Leaders from across the globe gathered in Barcelona for the IV Meeting in Defence of Democracy, with Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley at the forefront of calls to translate commitments to democratic governance into tangible action. The high-level summit closed with a landmark joint declaration that reaffirmed the global community’s core commitment to upholding democracy, universal human rights, and a rules-based international order, while outlining a concrete action plan focused on multilateral reform, information integrity, democratic digital governance, and inclusive global development.
Against a backdrop of rising geopolitical tension, widening economic inequality, growing societal polarization, and the rampant spread of disinformation, Mottley positioned Barbados as a leading voice for small nations demanding that democratic values be defended through action, not just rhetoric. Her address centered on three interconnected critical priorities that shape the future of democratic governance globally: upholding the rules-based international system, countering the rise of extremism fueled by systemic inequality and exclusion, and defending truth amid a growing crisis of disinformation.
“For small states like Barbados, a rules-based order is essential to our ability to exist and succeed,” Mottley emphasized. She further warned that unaddressed systemic inequality poses an existential threat to democratic foundations, noting, “When democracy does not deliver for people, and when inequality becomes extreme, it erodes faith in the system itself and creates space for extremism.”
Many of Mottley’s key priorities were integrated directly into the final Barcelona declaration. The document reaffirmed that respect for international law and multilateral cooperation remain the bedrock of global peace, sustainable development, and human dignity. Participating leaders committed to building a renewed, more effective, inclusive, and representative multilateral system, including comprehensive reform of the United Nations, particularly the UN Security Council.
Of special significance to Barbados and other similarly positioned nations, the declaration recognized the urgent need for a reformed multilateral framework that addresses the unique vulnerabilities of Small Island Developing States (SIDS) and advances a global development financing structure better aligned to the needs of marginalized nations and their citizens.
A core pillar of Mottley’s intervention was the concept of informational sovereignty, which she framed as fundamental to democratic function. “Without facts there is no truth, without truth there is no trust, and without trust there is no shared reality,” she stated, arguing that democracies have a non-negotiable obligation to protect the public’s right to accurate information. This emphasis was reflected in the final declaration: participating nations pledged to strengthen cross-border cooperation on transparency, accountability, and democratic governance in the digital space; launched a new Digital Democracy Roundtable initiative; and committed to supporting algorithmic transparency, information integrity, independent pluralistic media, sustainable journalism, and national digital sovereignty.
Mottley pushed attending leaders to move beyond broad symbolic statements and unite around shared, values-driven actionable goals. “If we are serious about the Sustainable Development Goals, we have to be serious about allowing countries to access the means to achieve them. The reform of the international financial system is central to that effort,” she said. She went on to argue for a “more comprehensive, fairer and more democratic system” that guarantees all people access to basic necessities including food and clean water, and addresses the systemic inequities that push vulnerable nations further to the margins during global economic crises.
The summit’s final declaration echoed these concerns, acknowledging that persistent systemic inequality creates fertile conditions for extremism and democratic backsliding, reaffirming the importance of fair progressive taxation, and recognizing that climate change acts as a key amplifier of global inequality. Most notably, the meeting framed itself as a decisive turning point, shifting the initiative from collective acknowledgment of shared challenges to concrete implementation. The group will reconvene in New York this coming September on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly to review progress.
Beyond the plenary discussions, Mottley held bilateral talks with Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez focused on advancing practical cooperation priorities for Barbados and other small island states. The two leaders covered a wide range of topics, including migration policy cooperation, climate resilience, renewable energy transition, methane reduction policy, data governance, international competitiveness, strategic autonomy, and the removal of persistent systemic economic barriers that disproportionately harm small states.
Key topics on the bilateral agenda included a potential technical study visit for Barbadian officials to learn from Spain’s migration policy experience, the framing of climate resilience as a core national defense priority for small island nations, advancing renewable energy transition while maintaining energy security in a hurricane-prone region, strengthening global methane regulations, sustainable green data center governance, and the strategic importance of digital and communications sovereignty for small states.
The leaders also addressed the disproportionate harm caused by unfair international financial listings, specifically discussing Barbados’ long-running request to be removed from Spain’s national blacklist of financial jurisdictions. Mottley noted that Barbados has already met all required compliance standards set by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and Sanchez confirmed that Spain would immediately move forward with updating the list and removing Barbados from the designation.