Guadeloupe's municipalities confront disastrous financial situations inherited from historical clientelism, especially in recruitment. This issue poses a major challenge for municipal election candidates. Jean-Philippe Courtois, outgoing mayor of Capesterre-Belle-Eau, voices his dismay over these budgetary constraints.
Guadeloupe's communes have been battling precarious finances for years, a legacy of past clientelism that hinders local governance. This burden weighs heavily on mayors elected in 2020, who often uncover the full extent of deficits once in office.
Jean-Philippe Courtois, outgoing mayor of Capesterre-Belle-Eau in Basse-Terre department and affiliated with divers centre, seeks re-election. He succeeded Joël Beaugendre, a divers droite mayor from 1995 to 2020 who passed away in 2024. 'We knew the commune's financial state was complex, but we did not expect this level of deficit,' he shares. Courtois adds: 'We must mourn the electoral project; we know we cannot implement it.'
This assessment echoes among many officials. In 2019, the newspaper France-Antilles warned of municipalities 'close to bankruptcy,' releasing a scorecard assessing self-financing capacity, fixed charges, debt levels, and tax recovery across the archipelago.
Among the most severe cases is Terre-de-Haut in Les Saintes. Its former mayor, Louis Molinié of the Union des démocrates et indépendants, led from 2000 to 2018 and was convicted of public fund embezzlement, worsening the local finances.
These financial woes, highlighted ahead of the 2026 municipal elections, force candidates to scale back ambitions in an archipelago where fiscal management remains a core issue.