Independence of Grenada
In the general election of August 1967, the Grenada United Labour Party (GULP) defeated the Grenada National Party (GNP) and took office under the premiership of Eric M. Gairy, a trade unionist. Grenada became an independent nation on February 7, 1974. The transition was marked by violence, strikes, and controversy centring upon Gairy, who was named prime minister. Opposition to Gairy’s rule continued to mount, and a coalition called the New Jewel Movement (NJM), along with other opposition parties, succeeded in reducing GULP’s majority in Parliament in the 1976 election. On March 13, 1979, while Gairy was out of the country, the NJM staged a bloodless coup, proclaimed a People’s Revolutionary Government (PRG), and named their leader, Maurice Bishop, as prime minister. The new government faced opposition from Western nations because of its socialist principles and the substantial aid it had begun receiving from Cuba, but it embarked on a program to rebuild the economy, which had been left in disarray by Gairy. The PRG administration was ended in October 1983 by a military coup, during which Bishop was killed.
Less than a week later, on October 25, a U.S.-led invasion of the island overthrew the coup leaders and returned power to the governor-general, Sir Paul Scoon. In December Scoon appointed Nicholas Braithwaite, a former Commonwealth official, to head a governing council until an election could be held, and constitutional government was restored. A peacekeeping force remained until 1985. The election, held in December 1984, was won by the New National Party (NNP) headed by Herbert A. Blaize, who had led the government in the 1960s. The new government sought to revive tourism, but Grenada’s continuing economic problems throughout the late 1980s contributed to the government’s dwindling popularity. Following an election in March 1990, Braithwaite, whose National Democratic Congress (NDC) fell one seat shy of a parliamentary majority, was appointed prime minister by Scoon.
In 1992 Grenada reopened diplomatic relations with Cuba, which had been severed during the period of U.S. intervention. Braithwaite’s announcement in 1994 that he would be stepping down as NDC leader set the stage for the 1995 election, which was won by the NNP, whose leader, 47-year-old Keith Mitchell, became prime minister. In 1997 Mitchell paid an official visit to Cuban Pres. Fidel Castro, over the objections of the Democratic Labour Party, which criticized Cuba’s human rights record. Nonetheless, Mitchell signed an economic cooperation agreement with Cuba. In the 1999 general election Mitchell was returned as prime minister when the NNP swept all 15 seats in the House of Representatives. The next year a Truth and Reconciliation Commission was appointed to inquire into the cataclysmic political events that had occurred on the island from January 1976 to December 1991.
At the beginning of the 21st century, as the tax-haven abuses of the offshore banking industry in the Caribbean came to light, Grenada found itself in the crosshairs of the Paris-based Financial Action Task Force (FATF), which described Grenada’s system for dealing with money laundering as having “serious deficiencies.” On one day in March 2001, 17 Grenadian banks were closed down, all of them linked to the First International Bank of Grenada, which had collapsed in October 2000, taking $150 million worth of mainly U.S. depositors’ money along with it. By 2003, after the passage of anti-money-laundering laws, Grenada had been removed from the blacklists imposed by the FATF and the U.S. Department of the Treasury, but only five offshore banks were still operating in the country.
In the 2003 general election, Mitchell retained the prime ministership for a third consecutive term as the NNP barely held on to power, winning 8 seats in the House to the 7 seats secured by the NDC. Soon after, Mitchell became the focus of an investigation into charges that he had accepted $500,000 from Eric Resteiner, a German national, in exchange for Resteiner’s appointment as a trade ambassador for Grenada.
Hurricane Ivan wreaked havoc in Grenada in September 2004, causing the deaths of at least 39 people and wiping out almost all of the country’s agriculture-based economic infrastructure as well as much of its tourism facilities. An estimated 90 percent of the homes were damaged. Overall, the damage was estimated to be about $815 million.
In 2008 a commission of inquiry concluded that it could find no evidence that Mitchell had accepted bribes in the Resteiner matter. Nevertheless, in the general election held in July, the NDC convincingly ousted Mitchell’s NNP administration, with an 11- to 4-seat majority in the House. NDC leader Tillman Thomas was sworn in as prime minister. In 2009, as part of its efforts to relaunch offshore banking, the government instituted a number of reforms aimed at increasing oversight of the sector, including the creation of a new regulatory financial agency. Also in 2009 the government released Bernard Coard and the other six remaining imprisoned leaders of the 1983 military coup that had resulted in Bishop’s death. In 2010 the IMF agreed to provide a new $13.3 million three-year Extended Credit Facility arrangement for Grenada to help ameliorate the “significant adverse impact” that the global economic downturn had had on the country. Mitchell returned as prime minister when the NNP won all 15 seats in the House again in the 2013 general election.
Eric V.B. Britter The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica