With Antigua and Barbuda’s general election just around the corner, United Progressive Party (UPP) leader Jamale Pringle has made soaring fuel prices a cornerstone of his campaign, promising to kick-start urgent negotiations with key energy and transportation stakeholders within days of taking office if his party secures victory.\n\nSpeaking to a crowd of enthusiastic supporters at a recent UPP campaign rally, Pringle emphasized that the skyrocketing cost of living – driven in large part by steep increases in gasoline and grocery prices – has created a crisis for ordinary citizens that demands immediate, decisive government action. “From working commuters to small business owners, everyone is feeling the squeeze of rising gas and food costs, and this election has turned on this urgent struggle,” Pringle told attendees. He stressed that addressing household and business cost burdens would sit at the top of his administration’s policy agenda should UPP win the April 30 vote.\n\nUnder Pringle’s proposed plan, a UPP government would launch direct talks immediately after inauguration with the West Indies Oil Company (WIOC), the state-owned national petroleum entity, to audit current fuel pricing structures and explore actionable mechanisms to pass relief directly to consumers. Beyond energy sector negotiations, Pringle also committed to holding dedicated consultations with bus operators and other public transportation stakeholders. For months, public transport providers have raised alarm over how persistent high fuel costs have squeezed their profit margins, forcing many to consider raising passenger fares that would further shift burden to working people. These dialogues, Pringle noted, will feed into a broader fuel relief package designed to ease pressure on both transportation operators and daily commuters.\n\nWhile Pringle stopped short of releasing specific details on the size, funding structure, or exact eligibility requirements of the proposed relief package, he made clear that the core goal of the policy would be to reorient the country’s existing energy framework to deliver more tangible, direct benefits to ordinary citizens, rather than solely supporting institutional or corporate interests.\n\nThe pledge comes as fuel and energy costs have emerged as the defining political issue ahead of the general election, with households across the income spectrum and businesses of all sizes consistently naming transportation and energy expenses as the top driver of growing cost-of-living pressures. Pringle framed the planned fuel consultations as one piece of a wider UPP policy agenda focused on rolling back cost-of-living challenges, noting that any fuel-specific relief would be paired with broader economic support policies to lift financial strain across the country. As the island nation prepares to head to the polls on April 30, the promise of immediate action on fuel prices has cemented cost of living as the central battleground for competing parties.
Pringle Pledges Urgent Talks with WIOC, Bus Operators on Fuel Relief if Elected
