Edward Broaster Launches Unique Fuel Protest

Against a backdrop of skyrocketing fuel costs squeezing household budgets across Belize, a local opposition political figure has launched an unusual, high-profile protest that mixes direct public relief with pointed political pressure. Edward Broaster, caretaker for the United Democratic Party (UDP) in Belize Rural Central and a former Deputy Commissioner of Police, is set to roll out a one-day fuel subsidy this Friday, stepping in to cover a portion of motorists’ fuel costs at the Northern Gas Station — and publicly challenging Prime Minister John Briceño to match his effort to ease the strain on working Belizeans.

Broaster is no stranger to public acts of goodwill: he previously earned local attention for serving as a secret Santa for low-income families in Ladyville. Now he’s repurposed that community-focused approach to draw attention to the country’s worsening cost of living crisis, with fuel prices emerging as a top pain point for commuters, delivery workers, and ordinary families alike. Under his initiative, eligible drivers from Belize Rural Central will receive $2 off every gallon of fuel they purchase, capped at 10 gallons per vehicle. The discount will be applied directly at the pump, with Broaster’s team covering the difference to the gas station.

For Broaster, the initiative is far more than a one-off charitable act — it is a deliberate, peaceful protest aimed at highlighting what he calls the government’s inaction on soaring fuel prices. In comments to reporters, he emphasized that if an individual opposition figure can cut fuel prices for local drivers by $2 per gallon, the national government has the capacity to implement broader relief for the entire public. “Hearing from my constituents that the fuel price is killing them, the cost of goods is killing them, this initiative is a form of protest to show the government that yes you can reduce the price of fuel,” Broaster explained. “If I can cut it by two dollars, you can do the same.”

He framed the effort as a rebuke of what he calls the government’s hypocrisy around cost of living relief, noting that an administration elected to serve the Belizean people should not refuse to take meaningful action to ease widespread financial strain. When asked how a local opposition caretaker can fund a full day of fuel subsidies for hundreds of expected drivers, Broaster confirmed that the initiative is backed by financial support from unspecified supporters of the UDP, though he declined to name individual donors — leaving open questions about the backers behind the high-profile protest.

Beyond the one-day pump discount for motorists, Broaster revealed that additional relief efforts are already in planning for bus commuters, a group that has been hit particularly hard as rising fuel costs push up public transit fares across the country. He confirmed that his team is preparing a seven-day relief program specifically for commuters, though he did not release further details about the scope or timing of the upcoming initiative.

As Friday’s subsidy event approaches, political observers and local residents are divided on the nature of the effort: some see it as genuine, immediate relief for a community reeling from persistent price hikes, while others question whether it is merely a political stunt to gain attention for the opposition ahead of future political contests. Regardless of the motivation, the event is expected to draw long lines of drivers eager to lock in the discount, and will almost certainly amplify national conversations about the government’s handling of Belize’s ongoing cost of living crisis.