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Thorne: Move to DLP was a long time coming

by Barbados Today
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Describing Barbados as a “two-party democracy,” the newly appointed Opposition Leader, Ralph Thorne, said the trajectory of his political journey found its natural destination in the Democratic Labour Party (DLP). 

Thorne, in a significant shift from the Barbados Labour Party (BLP), which currently commands a 29-1 majority in Parliament, credited his newfound alignment to the DLP’s principles.

During a recent interview, Thorne expressed shock at the overall reaction to what he described as a long-anticipated move, acknowledging that his divergence from the BLP was a culmination of a prolonged internal process.

“I’m surprised that some of them did not recognize the trajectory of my speeches,” Thorne said, emphasizing the subtle signals embedded in his public addresses over the past year. 

He continued, “If people were listening to me last year, [they] would have seen that the collision was coming … that my conscience was speaking, that my concepts of justice … a sense of what is right and wrong.” 

“I felt deep in my heart [that] I was disagreeing within me with some of the things that the Government was doing. I was in fundamental agreement with some, and I knew I was going to come to this, but I didn’t think it would have been this response,” Thorne said. 

As he continued to shed light on the deliberate nature of his political pivot, the Opposition Leader disclosed that the DLP was his party of choice despite not vividly stating where he would be going following his exit from the BLP. 

“I didn’t call DLP, but the hint was broad. I said I wish to operate within the safe confines of a party. I have no desire to start a party. I believe we live in a two-party democracy, B or D, and people alternate between them. The recent history of Barbados has shown that. The strongest third party was NDP and it didn’t live past the human lives that started it. Sir Richard Haynes, he was a formidable politician, and even he could not get the NDP to survive,” Thorne said, referencing the fleeting nature of the National Democratic Party, which saw only two elections.

Apart from what he described as “the safe confines of the DLP,” Thorne noted that his social democratic principles also played a big part in his decision. 

According to him, “It was a safe confine because the philosophy of the DLP accords with my democratic philosophy.”

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