Mottley sworn in as Prime Minister of Barbados

Prime Minister Mia Mottley (right) receives the instrument of office from Governor General Dame Sandra Mason.

BRIDGETOWN, Barbados  – Less than 24 hours after she led her Barbados Labor Party (BLP) to victory in the May 24 general elections, Mia Amor Mottley, 52, was sworn in as Barbados eighth prime minister on Friday, joining a handful of Caribbean women who have lead governments in their respective countries.

Mottley, who first entered local politics in 1991, when she lost the St. Michael North East constituency to Leroy Brathwaite, took the oath of office before Governor General Sandra Mason and in the presence of family, friends and party supporters.

Attorney Dale Marshall also took the oath of office as Attorney General.

Mottley, who between 1994 to 2008, held a succession of ministerial portfolios, led the BLP to a whitewash of the Democratic Labor Party (DLP), winning all 30 seats in the Parliament.

Mottley was the first female to be appointed attorney general and minister of home affairs in 2001 and is also the youngest ever Queen’s Counsel in Barbados.

Two years later, she served as the island’s second female Deputy Prime Minister and following the BLP’s defeat in the 2008 election and Owen Arthur’s resignation as party leader, Mottley was chosen as BLP party leader on January 19, 2008. She also served as the first female Opposition Leader when she was sworn in on February, 7, 2008.

Mottley joins the late Dame Eugenia Charles of Dominica, Janet Jagan of Guyana, Jamaica’s Portia Simpson Miller and Triniad and Tobago’s Kamla Persad Bissessar as women who have led governments in their respective countries.