The Guyanese diaspora in America praise President Irfaan Ali for his engagements with them. Community leaders across America speak positively of the President meeting the diaspora. He is known to walk avenues in Queens and Brooklyn and to speak at public meetings for exchanges with Guyanese of all backgrounds.
Few global leaders engage their diaspora like President Irfaan and the scarce interactions of his immediate predecessor is not a comparison. President Ali had countless engagements with the diaspora which came across as a strategic pillar of outreach to promote and showcase the country in order to attract investors as well as to involve the diaspora in the nation’s development growth. He sees the diaspora as a powerful tool for Guyana’s developmental aspirations and trajectory to become a Caribbean Dubai or Singapore; he encourages diasporic participation in Guyana.
President Ali does not see the diaspora in terms of segments but as ‘one’. His ‘One Guyana’ policy sees all Guyanese abroad and at home as one people. His outreaches to the diaspora have become one of the most distinctive and admired elements of his governance style. He has consistently interacted with the diaspora since he became President and even before the 2020 elections when he got elected; he engaged Guyanese in every major location they are settled and continues to do so whenever he travels abroad. He and Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo (in addition to when the latter was President 1999-2011) engaged the diaspora multiple times with much success like no other Guyanese leader, except maybe Dr. Cheddi Jagan.

Whenever Irfaan or Jagdeo visited overseas and time permitting, they engaged the diaspora. They consistently praised the diaspora’s role in championing democracy in Guyana, for providing financial and material assistance to the homeland during difficult times, and in promoting ties with nations that host the diaspora; previous PPPC leaders like Janet Jagan, and Donald Ramotar also praised the work of the diaspora in the struggle for democracy in the homeland and for their economic and political contributions.
President Irfaan and VP Jagdeo have consistently highlighted Guyana’s transformation over the past six years, citing major achievements such as poverty reduction and exponential growth rates as well as improvement in standard of living. Diasporic communities tend to respond enthusiastically to the race free messaging of PPP political leaders during open engagements. The outreaches of both leaders and occasionally Prime Minister Mark Phillips with the diaspora appealed all ethnicities underscoring their strategy: leveraging the diaspora as economic connectors to strengthen Guyana’s economy and their connection with their homeland and continue to help protect democratic gains for which the diaspora fought.
President Ali is saluted for elevating overseas community engagement into a powerful instrument of invited economic participation and pride.
