In a fiery parliamentary address, St. Vincent and the Grenadines’ newly appointed Housing Minister Andrew John delivered a damning indictment of his predecessor’s administration, characterizing the housing ministry as “one of the most corrupt institutions” in the nation’s recent history. The allegations emerged during Thursday’s debate on the EC$1.886 billion fiscal package for 2026.
Minister John, who secured his parliamentary seat in the November 27 elections that ousted the Unity Labour Party (ULP) government, presented compelling evidence of systematic mismanagement. He revealed significant discrepancies between officially reported housing repairs and actual on-ground assessments, stating that claimed repairs to 5,034 homes were entirely fictional upon physical inspection.
The minister detailed how the previous administration allegedly utilized housing resources as “political footballs,” strategically positioning over $6 million worth of construction materials in key constituencies to manipulate electoral outcomes. These tactical depots were established across multiple regions including North Leeward, Central Leeward, and various Windward constituencies.
The parliamentary session grew increasingly heated when opposition senator Carlos James challenged the current government’s fiscal priorities, particularly questioning the allocation of EC$2.1 million for prime ministerial vehicles and official residence repairs while temporary housing assessors faced layoffs. James presented documentation showing termination notices issued to workers involved in post-Hurricane Beryl reconstruction efforts.
Minister John countered by producing a July 2024 Cabinet memo that established the temporary nature of these positions, emphasizing that his administration inherited expiring contracts rather than initiating dismissals. He contrasted this with the ULP government’s termination of over 500 workers during COVID-19 vaccine mandate implementations.
The housing minister committed to presenting photographic evidence during the formal budget debate commencing February 9, promising visual documentation of the alleged mismanagement and unfinished projects that have left citizens in inadequate housing conditions across the nation.
