International Libertarians – Claudia Barrett-Hogarth of the United Independents’ Congress of Jamaica

The United Independents’ Congress of Jamaica (UIC Jamaica) rose to prominence in 2021 when its Founder and President, Joseph L. Patterson, was arrested for leading a Freedom March on Parliament, against draconian Covid-19 measures.  We spoke with their General Secretary Claudia Barrett-Hogarth.  The party is a member of International Alliance of Libertarian Parties.

“political power should be restored to ordinary citizens, not concentrated in the hands of wealthy special interests, entrenched party structures, or political elites”

Can you introduce yourself to our readers, and tell us a bit about your party?

My name is Claudia Barrett-Hogarth. I am a retiree and farmer from the parish of St. Catherine, Jamaica, and I serve as the General Secretary of the United Independents’ Congress of Jamaica, commonly known as UIC Jamaica or simply the UIC.

The UIC is Jamaica’s third registered political party and its first national grassroots political and liberation movement. We are organized around the principle that liberty and personal dignity are rights inherent in the individual and uncompromisable for any individual, body or government to override or contravene. We also believe that political power should be restored to ordinary citizens, not concentrated in the hands of wealthy special interests, entrenched party structures, or political elites. The movement is funded, built, and sustained by ordinary Jamaicans at home and in the diaspora who volunteer their time, resources, skills, and voices because they believe in the UIC’s vision, mission, philosophy, core values, and objectives.

Our Mission is “to create the Non-Partisan Constitutional Republic of Jamaica that protects our individual liberty and promotes personal responsibility in a safe, clean and orderly society where everyone can live, earn and retire with dignity in true liberty”.

This mission is reflected in our Core Values: Individual Liberty; Personal Responsibility; Equal Opportunity; Equal Rights; Equal Justice; A Safe, Clean & Orderly Society; and A Free and Fair Market Economy.

“Our Mission is “to create the Non-Partisan Constitutional Republic of Jamaica that protects our individual liberty and promotes personal responsibility”

The UIC believes that many of Jamaica’s greatest problems are rooted in a lack of true individual liberty, personal responsibility, equal rights, justice, opportunity, public order, and a genuinely free and fair market economy. These failures are the result of bad governance. We therefore emphasize the rights of the individual and the need to limit government to its proper place and function, as outlined in our Philosophy:

“It is the right of every human being to be free. Therefore, the only moral justification of and rightful purpose of government is to protect the life, liberty and property rights of every citizen equally. Good Governance, therefore, is the protection of individual liberty and property rights; the promotion of personal responsibility; and the provision of a safe clean and orderly society that protects our individual and collective sovereignty. This is the only sure foundation for a truly free, fair, peaceful and prosperous society.”

“We believe Jamaica does not merely need a change of political managers. Jamaica needs a change of system”

What do you see as the major challenges facing Jamaica, and what policies is the party championing?

The major challenge facing Jamaica, from which many other problems arise, is bad governance. For over 80 years, Jamaica has suffered from corruption, mismanagement of public funds, excessive centralization of power, weak accountability, and an overbearing political culture that has too often placed partisan interests above the national interest.

The results are visible: high levels of crime and violence, persistent poverty, a weak and underperforming economy, devaluation of the Jamaican dollar, an undereducated citizenry, brain drain, poor roads and infrastructure, and inadequate delivery of essential public services.

The UIC is therefore championing a fundamental transformation of Jamaica’s governance model. Our policy direction includes moving Jamaica toward a Non-Partisan Constitutional Republic, strengthening checks and balances, removing the power of political parties and their neocolonial masters over the state, empowering citizens directly, protecting individual liberty and property rights, reforming taxation, creating a free and fair market economy, and building a safe, clean, orderly, and prosperous society.

We believe Jamaica does not merely need a change of political managers. Jamaica needs a change of system.

“We believe a simpler, fairer, and more disciplined taxation system would reduce wasteful spending and encourage productivity”

If you could introduce policies to change just three things in Jamaica, what would they be?

If the UIC were in a position to introduce policies to change three things in Jamaica, we would focus on the following:

First, we would overhaul the system of governance and elections. 

Jamaica’s current system does not give taxpayers proper value for money, nor does it provide sufficient protection against the abuse of power. We would seek to remove the unfair influence of wealthy special interests and entrenched partisan machinery by creating a system in which candidates must first pass a basic governance test, submit to public audit and vetting, and then be nominated on merit.

Once nominated, candidates would receive equal access to public campaign opportunities, including town halls and equal access to television, radio, print, and social media coverage. This would help ensure that elections are based on competence, character, public trust, and policy ideas rather than money, tribalism, or party machinery.

We would also remove partisan tribalism from all levels of governance. Representatives would be elected as individuals on their own merit, not as agents of a party. In the legislature, there would be no separation by party colours or party blocs, but a united, non-partisan Congress of Representatives.

We would also introduce stronger checks and balances. This would include a nationally elected President, elected Vice Presidents representing Jamaica’s three counties, independently elected Senators representing the parishes, and Ministers or Department Secretaries selected for subject-matter competence, publicly vetted by the independent elected Senate, and approved through transparent voting in the House of Representatives. Judges would be appointed through a similarly accountable process. The purpose would be to prevent the concentration of power, reduce conflicts of interest, minimize nepotism, and protect public resources.

Second, we would reform taxation and government revenue.

The UIC would limit government revenue to service fees, a 10% income tax from all sources of income, and a 10% sales tax. The 10% sales tax would be reserved for emergencies, poverty reduction through a workfare programme, and national beautification.

We believe a simpler, fairer, and more disciplined taxation system would reduce wasteful spending and encourage productivity. Health and education should be run as genuine public and corporate services in which the people are stakeholders. With better governance, lower waste, and stronger accountability, these services can be more efficient and properly funded.

The dedicated sales tax would help Jamaica build an emergency reserve, beautify the environment, reduce dependency on borrowing, and systematically address poverty. The goal is to ensure that the country becomes cleaner, safer, more beautiful, and more dignified, while ensuring that those who need support are provided with good housing, healthcare, nutrition, and education, so long as they are willing to work and contribute through the workfare system.

“Land that is not being used for residence or commercial development would be placed into productive use”

Third, we would pursue land ownership and productive use of Jamaica’s land.

The UIC believes that every Jamaican family should become property owners. Land ownership is one of the foundations of liberty, dignity, stability, and economic independence.

We would therefore seek to ensure that land is used in a way that benefits the Jamaican people. Land that is not being used for residence or commercial development would be placed into productive use, especially through organic farming and other sustainable industries. Our vision is for Jamaica to become the organic food capital of the world, with Jamaican citizens becoming shareholders and beneficiaries of the profits generated from its productive use.

“Jamaicans must stop waiting for rescue from the same system that has failed them. We must build and fund an alternative system of governance that serves the people’s best interests”

Is there anything else you want to say to our readers?

Bad governance affects all of us. When people remain silent while systems of power, political actors, and their private backers continue to misuse public authority and public resources, the people become trapped in their own oppression.

The UIC believes that Jamaicans must stop waiting for rescue from the same system that has failed them. We must build and fund an alternative system of governance that serves the people’s best interests and includes strong checks and balances to prevent the same abuses from recurring.

We invite Jamaicans at home and in the diaspora, as well as friends of liberty around the world, to pay attention to what is happening in Jamaica. Our struggle is not only about party politics. It is about liberty, responsibility, justice, opportunity, national dignity, and the right of a people to govern themselves properly.

How can people find out more about what the party is up to?

People can find out more about the United Independents’ Congress of Jamaica through the following platforms:

Website: www.uicjamaica.com
UIC Liberty TV: https://www.youtube.com/c/UICLIBERTYTV/videos
UIC Jamaica: https://www.youtube.com/@uicjamaicatv Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/UICJamaica
Tiktok: https://www.tiktok.com/@uicjamaica
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/uicjamaica/
Email: info@uicjamaica.com