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Barbados elects first female PM in opposition landslide win

by Reuters
Friday, 25 May 2018 16:14 GMT

(Updates with comments from winning candidate, defeated prime minister)

By Robert Edison Sandiford

BRIDGETOWN, May 25 (Reuters) - Barbados elected its first female prime minister as the opposition inflicted a crushing defeat on the ruling Democratic Labour Party (DLP), winning all the seats in the Caribbean island's parliament, election results showed on Friday.

The victory for Mia Mottley, 52, at Thursday's elections returns the Barbados Labour Party (BLP) to power on the island of some 285,000 people for the first time in a decade.

The Electoral and Boundaries Commission said the BLP had elected all 30 members of the parliament, delivering the first clean sweep in the history of the legislature. The DLP had previously held a slim majority with 16 seats.

"This victory is the people of Barbados' victory," Mottley told supporters outside the BLP's Bridgetown headquarters early on Friday, calling the result a vote for a more inclusive and transparent kind of leadership for Barbados.

"This must be our legacy to the people of Barbados: to give you back your government and your governance," she said.

The result means the Barbadian House of Assembly is without an official opposition, in spite of the fact that an unprecedented 135 candidates ran for office across nine parties.

Outgoing Prime Minister Freundel Stuart, who had served since 2010, congratulated Mottley, conceding that the DLP had suffered an "overwhelming defeat.".

"In campaigning, whenever there is success, success is shared by all those who succeed and by those with whom they are associated, but when there is failure, failure points to one man," he told reporters at his party headquarters.

"I think that there was some hurt in the society in respect of some of the decisions that had to be made."

The Barbadian economy has struggled since suffering a sharp contraction in 2009 in the wake of the global financial crisis.

Weak growth has put strains on Barbados' public debt, pressuring foreign exchange reserves and helping to spark repeated downgrades of the island's credit rating.

The DLP's economic record dogged Stuart in the campaign. Many voters expressed frustration at the party's failure to reduce debt and the cost of living even as their taxes rose.

Mottley, a former minister and attorney general, is due to be sworn in as prime minister at noon on Friday. She ordered all schools shut for the day and declared a half-day holiday. (Reporting by Robert Edison Sandiford Editing by Alistair Bell)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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