Good governance and the communication question

Five months into the term of St. Vincent and the Grenadines’ new New Democratic Party administration, a rising wave of criticism has flooded social media, print outlets, and radio airwaves, targeting what critics call a deeply flawed government communication strategy marked by mixed messaging, poor visibility, and a lack of clear national direction. In this weekly opinion column for *A View from the Outside*, social commentator and attorney Guevara Leacock pushes back against these widespread critiques, arguing that most current assessments fail to meet basic standards of analytical rigor by ignoring the broader context of governance, the realities of post-election administrative transition, and the tangible policy outcomes the new government has already delivered.

Leacock argues that the bulk of today’s criticism is rooted in selective observation, premature judgment, and a fundamental misunderstanding of how new administrations function during their early months in office. The core claim that widespread communication breakdown has irreparably damaged the government’s credibility, he notes, relies almost entirely on anecdotal claims of “blunders” and “mixed messages,” with no sustained, verifiable evidence or structured analysis to back up the assertions. Contrary to claims that the administration has gone silent, Leacock points to a steady stream of ongoing public communication: regular ministerial press conferences, the weekly Friday Report, official public notices distributed via the Agency for Public Information, and formal ministerial statements marking major national and international dates, from International Women’s Day to regional observances. Many of these communication practices, he adds, were far less consistent or visible under the previous 25-year administration, despite its self-framing as a progressive governing force.

Critics also misjudge the timeline of governance, Leacock argues. Transition from opposition to ruling power is far more than a simple swap of political faces: it requires realigning entire bureaucratic systems, recalibrating long-standing policy priorities, building new institutional workflows, and reorganizing priorities across every branch of the state machinery. What casual critics dismiss as “unpreparedness,” he says, is actually the ordinary friction that comes with any new administration taking up the reins of national power – a normal part of the governing learning curve, not a sign of systemic collapse.

Leacock also notes that decades of heavily centralized, single-voice public communication under the previous administration have left many Vincentians accustomed to a more performative style of governance, leading them to misread the new government’s quieter, more distributed, deliberative approach to communication. Democracy, he emphasizes, does not always look like constant public command; it often manifests as intentional process, careful coordination, and adaptive adjustment, rather than nonstop rhetoric.

Claims that the administration lacks clear direction also fall flat upon closer examination, Leacock contends. Governing direction is not measured by daily headlines or constant public spectacle; it is embedded in long-term legislative planning, administrative agendas, and policy pipelines that are often not immediately visible to the general public. In fact, the government’s full policy agenda was clearly laid out in the February 2026 Speech from the Throne delivered by Governor-General Sir Stanley John at the opening of Parliament, a public document that remains widely accessible via the Agency for Public Information’s social media channels – an act of official communication that critics consistently ignore.

What many critics are actually demanding, Leacock argues, is not just communication, but a specific performative style of communication: constant public visibility, immediate answers to every question, and nonstop rhetorical display. This model prioritizes optics over governing substance, creating a dangerous temptation to confuse theatrical leadership with effective leadership. Government is not a stage performance, it is deliberate work – and that work is already visible across St. Vincent and the Grenadines: ongoing road repairs, the reinstatement of public officers dismissed under the previous administration’s vaccine mandate, the acquisition of new ambulances, and a measurable rise in public economic confidence. These tangible outcomes are not signs of political drift; they are evidence of steady, effective governance.

Leacock also addresses the common critique that “too little has changed” from the previous administration, noting that continuity in governance is not inherently a failure. Responsible governing requires stability, incremental progress, and intentional continuity rather than constant, disruptive upheaval. Dramatic overnight transformation may satisfy an impatient public, but it risks damaging long-term institutional health and creating lasting national instability. Even with the NDP’s landslide 14-1 electoral mandate secured in November 2025, not every sector of national life can or should be remade overnight: meaningful, lasting change takes time, and serious governing requires patience.

Critics who dismiss Prime Minister Dr. Godwin Friday’s frequent appearances at schools, community gatherings, and sporting events as trivial, symbolic engagements also reveal a narrow view of modern political leadership, Leacock says. In a small democracy like St. Vincent and the Grenadines, consistent civic presence among constituents is not a trivial distraction from governance – it is a core part of building and humanizing political legitimacy. Leadership is not only expressed through formal cabinet meetings, technical briefings, and official statements; it is also demonstrated through proximity to the people the government serves, a standard Friday is already meeting.

The most concrete and reasonable critique, Leacock acknowledges, is the call to appoint a professional government communications strategist to improve coordination. On this point, there is room for agreement: most governments benefit from more centralized, coordinated communication, and the current administration has already publicly announced its plan to hire a communications specialist. Even so, Leacock warns against overstating the role of communication in good governance. Communication can never substitute for solid policy or effective delivery, and it is not the primary metric for judging whether a government is performing well. There is a deep risk, he notes, of communication becoming a replacement for substance: a tool to manage public perception rather than address tangible national challenges, a pattern Vincentians saw firsthand under previous administrations that dominated airwaves with rhetoric while national institutions eroded behind the scenes. Talking alone can only achieve so much: communication matters, but it cannot build roads, reform institutions, stabilize public finances, or restore public trust on its own.

The most glaring gap in most current criticism, Leacock argues, is the near-total absence of engagement with actual policy substance. There is little serious discussion of the administration’s legislative initiatives, administrative reforms, or economic plans, with passing, offhand references to policy replacing rigorous analysis. A government cannot be judged on messaging alone; it must be evaluated by what it actually does, builds, and reforms. To focus almost exclusively on communication is to present a partial, deeply misleading picture of governing performance.

Leacock does concede that many Vincentians have legitimate questions and demands for more information: the public has a right to details about the alleged long-term economic mismanagement of the previous administration, and many are waiting for the promised forensic audit of past government practices. That desire for transparency is completely valid, he notes, but forensic audits by their nature require rigorous, time-consuming examination of state records, conducted while the new government continues to carry out its day-to-day governing responsibilities. Patience in this process is not a sign of weakness, it is a requirement for thorough, accurate work.

In conclusion, Leacock stresses that while questions about communication clarity and coordination are legitimate, the bulk of current criticism is analytically thin and premature, often trading evidence for assertion and rhetoric for balanced analysis. A credible critique of the administration’s communication strategy would situate communication within the broader context of governance, acknowledge the realities of administrative transition, and center policy outcomes over messaging style. Until that kind of rigorous assessment is offered, the repeated calls for the government to “wake up” reveal more about the limitations of the critics than they do about the performance of the young administration.

This column was published by Guevara Leacock, a barrister of Lincoln’s Inn and practicing attorney in St. Vincent and the Grenadines with a focus on history and political commentary, on Saturday 10 April 2026. The opinions expressed are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial stance of iWitness News.