The system pauses, but power does not. What dissolution reveals about governance, legitimacy, and the election now underway.
Parliament has been dissolved in Antigua and Barbuda.
The phrase sounds procedural. It is anything but. Dissolution is one of the few moments in a political system where its underlying structure becomes visible. What is normally layered and mediated is stripped back. The House disappears. Representation pauses. The electorate is left, briefly, as the only functioning authority.
This is not the start of politics. It is the removal of its scaffolding.
For years, governance has been exercised through Parliament, through debate, through votes, through the slow negotiation of policy and power. Dissolution interrupts that arrangement. It ends the life of the legislature and replaces it with a different kind of accountability, one that is immediate and less controlled.
There are no Members of Parliament now. No committee rooms. No legislative agenda. Only an executive that remains in place, and a public that must decide whether it should.
What dissolution actually does
Dissolution is carried out by the Governor-General of Antigua and Barbuda, on the advice of the Prime Minister. It is formal, but its consequences are deeply political.
- Parliament ceases to exist
- All MPs lose their legislative authority
- All unfinished laws and debates collapse
- The executive remains, but without parliamentary scrutiny
- The electorate becomes the only active check on power
In practical terms, the system narrows. There are fewer buffers, fewer intermediaries, fewer places for accountability to be deferred.
What happens next
The process that follows is structured, but it is not neutral. Each step is administrative on paper and political in effect, overseen by the Antigua and Barbuda Electoral Commission.
1. Writs of Election issued
The state formally instructs that elections be held. This is the legal ignition point. It converts a dissolved Parliament into an active contest for power.
2. Nomination Day
The field becomes real. Candidates are no longer possibilities but commitments. Parties reveal their choices. Independent candidates test their viability. This is where political strategy becomes visible.
3. Campaign period
Often described as messaging, but better understood as narrative construction. Campaigns are not only about policy. They are about credibility, memory, and perception. They attempt to define what the last term meant and what the next one should be.
4. Polling Day
Voting takes place under a first past the post system. The simplicity of the system masks its consequences. Victory does not require consensus, only more votes than the next person. Outcomes can hinge on margins, turnout, and fragmentation.
5. Results and government formation
Power consolidates quickly. A majority becomes a government. The Governor General formalises what the electorate has decided, and Parliament returns, but with a new composition and, often, a new mandate.
The caretaker reality
Between dissolution and election, the government remains, but in a diminished posture.
- It governs, but should not transform
- It administers, but should not commit
- It holds office, but does not hold certainty
This is the caretaker convention. It is less about law and more about restraint. It recognises a simple tension. A government still has authority, but that authority is under review.
What actually changes for the public
The most significant shift is not institutional. It is relational.
- Representation is temporarily suspended
- Political contact becomes more direct and more frequent
- Constituencies become the primary arena of engagement
- Voters are no longer represented. They are being appealed to
For a brief period, the distance between citizen and state collapses. There is no parliamentary filter. Only persuasion and decision.
What to watch in this election cycle
Elections in Antigua and Barbuda are rarely decided by abstraction. They turn on specifics, often small ones, that accumulate.
- Turnout – Not just how many vote, but who shows up and where
- Candidates – Whether familiarity holds or fatigue sets in
- Issues – How economic pressure, public services, and daily realities are framed
- Organisation- Which party can convert support into actual votes
These are not just campaign variables. They are indicators of political alignment and discontent.
Glossary
Dissolution
The formal termination of Parliament, triggering elections
Writ of Election
Legal instruction to begin elections in each constituency
Nomination Day
The point at which candidates are officially confirmed
Caretaker Government
An administration that continues in office but avoids major decisions
First-Past-the-Post
An electoral system where the highest vote-getter wins
Constituency
A defined geographic electoral district
Returning Officer
The official responsible for managing elections locally






