A concerned member of the Liberian diaspora and the opposition Congress for Democratic Change (CDC) has issued a response to President Joseph Boakai’s recent Annual Message to the 55th Legislature. Dr. Elizabeth Gaye-Kamara, while acknowledging the “eloquent, data-heavy, and carefully curated” nature of the address themed “From Resolve to Results,” contends that the official portrait of progress stands in contrast to the lived experience of many citizens.
The reflection, presented as an open letter to the President, argues that the true state of the nation is better gauged not from the “courtyard of power” but from the “streets, homes, police cells, markets, and hospital corridors of Liberia.” It challenges several key areas of the administration’s report.
On security and the rule of law, the Dr. Gaye-Kamara acknowledges claims of strengthened justice but paints a grim picture of normalized police brutality, unlawful arrests, and a climate of fear where citizens whisper grievances. “The question many Liberians now ask is simple: Who polices the police?” the commentary asks, suggesting a chain of command that functions for applying force but not for ensuring accountability.
Addressing youth and social welfare, the piece describes a generation of children solemnized into hardship through street trading, drug exposure, and policy silence. It frames rampant drug abuse not merely as an epidemic but as a “symptom of a deeper failure: hopelessness,” warning that a nation where children “inhale survival before they inhale dreams is not progressing—it is quietly unraveling.”
The commentary also questions economic metrics, stating that for households facing stagnant salaries, unforgiving markets, and rising transport costs, “no parent feeds children with macroeconomic indicators.” It draws a pointed comparison with the preceding CDC administration, which the author admits was “noisy, imperfect, and sometimes uncomfortable,” but argues that its development efforts—from road construction to youth employment—were tangibly “felt.” In contrast, today’s governance is described as “quieter, polished, and globally applauded—yet locally questioned.”
The core critique centers on a perceived gap between rhetoric and reality. “A nation does not fall because leaders speak too little,” the author writes, “it falls when leaders speak too well while listening too poorly.” The piece asserts that Liberians are not rejecting reform but “denial,” and are not against government but against a “government that explains pain instead of relieving it.” In closing, the Dr. Elizabeth Gaye-Kamara offers a caution that “history is unforgiving to administrations that confuse reports with reality,” noting that “PowerPoint progress does not comfort a mother whose child was beaten, nor does donor confidence console a hungry household.” The call is for “less reassurance and more restraint of force; less celebration and more correction; less diplomacy in words—and more justice in action.”
The author emphasizes that the reflection is rooted not in hatred or mere opposition, but in “patriotic disappointment, grounded in love for Liberia and loyalty to truth,” concluding with a sobering note: “The nation is speaking softly now. History will speak loudly later.”