Senate of Antigua and Barbuda is scheduled to meet Today

In a plenary sitting held on June 16, 2026, the House of Representatives of Antigua and Barbuda approved a broad slate of legislative proposals, constitutional motions, and international ratifications, advancing five major bills to the Upper House for upcoming debate.

The five bills heading to Upper House deliberation cover a wide range of policy priorities, from legal modernization to border security and immigration reform. The first, the Fatal Accidents Bill 2026, is designed to update the country’s outdated legal framework for damage claims stemming from fatal incidents, and will fully repeal the decades-old existing law, Fatal Accidents Act, Cap 166, replacing it with updated regulatory language. The Magistrate’s Code of Procedure (Amendment) Bill 2026 targets Section 38 of the existing Magistrate’s Code of Procedure Act, CAP 255, refining the statutory rules governing how search warrants are issued by judicial authorities. The Electronic Crimes (Amendment) Bill 2026 revises Section 18 of the 2018 Electronic Crimes Act, with changes focused on strengthening provisions related to production orders for digital evidence and updating penalties for entities or individuals that fail to comply with court-ordered information requests.

On immigration and border management, two bills address longstanding policy gaps and bring domestic rules in line with global standards. The Immigration and Passport (Amendment) Bill 2026 establishes a formal amnesty program that allows undocumented residents to apply to have their immigration status formalized, creating a pathway to legal residency for eligible individuals. The Advanced Passenger Information and Passenger Name Record Bill 2026 introduces formal regulatory frameworks for the collection, transmittal, sharing, and secure storage of passenger data for people entering, departing from, or transiting through Antigua and Barbuda, aligning the country’s border security protocols with current international best practices.

In addition to the five bills bound for the Upper House, the sitting also approved two procedural motions that will be taken up by the upper chamber. One motion authorizes the compulsory acquisition of land for public use, specifically to build a secure entry and exit corridor and supporting public infrastructure for the planned National Performing Arts Centre. The second motion sets procedural arrangements for the Governor General’s official opening of Parliament scheduled for May 26, 2026, including the delivery of the traditional Throne Speech outlining the government’s upcoming policy agenda.

Beyond the legislation moving to the Upper House, the House of Representatives approved a series of additional resolutions during the same sitting, including four international treaty ratifications that strengthen Antigua and Barbuda’s global engagement. These include ratification of an addendum to the Multilateral Competent Authority Agreement on the Automatic Exchange of Financial Account Information, a global transparency agreement designed to combat cross-border tax evasion. Members also approved ratification of the 1986 amendment to the Constitution of the International Labour Organization, updating the institutional framework of the global labor standard-setting body. A reciprocal visa exemption agreement between the governments of Antigua and Barbuda and the United Arab Emirates was also ratified, allowing citizens of both nations to travel visa-free between the two countries, a move expected to boost tourism, trade, and people-to-people ties. The final ratification approved by members was a 2016 protocol amending Articles 50(a) and 56 of the Convention on International Civil Aviation, signed in Montreal, which updates global civil aviation governance rules.

The sitting also concluded the formal appointment of a new Public Accounts Committee, required under Section 98 of Antigua and Barbuda’s Constitution, which exercises legislative oversight of government spending to ensure public funds are used appropriately and transparently. The committee will be chaired by Hon. Jamale Pringle, MP for All Saints East and St Luke, with other members including Hon. Trevor Walker, MP for Barbuda; Hon. Anthony Smith Jr, MP for All Saints West; Hon. Michael Freeland, MP for St George; and Hon. Melford Nicholas, MP for St John’s City East.

Official multimedia coverage of the full June 16 sitting has been released by the Government Information Service of Antigua and Barbuda.