, shifting global economies, the climate crisis, and a population hungry for transparent, forward-thinking governance. Today’s challenges require agility, innovation, and a willingness to disrupt outdated systems. Unfortunately, the political giants of the past seem more inclined to preserve their era’s way of doing things than to embrace the bold reforms the future demands.

It is not a matter of disrespect. It is a matter of evolution. Leaders who guided us through the 1980s and 1990s did so in their time; now, that time has passed. A generation of talented, educated, and globally aware Antiguans and Barbudans stands ready to take the baton — but they are too often sidelined, their energy muted by the towering shadows of those unwilling to step down.

Politics should not be a lifetime occupation. It should be service, followed by the grace to step aside and let others serve. When leaders cling to power for decades, they do not just block individuals — they block ideas, new solutions, and the very possibility of transformation.

If Antigua and Barbuda is to truly thrive in the decades ahead, we must usher in a new era of leadership. That means Harold Lovell must rethink his return, and stalwarts like Sir Molwyn Joseph, Sir Cutie Benjamin, and Sir Robin Yearwood must accept that their finest contribution now may be to mentor and pass the torch, not to grip it tighter.

The past built our foundation, but it is the future that will define our destiny. And the future belongs to the next generation — if only the old guard will let it.

Carl Davidson