
There is much window dressing
All year round:
In store windows and in Parliament-
By persons renown.
I recall going into Bridgetown
With my dad and my siblings
And viewing the Christmas showcases
And this was so exciting.
It cost my dad nothing more
Than a pack of nuts and bus fare
And while we stared at the show window,
No police appeared.
If that went over your head
It means you are quite young,
I am talking about back in the 60’s decade
When you were not around.
We seldom got what we saw
But we anticipated the tour
Though as we got older and better off
We did it no more.
You see, it held no more appeal
As it did when we were kids
And so, when we became young adults,
Other things did.
However, I must confess
Window dressing has returned
Though it’s not the window dressing
For which I once yearned.
It’s not the store windows
But behind Parliament walls
Where MPs paint wonderful pictures
That have us enthralled.
Pictures about projects
That never get off the ground
But year after year they get recycled
Like a merry-go-round.
Window dressing of the kind
To attract investment
Like the recent legislation to encourage
Free regional movement.
Our west coast and south coast
Are strewn with hotels
And the picture of these coasts shows
Our country is well.

But while seeing is believing
All that glitters is not gold
And all this window dressing is doing
Is creating debt untold.
Window dressing in the form
Of importing experts galore
But the myriad of perennial problems
Still vexing us sore.
Borrowing to window dress
To prop up foreign reserves
Making the country appear wealthy:
Apparent future preserved.
Yes, a healthy environment
But a people grossly sick
Forcing them that are disenfranchised
To be economically slick.
Reimagining and reinventing
Window dressing décor
But nothing’s really getting any better
For our indigent poor.
Other than window dressing
That smacks of welfarism
That only generates more and more
Social rheumatism.
The facility to climb
The proverbial ladder of success
Appears to be targeting a select few
Leaving most in a mess.
The country of opportunity!
A great window dressing ad
But beyond the window dressing façade
Things are really bad.
A renown Prime Minister
Respected worldwide
But the Republic she presides over
Experiences a great divide.
Between the rich and the poor
There is mighty wide gap
And often the token assistance given
Is more like a slap.
Like the window dressing
Of that $300 amount
That in the blink of an eye disappeared
From the poor’s account.
Absolutely no trickle down
Reaches the vulnerably poor
While the window dressing politicians
Get more and more.
The MPs dress up the window
And invite the poor to look
But these recycled manifesto promises
Produce only a book.
A book for posterity
Given to the poor for free:
“A Window Dressing Guide for Politicians”
Added to a sparse library.
A world of window dressers
Politicians have become,
Showcasing their promises to all
But only benefitting some.
Yet they are convincing
And for them we vote
Lured by another window dressing:
A politician’s master stroke.
Stewart Russell © October 19, 2025
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