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King Ralph rides into the sunset

Above: Dickson Igwe
By Dickson Igwe

On May 7, 2014, King Ralph of the Virgin Islands decided to abdicate. The Elder King decided to hand over power to a younger generation of politicians. OK. Long live the New King or Queen, whoever he or she. This was a show of true courage and statesmanship by the Veteran Politician.

In any event, the Elder King will now enjoy that 200 day world cruise. He should spend the rest of his days walking his vast Virgin Gorda estates. At this stage in his life, the SKULDUGGERY of politics was the last thing he needed.

His decision will leave his legacy as the longest serving Virgin Islands Leader intact. It will also crystallize his place in history as First Premier of these Lesser Antilles. Hamilton Lavity Stoutt remains the First Leader of the Modern Virgin Islands.

The King’s decision paves the way for the next generation of Virgin Islands leaders: those in the 40-60 age bracket. Politics is frequently a game for older heads. Politics offers a select number in this generation the once in a lifetime opportunity to one day become leader of these Majestic Lesser Antilles, or at the very least an elected Senator.

As Elder Virgin Islands Statesman, the present generation of political leaders will find access to King Ralph’s advice invaluable.

The following story continues the assessment of Virgin Islands politics at mid term. It looks at third parties. It is a narrative that examines how the swing dynamic affects third party chances of election success.

Now, in a swing dynamic, the swing is usually from one major party to the other. That is, between two power polarities on the political map. In order for a third party to have any chance at an election it first has to create its own bedrock of supporters. Then, it must hope for a split in the swing vote. A third party has to receive a significant percentage of the swing vote.

That means a third party has to arouse the passions of the undecided voter. It is usually near impossible for a third party to convince the core supporters of an established political party to move their support. Core supporters form the bedrock of a political party. It is impossible to tell how large are the core of the two main political parties. It may be speculated that the opposition’s core is larger and stronger because it has been in power longer than the incumbents.

A bout of opposition can also strengthen a party’s core due to a hunger for the power once enjoyed.

A third party may have a chance winning over supporters of one or other of the big two who are not at the party core. These are voters who choose to lodge at one or other party, owing to the fact that they have no other choice. These voters frequently choose the lesser of two evils and are termed FLOATING VOTERS by political pundits.

A third party offers these UNSURE VOTERS a way out. However, history has shown, especially in the USA that independent voters frequently move to the other side, and not to a third party. Third parties have had very little success in the USA.

One can speculate that the Virgin Islands possess a significant number of these INDEPENDENT or SWING VOTERS. The exact percentage is impossible to determine due to unavailable metrics. But it appears very high. There is a demographic reason for this.

New voters are increasingly the product of migration and marriage between Virgin Islanders and outsiders. This is what makes the political equation in these Antilles extraordinarily difficult to decipher. With a majority expatriate population and their offspring, the swing vote rests mainly with this demographic.

These are the voters most likely to change their minds at the drop of a hat. Frequently these are the voters that decide the outcome of an election. Most swing voters wait until the very last minute before deciding who to vote for. Reaching swing voters is where the two main parties must put their resources and efforts for an effective election strategy.

A third party has to excite. However, there is just that much intensity and passion in supply in a political race. This political writer will make the prediction that the winner of the 2015 election will be the party that gets its core supporters fired up the most. That is what happened at the US Elections of 2012.

The Democratic Demographic got fired up at the last stages of the race and gave President Obama their overwhelming support: blacks, Hispanics, minorities, women, gays, and white liberals. This happened after the SQUEAKY CLEAN Mitt Romney made aspersions about SCROUNGERS and people who voted according to which party gave the OBLIGATORY HANDOUT. Yes. Fire in the belly is what will get core party supporters out of their beds, eager to visit the polling booth on Election Day.

From observation, the supporters of the big two in the Virgin Islands appear riled, fired up, even vexed. Core party supporters are horrified by the idea of one or the other winning power come the next General Election. That is real politics at play. None of the big two will take any prisoners.

There is passion and aggression, even anger, on both sides of the political divide. The assessment of this political journalist is this one: the next general election in all probability will remain a TWO PARTY RACE. That assessment, he believes strongly, will become self fulfilling as the intensity increases in the two main camps as 2016 approaches.

Once campaigning starts, and campaigning has probably already began, there will be just enough oxygen in the political game for 2 players. The core supporters of the big two are currently baking in the proverbial oven called party politics. They will come out of that oven, hot, eager, hungry, and battle ready.

These are the political archers. They will aim their arrows at the MAIN FOE on the opposite side of the political battlefield. Their bows well primed. The bowstrings, taut, pulled back to the max. The arrows have already started to be released. The simple question is: which ones will hit their mark.

To be continued.

Dickson Igwe is a current affairs columnist, he is a scholar of strategy. Connect with Dickson Igwe on TWITTER and FACEBOOK. Email Dickson Igwe on dicksonresearch@gmail.com

8 Responses to “King Ralph rides into the sunset”

  • ... (10/05/2014, 09:33) Like (0) Dislike (2) Reply
    this guy is a VIP writer he better do not let he NDP wife see this stuff
    • OhKala (11/05/2014, 10:59) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
      MVW, where in this story you get the impression that this writer is VIP? Just trying to make mischif as usual.
  • weed (10/05/2014, 12:56) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
    And I still dont think that we know the whole story while Ralph give up.... Time is longer than rope however
  • xxxxxxxx (10/05/2014, 18:49) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
    I want to hear what Uncle has to say....
  • yellow (12/05/2014, 10:19) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
    School children say Fahie and cavin working hard
  • killer (13/05/2014, 23:43) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
    i have not heard you? Lord HELPPPPPPP IF THE PEOPLE GO BACK TO NDP!!!!!!
  • free at last (14/05/2014, 17:41) Like (0) Dislike (0) Reply
    The sun has set on the ndp


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