Legitimacy Crisis in Haiti: The Alliance de Rupture Calls for a Consensual Transition and a Swift Return to the Polls
the press conference on Friday, February 13, 2026, the Alliance Nationale de Rupture et Alliés addressed a direct message to Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé, outlining its position on the ongoing political transition and its interpretation of the country's institutional situation.
By Jean Wesley Pierre · Port-au-Prince · · 2 min read · Updated 24 April 2026
Translated from French — AI-assisted and reviewed by the editorial team. The French version is authoritative. Read the original · About our translation policy

National Coordinator of the ANR,
first reiterated the group's political stance by stating: « We did not sign the April 3 agreement; all organizations and political parties that did not sign it are part of the Alliance. » He also issued a political warning: « Mr. Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé, what happened the day before will not happen again on the day of the funeral », before calling for « a one-year transition so that, on February 7, 2027, the country can hand over power to a person chosen by the people ». Another speaker emphasized the head of government's responsibility in seeking stability: « It is the Prime Minister's responsibility to put the country back on the path to stability », adding that « there is no liberation without consensus ». This statement highlights the idea that a lasting exit from the crisis requires a broad and inclusive political agreement. The Alliance's representatives also highlighted the prolonged absence of elected officials in Haiti: « Five years of governance, five years without any elected official, without a true representative of the Haitian people », in reference to the period since the assassination of the former president in 2021 until today. These statements reflect a persistent challenge to current political mechanisms and an advocacy for a clearly time-limited transition leading to elections. The emphasis on consensus also reveals an implicit criticism of political processes deemed insufficiently representative. The Alliance seems to want to refocus the national debate on democratic legitimacy, considered an essential condition for the country's stabilization. This position highlights the depth of the Haitian institutional crisis and the persistent divergences among political actors regarding the ways out of the current impasse. Jean Wesley Pierre / Le Relief



