FLASH : Attempt to revoke the PM defeated by the USA

In a dramatic political showdown on January 21, 2026, Haitian Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé retained his position after a failed dismissal attempt within the Presidential Transitional Council (CPT). The resolution for his removal initially garnered support from five council members before Advisor Smith Augustin unexpectedly reversed his position, refusing to provide the crucial final signature needed for passage.

The four advisors who endorsed the dismissal motion were identified as Fritz Alphonse Jean, Leslie Voltaire, Louis Gérald Gilles, and Edgard Leblanc Fils. Their effort faced strong opposition from Laurent Saint-Cyr, the Council’s President pro tempore and Coordinator, who circulated a formal correspondence condemning the initiative.

Saint-Cyr’s communication emphasized the critical need for governmental stability ahead of the February 7 institutional deadline, warning against ‘any initiative likely to fuel instability, confusion or a breakdown of trust’ that would carry ‘serious risks for the country.’ He advocated for structured dialogue representing Haiti’s diverse political sectors rather than rushed decisions.

The decisive factor in quashing the dismissal attempt emerged from explicit diplomatic pressure from the United States Embassy. In unequivocal language, U.S. officials declared that changing Haiti’s government composition at this late stage would be considered ‘an effort to undermine’ American objectives for security and stability. The correspondence contained a direct threat that the U.S. would regard supporters of such measures as ‘acting contrary to the interests of the United States, the region, and the Haitian people’ and would ‘act accordingly.’

This diplomatic intervention highlights the ongoing influence of international actors in Haiti’s fragile political transition and the continuing challenges facing the Caribbean nation’s governance structures.