Minnis was sworn in as prime minister on 12 May 2017 and presented his cabinet on the 15th. He has held the additional portfolio of
Minister of Finance since November 2020.
Hurricane Dorian Minnis' greatest challenge was
Hurricane Dorian in 2019, which killed at least 70 people and devastated several islands. He was greatly criticized for his government’s poor response to the catastrophe, and dealt with allegations that the Bahamian government siphoned relief donations into personal accounts, and stockpiled aid and donated building materials. The number of 70 dead is highly debated as eyewitness accounts and testimonies from aid workers and civilians alike place the real toll at around 2,000. The number of 70 dead only referred to identified bodies, as settlements like the Mudd and Pigeon Peas were destroyed and most inhabitants were undocumented Haitian immigrants. There are also accounts of mass graves being dug by Bahamian authorities, with reporters ordered to secrecy and their cameras being destroyed.
Foreign Affairs His government aligned itself with that of the United States in international relations. On Venezuela, he refused to recognize President
Nicolas Maduro and supported Juan Guaido, an opposition leader. He and other pro-US Caribbean leaders attended a summit meeting with Donald Trump in March 2019 to define a common policy on the situation in Venezuela and China's "predatory economic practices".
2021 general election In August 2021, Minnis called a snap election, less than a year before it was due. Although Minnis retained his seat, the FNM lost it in a landslide and he conceded. ==In opposition the second time==