CHOISEUL ON THE MOVE
BUDGET 2026: BIG WORDS, BIG PLANS… BUT WHAT DOES IT REALLY MEAN FOR THE PEOPLE?
Let us deal with this budget speech honestly.
The Deputy to the Governor General’s 2026 Budget Address was filled with promises, policy direction, legislative plans, and repeated warnings about a difficult global environment. We heard about rising oil prices, global uncertainty, pressure on tourism, water challenges, healthcare reform, youth investment, agriculture, housing, and major infrastructure plans.
On paper, it sounds like a government trying to prepare the country for turbulent times. But in true Choiseul on the Move style, we must go beyond the polished delivery and ask the harder question:
How much of this budget will actually be felt by the ordinary people of Saint Lucia — especially in rural communities like Choiseul, Saltibus, Piaye, Roblot, La Fargue and beyond?
1. THE SPEECH GOT THE GLOBAL PICTURE RIGHT
To be fair, the speech correctly identified that Saint Lucia is operating in a very uncertain global climate. The address warned about rising crude oil prices, economic instability, diplomatic shifts, and possible negative effects on food, gas, fuel, and travel.
That part was not exaggerated. In fact, it was one of the most realistic sections of the speech. Small island states like ours are always the first to feel the squeeze when the outside world starts shaking.
But while the speech acknowledged the danger, it did not clearly spell out what immediate protection ordinary citizens can expect if prices continue to rise.
Translation for the average family: harder months may be ahead, but the speech did not provide much detail on direct relief for struggling households.
2. A LOT OF LAWS ARE COMING — BUT PEOPLE WANT RESULTS, NOT JUST BILLS
The government announced an ambitious legislative agenda. Among the items mentioned were:
- Universal Health Coverage legislation
- Mental Health Bill
- Witness Protection legislation
- Electronic Crimes Bill
- DNA and forensic evidence legislation
- Justice of the Peace Bill
- Diaspora Bill
- Electoral boundary review
- Review of the Citizenship by Investment Programme
That is a serious amount of legislative activity. But the people of Saint Lucia are not living on legislation. They are living on wages, water, healthcare, roads, housing, food prices, and opportunity.
New laws may help modernize the country. But unless they produce visible improvements in daily life, many people will see them as another pile of official business with very little personal benefit.
3. THE INFRASTRUCTURE PROMISES SOUND BIG — BUT THE SOUTH STILL NEEDS TO SEE ITSELF IN THE STORY
The speech highlighted several major projects:
- Completion of St. Jude Hospital
- Redevelopment of Hewanorra International Airport
- Construction of the Halls of Justice
- Housing development through the National Insurance Scheme
- Vieux Fort administrative complex and amphitheatre
These are not small matters. These are major national projects with the potential to create real value.
But here is where the speech felt distant from rural Saint Lucia. There was no sharp focus on the neglected infrastructure gaps that affect many communities outside the main development zones. No specific spotlight on badly needed road works in underserved districts. No clear signal that places like Choiseul and Saltibus are front and centre in the development map.
And that is the problem: when communities are not named, they often fear they are not being prioritized.
4. WATER WAS ONE OF THE MOST IMPORTANT PARTS OF THE SPEECH
One of the strongest sections of the address dealt with water. The government admitted that the country is paying a heavy price for years of poor maintenance and underinvestment in water infrastructure. It also encouraged rainwater harvesting and promised more effort to bring relief.
That acknowledgment matters.
Because for many Saint Lucians, water is not some abstract policy issue. It is one of the most frustrating parts of daily life. When people cannot depend on a stable water supply, every other part of life becomes harder.
In rural communities especially, this issue cuts deep. So yes, the government said the right thing here. But the public will judge it not by the speech, but by whether the taps actually improve.
5. AGRICULTURE AND FOOD SECURITY GOT THE RIGHT WORDS — NOW THEY NEED TEETH
The call to “grow what we eat and eat what we grow” is one of those statements every government loves to repeat. The speech also spoke of transforming agricultural policy and placing more resources into the youth economy.
Again, the direction sounds good. But Saint Lucians have heard this kind of language for years.
Food security cannot remain a slogan. It has to become a system. Farmers need support. Young people need a reason to stay in agriculture. Schools and communities need to be part of the change. Otherwise, it will remain a nice sentence in a speech and nothing more.
6. EDUCATION, YOUTH AND HEALTHCARE: HOPEFUL, BUT STILL TOO GENERAL
The address said no child should be left behind. It promised reviews of education laws, attention to school attendance and retention, and movement toward universal health coverage.
Those are important goals. No serious person would oppose them.
But there were still unanswered questions:
- How quickly will these reforms be felt?
- How will rural communities benefit?
- Will healthcare costs truly go down for struggling families?
- Will youth unemployment fall in a meaningful, measurable way?
Good intentions are easy to announce. The hard part is implementation.
THE CHOISEUL ON THE MOVE TAKE
This budget address was polished, serious, and full of ambition. It showed that the government understands the country is entering a rough period globally and that Saint Lucia needs resilience, reform, and discipline.
But for all its vision, the speech was still light in three areas that matter most to ordinary people:
- Immediate cost-of-living relief
- Clear rural impact
- Specific timelines for results
In other words, it gave the country a map — but not enough signposts.
A budget is not judged by how well it is read in Parliament. It is judged by how deeply it is felt in the homes, pockets, roads, schools, clinics, and communities of the people.
And that is where the real test begins.
Choiseul on the Move will be watching not just the promises — but the delivery.





