đŠ Black Light: Elected Leader of the Week
đ§đ§ Mia Mottley â The Caribbeanâs Voice on the World Stage
When global leaders gather to talk climate, economic justice, or post-colonial recovery, thereâs one voice they listen for â Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley of Barbados.
Now in her second consecutive term after a sweeping re-election in 2022, Mottley has transformed her role as a Caribbean head of government into one of global moral authority. Whether addressing the UN, the IMF, or her own Parliament in Bridgetown, she speaks with the fire of a reformer, the clarity of a jurist, and the heart of a daughter of the soil.
đ± Leading with Vision from the Global South
Mottley became Barbadosâs first female Prime Minister in 2018, then led her Barbados Labour Party (BLP) to a second landslide in 2022 â winning every seat in Parliament. Under her leadership, Barbados made history by removing the British monarch as head of state in 2021 and becoming the world’s newest republic.
Her government has prioritized:
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Climate justice and debt reform
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Digital transformation and renewable energy
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Education, mental health, and youth inclusion
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Reparations and post-colonial accountability
She doesnât just advocate for her nation â she advocates for Caribbean futures.
đ Global Diplomat, Caribbean Warrior
PM Mottleyâs speeches at the United Nations, the World Bank, and COP climate summits have gone viral for their fearless critique of global inequities. Sheâs called out rich nations for failing to meet climate finance promises, denounced discriminatory lending practices, and proposed the Bridgetown Initiative â a plan to reform global financial institutions to better serve small island developing states.
âWe were the ones whose blood, sweat, and tears financed the industrial revolution,â she told COP27 in 2022.
âAre we now to face double jeopardy by having to pay the cost as a result of those greenhouse gases from the industrial revolution?â
đ§ Why It Matters
Mottley is more than a Prime Minister â sheâs the moral compass of the post-colonial Caribbean. Sheâs demanded reparative justice from former colonial powers, held multinational corporations accountable, and pushed for regional unity on everything from migration to finance.
In a world where small voices often get drowned out, Mia Mottley makes hers impossible to ignore. She reminds us that Black leadership is not just about representation â itâs about transformation.
đ Black Light is Vision Newspaperâs weekly editorial spotlight on Black elected leaders around the world â amplifying the voices shaping justice, democracy, and change from inside the system.
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Alwin Marshall-Squire is the Editor-in-Chief of S-Q Publications Inc., overseeing editorial strategy for GTA Weekly, GTA Today, and Vision Newspaper. He leads the publicationsâ mission to deliver bold, original journalism focused on the people and communities of the Greater Toronto Area, Canada, and the global Caribbean diaspora.
Also writes for GTA Weekly and GTA Today.
