Sir Gerald Watt | |
Office: | 6th Speaker of the House of Representatives of Antigua and Barbuda |
Termstart: | 25 June 2014 |
Predecessor: | Giselle Isaac-Arindell |
Birth Date: | 19 December 1938 |
Sir Gerald Owen Anderson Watt KCN KC (born December 19, 1938)[1] is an Antiguan politician and a former cabinet minister. Watt represented St. John's Rural East in parliament from 1971 until 1976 and is a former chairman of the Antigua and Barbuda Electoral Commission. Watt has also served as attorney general (1971-1976)[2] during his time as Minister of National Security, Labour, and Legal Affairs. Watt has been the Speaker of the House of Representatives since 25 June 2014. He can be considered bipartisan.[3]
Following the nomination of three candidates, the Speaker of the House of Representatives was chosen in secret ballot in 2023 for the first time in the history of the nation. Nominations from the floor included former prime minister Baldwin Spencer, lawyer Sherrie-Ann Bradshaw, and Watt. Bradshaw received a nomination from the Leader of the Opposition in Parliament, Jamale Pringle for Spencer, Watt from Prime Minister Gaston Browne, and independent candidate Asot Michael for Bradshaw.[4]
The United Progressive Party (UPP) is considering a vote of no confidence against Watt. Jamale Pringle, the leader of the UPP, first declared that he will bring a motion forward in July 2023. Allegations of political prejudice and alleged maltreatment of opposition MPs, particularly Asot Michael of St. Peter, who was suspended for three sittings on May 18, 2023, are the main causes for the allegations.[5]
Watt supports arming police officers with tasers.[6]