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Grenada’s Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell completed a 2-day official visit to Washington, DC (May 18–19, 2026) to advance Grenada’s foreign policy, economics, and security interests. Key outcomes include: - Strengthened bilateral ties with the United States across investment, energy, trade, infrastructure, and regional security. - High-level engagements with U.S. officials and lawmakers to bolster economic cooperation: meetings with Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landa
2026-05-24Summary: - Foreign policy and diplomacy: Grenada pursues a principled, multilateral approach, strengthening regional links (OECS, CARICOM, CELAC, ACS) while deepening cooperation with traditional allies and forging new ties globally (Africa, Asia, Latin America). Emphasizes climate action, fair trade, economic diplomacy, and expanded export markets; reaffirms commitment to the Grenadian diaspora. - Elections and politics: The Throne Speech frames governance as people-centric,
2026-05-24Summary tailored to your query (Grenada focus: foreign policy, politics, diplomacy, elections, economy, security) - Economy and reconstruction: Grenada’s economy shows robust growth post-2024 Hurricane Beryl due to tourism resilience, ongoing reconstruction, and development investments. Inflation is moderating, with sizable fiscal support from Citizenship-by-Investment (CBI) revenues and disaster-related contingent financing. Large current account deficits are funded by stro
2026-05-24Summary: - Grenada's Prime Minister Dickon Mitchell warns Venezuela’s crisis is increasing regional instability and failing to advance peace; diplomacy and adherence to international norms are essential to resolve disputes in the Western Hemisphere. - Mitchell emphasizes dialogue, negotiation, and compromise as the sustainable path, and calls for respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity. - He rejected a direct response to U.S. statements about “running” Venezuela, su
2026-05-24Summary: Grenada unveiled a EC$1.9 billion national budget for 2026 to Parliament, framing it as a catalyst for citizen engagement and bold reforms. Finance Minister Dennis Cornwall highlighted continued commitment to fiscal responsibility, resilience, and growth under the Dickon Mitchell government. Key figures: recurrent revenue EC$1.3B, recurrent expenditure EC$1.1B, capital expenditure EC$370M, with an estimated deficit of EC$309.8M funded mainly from government deposits
2026-05-24