Lead Editor-Politics
akash.samaroo@cnc3.co.tt
Regional leaders directly confronted what they described as the perception of a growing “fracture” within the regional bloc during yesterday’s opening ceremony of the 50th Regular Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of Caricom.
The most significant recent strain involves the region’s response to United States foreign policy under President Donald Trump. In late 2025 and early 2026, the United States increased military pressure on Venezuela, eventually resulting in the ouster of Nicolas Maduro.
While Trinidad and Tobago supported the military action, Barbados and other member states have held firm to the bloc’s traditional ethos of non-interference and maintaining the region’s stance as a zone of peace. This public split in how to handle a neighbour as influential as Venezuela has led many to believe the bloc’s “collective voice” is cracking.
However, in addressing Caricom leaders yesterday, outgoing chair and Jamaica Prime Minister Andrew Holness insisted that the regional body remains strong and underscored that unity does not require uniformity.
“Our treaty does not mandate a singular foreign policy or a supranational authority. And because we are sovereign states, each accountable to our own electorates, we will at times assess risks differently, sequence priorities differently, or interpret geopolitical opportunities differently. That is not evidence of the weakness of our association. This is the natural expression of sovereign democracies navigating an increasingly turbulent global environment,” Holness said.
He added, “Too often, differences in national perspectives are portrayed as fractures threatening the regional project. I submit that they are nothing of the sort. While there are undoubtedly circumstances where one voice has and will work for us to great effect globally, variations in national perspectives is not a liability to be feared.”
Meanwhile, newly elected Prime Minister of St Vincent and the Grenadines, Dr Godwin Friday, addressed the differing views shared by Caribbean leaders.
“Over the years, we have come to near breaking points. Words have been exchanged amongst leaders. Meetings have failed or even failed to take place because of an inability to agree on critical matters or a lack of will. And for that, we have been mocked at times as being more Cari-gone than Cari-Com, yet here we are. Caricom survives and the spirit of regional integration persists and indeed grows.”
Prime Minister Friday added, “But now more than ever we are being tested. We are challenged from inside and out. The world around us grows more perilous daily. International rules and practices that we have become used to over the years have changed in troubling ways that call upon us to look to one another for support. Where we thought we could safely rely on familiar routes of the road, we must now tread cautiously and manoeuvre as best we can to advance our individual and collective interests.”
Current Caricom chair and St Kitts and Nevis PM Dr Terrance Drew conceded things were not all well at this point in time.
He said, “So the Caribbean at this time and Caricom may be going through challenges and difficulties, but I want to say one thing. At a time when it seems toughest, when the seas seem rough, when those who are the critics do their best in criticising and suggesting that Caricom has lost its way, today in St Kitts and Nevis, in our presence, are all the leaders of Caricom, and the last time we had all leaders in the same room was 10 years ago. So, there is opportunity in adversity.”
