
Four Democratic candidates vying to be the territoryโs next delegate to Congress took to the stage of the St. Croix Educational Complex Thursday night for a spirited and sometimes heated debate hosted by the Democratic Party of the Virgin Islands.
Over nearly two hours, candidates Emmett Hansen, Teri Helenese, Janelle Sarauw and Delia Smith offered competing visions for the role of the territoryโs representative in Washington. Several candidates also used their allotted time to fire broadsides at their opponents. The eveningโs more pointed comments came during exchanges between Helenese, Smith and Sarauw, whose enthusiastic supporters formed the core of Thursday nightโs in-person audience at the Complex auditorium. A section in which candidates were given an opportunity to ask a single opponent one question began with Sarauw challenging Helenese over the rum cover-over rate.
Excise tax collected on Virgin Islands-made rum exported to the United States is โcovered overโ to the territory. The cover-over rate was capped at $10.50 per proof gallon but extended to a rate of $13.25 and retroactively applied multiple times over the years. That rate expired in 2021, but the territory secured a permanent extension last summer after years of lobbying federal lawmakers โ though the extension was not applied retroactively this time. Helenese and her supporters regularly cite the permanent extension as one of the crowning achievements of her tenure as the territoryโs State-Federal Relations director.
โWith all the relationships and with a salary of $216,000 from the [Public Finance Authority], why did you not work to negotiate a better rum cover-over deal?โ Sarauw asked. โThereโs no clause that allows for renegotiations, and you locked us into a permanent rate. Thatโs similar to locking somebody into a salary for the rest of their lives with no chance of a salary increase.โ
Helenese said the rate of $13.25 was set by the federal government.
โIt is not anything that Bacardi or Sazerac or Cruzan Rum or Captain Morgan could negotiate,โ she said. โOf courseโฆ we all want $20, $22, but it is standardized from Washington D.C. So from that point of negotiation, that is where the adjustment lays.โ
Sarauw said she didnโt buy Heleneseโs explanation.
โThatโs why we are in Congress,โ she said, โand Congress historically has shown that they are willing to have federal carve-outs. Weโve had Medicaid carve-outs, we have the Jones Act carve-out, so I simply canโt agree with the fact that Congress agreed on a $13.25 โ no modern tax structure is a static rate. Any modern tax structure is a percentage.โ
Helenese and Smith both directed their questions back at Sarauw, and Smith accused the former senator of โmisleadingโ Virgin Islanders by suggesting that she would be able to work with a Republican majority fixated on cutting taxes and dismantling social safety nets.

โAnd what is โmisleadingโ is to suggest that Ms. Sarauw will lead the Virgin Islands with her extensive knowledge of Virgin Islands law,โ Smith said. Her comment elicited jeers from Sarauwโs supporters in the audience, prompting moderator Merlisa George to remind them that โwe are a civil people.โ Smithโs sharpest jab came during closing statements, during which she said that Sarauwโs character โhas been brought to the spotlight by nobody but herself.โ
โAnd that is my issue: to make sure that the person who represents you is one who is going to be of good character, a good citizen โ one that is mature, one that is responsible, and one that will live within the laws of the United States and the United States Virgin Islands,โ she said while George tried in vain to quell agitated audience members and keep Smith from speaking past her allotted time.
Though the case was not mentioned specifically, the comment came one month after a Florida judge declined to grant a restraining order against Sarauw sought by a former romantic partner. According to local media reports, the judge found that there hadnโt been any recent act of violence or basis to believe that violence was imminent.
After chastising the crowd Thursday, George told Smith that her comment was โunnecessary in your closing comments.โ
โLetโs keep it respectableโฆ you are to answer the question and support your candidacy,โ George said.
Hansen, who in his opening statement said that a difference of opinion โwas not a death sentence,โ declined to ask any of his fellow candidates a question.
โI actually came here tonight to let the audience and the viewers listen to my plans. And this thing? No thank you,โ he said, apparently put off by the tense back-and-forth.
The Democratic Party of the Virgin Islands will continue its forum and debate series on Friday evening with a gubernatorial debate at 6 p.m. held at the St. Croix Educational Complex.



