Two reform proposals have gained considerable traction in Caribbean political discourse in recent years: fixed election dates and term limits for prime ministers. According to Antigua News Room, both measures, while presented as tools of democratic accountability, are structurally incompatible with the Westminster system enshrined in Antigua and Barbuda's 1981 Constitution.

Both proposals are borrowed, whether consciously or not, from the vocabulary of presidential government. When examined against the constitutional architecture of Antigua and Barbuda, they reveal themselves to be not merely impractical but fundamentally at odds with the parliamentary framework the country operates under. This series examines each proposal in turn, grounding the argument in the specific provisions of the Constitution and in the comparative experience of other Commonwealth jurisdictions.

Part One establishes the constitutional foundation of the argument. It explains the doctrine of responsible government and shows how Sections 60 and 69 of the Constitution are built around parliamentary confidence rather than fixed timelines — and why a fixed election date, even if enacted by statute, would conflict directly with those provisions.

Part Two tests that argument against its strongest counterexamples. It examines the United Kingdom's Fixed-term Parliaments Act 2011, the most serious attempt to impose a fixed electoral calendar on a Westminster parliament, and draws on the lessons of that experiment, as well as the administrative realities of boundary reform under Sections 62 through 65, to show why calendar-driven elections fail in practice as well as in theory.

Part Three turns to the second proposal: term limits for prime ministers. It argues that term limits import a presidential logic into a parliamentary framework, contradict Section 69 of the Constitution, and, far from checking executive dominance, would accelerate the very presidentialisation of the prime ministerial office that critics of Caribbean governance most fear.

Part Four completes the argument by examining what term limits would actually do to democratic accountability — weakening the electoral incentive that keeps leaders responsive, disrupting institutional memory in small states, and failing to address the structural sources of patron-client governance. It closes by identifying the reforms that the existing constitutional framework already permits and that genuine democratic renewal actually requires.

Part One: The Constitution Speaks First

There is a particular brand of constitutional enthusiasm that arrives dressed in the language of accountability but carries, beneath its reformist garb, a fundamental misunderstanding of how parliamentary democracy actually works. The proposal to introduce fixed election dates has gathered considerable momentum across the Caribbean. It sounds appealing. It is, however, structurally incompatible with the Westminster model — and nowhere is that incompatibility more clearly exposed than in the Constitution of Antigua and Barbuda.

The Westminster system is not simply a method of counting votes. It is a coherent theory of government built on a single load-bearing principle: the executive derives its authority continuously and conditionally from the confidence of the legislature. The moment that confidence is lost, the authority dissolves. Government, in this model, is not a fixed tenure but a living mandate — renewable, revocable, and always contingent. This is what constitutional scholars mean when they speak of "responsible government."

The Constitution of Antigua and Barbuda, enacted at independence in 1981, reflects this logic with precision. Section 60(1) provides that the Governor-General, acting on the advice of the Prime Minister, may at any time prorogue or dissolve Parliament. The word "any" carries considerable constitutional weight. It is the mechanism by which a government may go to the country when it has lost its majority, when a national crisis demands a renewed mandate, or when a legislative impasse cannot otherwise be resolved. Section 60(2) imposes a five-year maximum term, after which Parliament "shall then stand dissolved" — but this ceiling is not a schedule. It is an outer limit on an otherwise flexible instrument.

The distinction matters enormously. A fixed election date transforms that ceiling into a floor. It tells a government — and the electorate — that no matter what happens in the chamber, no matter how thoroughly confidence has collapsed or how urgently the country requires fresh direction, the vote must wait. That is not accountability. It is paralysis dressed in procedural language.

The Constitution anticipates exactly this danger. Section 60(4) grants the Governor-General the discretion to dissolve Parliament unilaterally if the House passes a vote of no confidence and the Prime Minister neither resigns nor advises a dissolution within seven days. This is a non-partisan safety valve — a guarantee that no government may cling to office after losing the legislature's confidence. A fixed election date would render this provision legally incoherent. If the date is set by statute, the Governor-General's constitutionally mandated power of discretionary dissolution becomes a source of conflict rather than resolution.

Would the statutory date override the constitutional trigger? The answer, in a system where Section 2 declares the Constitution the "supreme law" of Antigua and Barbuda, is unambiguous: any inconsistent statute would be void. A fixed-date law enacted without a constitutional amendment would not simply be inadvisable — it would be constitutionally vulnerable.