Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
politics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Democratic Labour Party (Barbados)


FieldValue
nameDemocratic Labour Party
logoBarbados Democratic Labour Party logo.png
colorcode
leaderRalph Thorne
presidentRalph Thorne
foundationErrol Walton Barrow, 27 April 1955
splitBarbados Labour Party
positionCentre-left
ideology
headquartersGeorge Street, Belleville, St. Michael
internationalWest Indies Democratic Labour Party (1957–1961)
websitewww.dlpbds.org
countryBarbados
abbreviationDLP
seats1_titleHouse of Assembly
seats2
seats2_titleSenate
seats1

The Democratic Labour Party (DLP), colloquially known as the "Dems", is a political party in Barbados, established in 1955. It was the ruling party from 15 January 2008 to 24 May 2018 but faced an electoral wipeout in the 2018 general election which left it with no MPs.

In common with Barbados' other major party, the Barbados Labour Party, the DLP has been broadly described as centre-left social-democratic party, with local politics being largely personality-driven and responsive to contemporary issues and the state of the economy. Historically, the BLP claims a heritage from British liberalism, while the DLP was founded 11 years afterwards as a more left-leaning breakaway group.

History

The DLP was founded in 1955 by Errol Barrow, James Cameron Tudor, Frederick "Sleepy" Smith and 26 others. Once members of the Barbados Labour Party (BLP), these 29 broke away to form this more left-leaning alternative. However, as a result of their common origin, the two parties have been and remain ideologically similar. In the 1956 general election the DLP received 19.9% of the vote and won four seats. In the following election in 1961 it received fewer votes than the BLP, but won a majority of the seats in Parliament, with Barrow becoming Premier.

After the party retained power in the 1966 election (this time with a plurality of the vote), Barrow became the country's first prime minister. The party won a third successive election in 1971, but lost power to the BLP in 1976. It remained in opposition until victory in the 1986 election, in which it won 24 of the 27 seats. The DLP remained in power following the 1991 election, but was defeated by the BLP in 1994. It returned to power again in the 2008 election, when DLP leader David Thompson became prime minister. Following his death in 2010, Freundel Stuart succeeded to the office, and led the party to a narrow election victory in 2013.

The 2018 election saw the DLP lose all of its MPs. Stuart stepped down as leader, and Verla De Peiza, unopposed in a leadership election held by the party on 1 August 2018, became his successor in the role of DLP leader and president.

After losing the 2022 election which resulted in the DLP not regaining any seats in the House of Assembly, De Peiza resigned on 21 January 2022. Ronnie Yearwood was then later elected DLP president after DLP elections took place on 1 May 2022.

Barbados Labour Party MP Ralph Thorne left the BLP in February 2024, becoming Leader of the Opposition. He joined the DLP shortly thereafter, becoming the party's leader and Thorne became the first DLP MP since 2018. Ronnie Yearwood remained as president of the party until his expulsion from the party along with Secretary General Steve Blackett on the 24th August 2024 after a months-long inter-party dispute occurred.

Electoral history

House of Assembly elections

ElectionParty leaderVotes%Seats+/–PositionResult
1956Errol Barrow19,65019.9%42nd
196139,53436.3%111st
196672,38449.6%11st
197153,29557.4%41st
197645,78646.4%112nd
198155,84547.1%32nd
198680,05059.4%141st
1991Erskine Sandiford59,90049.8%61st
1994David Thompson47,97938.8%102nd
199945,11835.1%62nd
2003Clyde Mascoll54,74644.2%52nd
2008David Thompson70,13553.2%131st
2013Freundel Stuart78,85151.3%41st
201833,55121.8%162nd
2022Verla De Peiza30,27326.55%2nd

West Indies election

ElectionParty GroupLeaderVotesSeatsPositionGovernmentNo.ShareNo.Share
Democratic_Labour_Party_(Barbados)}}" width="1"1958West Indies Democratic Labour Party}};"DLP25,25620.3%0.0%3rd

References

References

  1. ''Journal of the Barbados Museum and Historical Society'', Vol. 44 (1998).
  2. "The Party". Democratic Labour Party.
  3. Nohlen, D (2005) ''Elections in the Americas: A data handbook, Volume I'', p85 {{ISBN. 978-0-19-928357-6
  4. Nohlen, pp92-93
  5. Nohlen, p92
  6. Nohlen, p94
  7. (15 August 2018). "Verla De Peiza elected as the new leader of Barbados' Main Opposition Party {{!}} The Habari Network". The Habari Network.
  8. (2022-01-21). "DLP president Verla De Peiza resigns".
  9. (2022-05-01). "Dr Ronnie Yearwood elected new DLP president".
  10. Slegall Gibson. (2024-08-16). "Dr. Ronnie Yearwood and Steve Blackett expelled from the DLP".
  11. (19 February 2024). "#BREAKING - CBC: Barbados Leader of Opposition Ralph Thorne announced as the new Political Leader of the Democratic Labour Party - granting the party its first seat in Parliament since 2018. Dr Ronnie Yearwood will remain DLP President".
  12. (27 March 1958). "Kingston Gleaner Newspaper Archives, Mar 27, 1958, p. 20". NewspaperArchive.com.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Democratic Labour Party (Barbados) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report