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In this episode, we sit down with Lee Webber—President/Owner of MDA, and former President & Publisher of the Pacific Daily News—for one of the clearest, most unfiltered breakdowns yet of why Guam’s political system is structurally incapable of delivering progress under its current design.

Drawing from five decades on island—from his medevac arrival in 1968 to running USA Today’s Asia operations and leading major newspapers across the region—Lee explains why Guam’s governance problems are not about personalities, but about systems: diffuse accountability, misaligned incentives, entrenched bureaucratic interests, and a legislative structure that rewards avoidance over action.

Lee makes the case that districting senators and moving to a part-time legislature is not just a reform—but the foundational change Guam needs before anything else can improve. From procurement failures and stalled infrastructure to declining public trust, he walks us through how centralized power, no clear constituency, and a culture of apathy prevent solutions from ever taking hold.

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If you want to understand why Guam keeps repeating the same failures, why reform efforts stall, and what structural shifts could actually change the trajectory of the island, this conversation offers a rare, experienced, and brutally honest viewpoint from someone who has watched Guam evolve over 50 years—both from the inside and from abroad.

Data Points is presented by Pinpoint, Guam’s leading real estate data company. Our mission is to help you make informed decisions on real property purchases through detailed market analysis and insights.