A public letter addressed to the Prime Minister of Dominica from prominent activist Gregor Nassief has reignited debate over the country’s troubled new electoral reform framework, exposing deep flaws in voter registration, confirmation and ID card distribution that have left tens of thousands of eligible citizens disenfranchised. This marks Nassief’s fourth public intervention on electoral reform issues, following a year of persistent gridlock that has eroded public trust in the island nation’s democratic process.
In March 2025, Dominica’s House of Assembly passed three landmark electoral reform bills designed to overhaul the country’s voter registration system and introduce mandatory national voter ID cards. Yet on the same day the legislation was signed into law, continuous voter registration — a core process that allows newly eligible voters to add their names to the electoral roll at any time — was illegally suspended. The suspension lasted 355 consecutive days, ending only on March 9, 2026, cutting off more than a full year of new voter sign-ups.
This shutdown directly impacted local elections held across the country, including the March 23, 2026 Roseau City Council poll, where no new eligible voters were able to register or participate in the 369 days leading up to the vote. The island’s existing voter roll has long been plagued by inaccuracies: 2019 data shows roughly 75,000 names were listed on the roll, though International IDEA estimates Dominica’s total resident voting-age population is only around 55,000, with thousands of deceased people and long-term emigrants still included on the register. As of April 2026, only around 14,000 eligible voters — roughly 25% of the total eligible population — have submitted applications for registration or voter confirmation. Of that group, just 4,000 applicants have received final confirmation, representing barely 7% of all eligible Dominicans. Six months into the six-month confirmation period, which launched on October 15, 2025, not a single approved applicant has received their legally mandated voter ID card.
Nassief, who submitted his own registration application on March 9, 2026, says he has yet to receive approval a full month later, and he is far from the only citizen stuck in bureaucratic limbo. Nassief pushes back forcefully against claims Prime Minister made during a March 25, 2026 press conference, where the leader dismissed delays as inconsequential to election outcomes, blamed citizens for failing to participate in the process, and framed the slow rollout as “important progress” derailed only by a last-minute ID card design change.
Nassief refutes the Prime Minister’s claim that shutting out new voters cannot alter election results, pointing to the 2026 Roseau City Council race where opposition candidate Lenny Jno Baptiste lost Ward 1 by just eight votes, a margin that could easily have been flipped by disenfranchised new voters. He also rejects the claim that citizens have failed to “avail themselves” of the confirmation process, noting that the system itself was unavailable to new registrants for nearly a year, and even now, half of all applicants remain unapproved with no IDs in hand.
The letter also challenges the Prime Minister’s constitutional argument that he is required to call a general election on schedule regardless of the confirmation process’s failures. Nassief notes that no provision of Dominica’s constitution compels an early election before the new electoral framework, which the current government championed, is fully implemented and trusted by the public. Calling an election prematurely, he argues, is not a constitutional requirement but a political choice that would proceed without a fully functional, legitimate system. Framing the year-long disenfranchisement of new voters as “water under the bridge,” as the Prime Minister did, shows a dangerous disregard for democratic norms, while the Prime Minister’s public insistence that the confirmation process will end definitively on October 14, 2026 undermines the Electoral Commission’s statutory independence, which allows the body to extend the process by 90 days if necessary.
Nassief lays out six concrete recommendations to restore public confidence in Dominica’s electoral system: first, he calls for the resignation of all five current Electoral Commission members, who have lost public trust, to make way for a new body that can command cross-societal support. Second, he urges the government to provide the new commission with full independence, sufficient resources and extended timelines to fix operational failures and complete registration and confirmation in line with the government’s own standard of being “timely, efficient and transparent.” Third, he calls for a full review of all recent village and city council elections to determine whether they were legitimate, with new elections called if widespread disenfranchisement invalidates the original results. Fourth, he supports a fully nonpartisan public education campaign co-led by the Electoral Office and civil society to encourage all eligible voters to participate regardless of partisan affiliation. Fifth, he calls on the Prime Minister to publicly affirm the Electoral Commission’s right to extend the confirmation period if needed to ensure all eligible voters can complete the process. Finally, he demands a clear public commitment that no general election will be called until the new system is fully functional and public confidence has been restored.
Nassief concludes that Dominica does not need further legal debates over executive authority to call elections; it needs a moral commitment from the Prime Minister that no poll will proceed until the legislated reform framework is fully operational and trusted by the public. Choosing to prioritize legitimacy over expediency, he argues, is the only way to ensure any future Dominican government rests on the free, unobstructed will of the people.
