148. The President of Guyana: The Fastest Growing Economy in the World (Irfaan Ali)

  • Podcast

  • 15 August 2025

  • Posted by Alastair Campbell

  • 1

How does Guyana balance its unprecedented economic growth, largely due to oil discoveries, with environmental sustainability? How does Guyana perceive and address the historical scar left by slavery? What has happened to West Indies cricket, and how does the future look?


Alastair is joined by President of Guyana, Ifraan Ali, to answer all these questions and more.


Join The Rest Is Politics Plus: Start your FREE TRIAL at therestispolitics.com to unlock exclusive bonus content – including Rory and Alastair’s miniseries – plus ad-free listening, early access to episodes and live show tickets, an exclusive members’ newsletter, discounted book prices, and a private chatroom on Discord.


Social Producer: Harry Balden

Video Editor: Josh Smith

Assistant Producer: Alice Horrell

Producer: Nicole Maslen

Head of Content: Tom Whiter

Exec Producers: Tony Pastor, Jack Davenport

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

One response to “148. The President of Guyana: The Fastest Growing Economy in the World (Irfaan Ali)”

  1. Alastair Campbell, co-host of the political podcast The Rest is Politics, asked in the new episode of Leading—featuring Irfaan Ali, the President of Guyana—some important questions regarding the country’s low-carbon strategy, management of the sovereign wealth fund (including the Norway model), corruption in the wake of the oil boom, and Guyana’s position on the Venezuelan border controversy.

    He was, however, largely served fairy tales about good governance and effective corruption management in Guyana—how the NRF is under strict parliamentary control, and so forth. Overall, it was a missed opportunity to probe Guyana’s President with the questions that matter:
    • Why haven’t you renegotiated the lopsided oil contract with ExxonMobil and its partners?
    • Why has the ruling party blocked all parliamentary commissions of oversight from functioning?
    • How come infrastructure projects are awarded to incompetent contractors with no track record?
    • Why haven’t you travelled to Norway to learn how they have insulated their sovereign wealth fund from political interference?
    • Why has the President not set up a Commission of Inquiry to investigate credible evidence of alleged corruption involving Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo?
    • Why hasn’t the President investigated the Commissioner of Information for blocking requests for public information?
    • How come Silica City—the President’s pet development project—is being planned and built without parliamentary control, oversight, or an approved budget?
    • How will the Government of Guyana respond to last year’s recommendations of the UN Human Rights Committee on civil and political rights?
    • What is your administration’s strategy to make Guyana attractive enough for university graduates to stay in a country where nepotism and party loyalty often trump merit?
    • How come the broad Guyanese public has only seen increases in the cost of living and housing shortages, while a few chosen ones—mainly associated with the ruling party and their families and friends—have profited massively from the oil boom?

    These are only some of the burning questions that should have been asked in such a forum. President Ali systematically refuses to give interviews to the domestic independent press and does not respond to questions from NGOs such as the Oil & Gas Governance Network (OGGN) Guyana (www.oggn.org) or members of civil society.

    OGGN conducted an eight-week letter campaign, asking various members of the Government of Guyana specific questions regarding the lopsided 2016 oil contract. None of the ministers, including the President himself, took the time to address the questions raised (see the OGGN homepage for links to the February–April 2025 letter campaign). Is this the President’s vision of inclusive and responsible government? Or is it a reflection of the reality of good governance, accountability, and transparency in Guyana under his rule?

    In closing: what is the true value of interviews with leaders of the Global South if the moderator has little knowledge of the country and no real grasp of its domestic politics—apart from a briefing with the British High Commissioner to Guyana prior to recording the conversation? If you are unable to separate fairy tales from facts, you are doing both your audience and your brand a disservice.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

195. Can the West Reclaim its Power from Trump? (Malcolm Turnbull)

As Western nations become increasingly dependent on the US for AI, satellite infrastructure, and defence, are they sacrificing sovereignty in exchange for American security? Can middle powers such as ... Continue

29 June 2026

547. The Truth About Russian Oil, Net Zero, and North Sea Drilling

With the UK and Europe sweltering in yet another record-breaking heatwave, will we ever actually reach net zero? How close are we to a “lights out” scenario due to the Iran war, and how did we bec... Continue

25 June 2026

In a world of chancers and charlatans, we need facts at our fingertips

Get a FREE signed copy of A history of Brexit: in 256 disasters when you subscribe to The New World... Continue

24 June 2026

546. Keir Starmer Resigns: What Happens Next?

What does Keir’s Starmer’s exit as Prime Minister and leader of the Labour party mean for the UK? After his thumping victory against Reform UK last week, will Andy Burnham face a contest or a coro... Continue

22 June 2026

Burnham must learn the lessons of Starmer’s failure – and they start with Brexit

Be optimistic, don’t ignore the party and find new ways to cut through lies and disinformation... Continue

22 June 2026

Alastair Campbell’s diary: What Starmer never understood about being PM

The nature of how his landslide was won demanded more inclusive government... Continue

22 June 2026

194. Is Putin Losing his Grip on Russia?

With war fatigue growing and polls showing increasing dissatisfaction with life in Russia, is Vladimir Putin beginning to lose control? What is really happening inside Russia today? And what is it lik... Continue

22 June 2026

545. Burnham Beats Reform: Britain’s Next Prime Minister?

Has Andy Burnham’s huge victory against Reform in Makerfield shown the Labour Party how it can beat Farage? What does this defeat mean for the right, and how tricky will the coming months be for And... Continue

19 June 2026