Cyprus votes for new parliament with corruption and living costs in focus

Cyprus votes for new parliament with corruption and living costs in focus

By Michele Kambas

Reuters A woman casts her vote during parliamentary elections at a polling station in Nicosia, Cyprus May 24, 2026. REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou A man casts his vote during parliamentary elections at a polling station in Nicosia, Cyprus May 24, 2026. REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou

A woman casts her vote during parliamentary elections at a polling station in Nicosia

NICOSIA, May 24 (Reuters) - Cypriots went to the polls on Sunday in a parliamentary election expected to deliver ‌gains for anti-corruption campaigners and the far right, while weakening centrist ‌parties that back President Nikos Christodoulides.

In a vote being closely watched for signs of ​public sentiment ahead of a 2028 presidential election, more than half a million registered voters will elect 56 lawmakers from a record field of 753 candidates.

Cyprus has a presidential system of government but Sunday's poll is a ‌gauge of support for ⁠Christodoulides, who does not have a party of his own so relies on the backing of others to ⁠pass legislation.

Polls close at 1500 GMT, with conclusive voting results expected about two hours later.

NEWCOMERS SEEN GAINING GROUND

Advertisement

Three centrist parties - Diko, Dipa and EDEK - currently ​support the ​president, but the latest opinion polls ​show weaker voter backing for ‌at least two of them.

The island's other traditional political forces, including the right-wing DISY and Communist AKEL parties, have also been losing ground to newer challengers.

Polls show gains for the far-right ELAM party, as well as for political newcomers ALMA and Volt, which have campaigned on a ‌platform of better accountability and rooting out ​corruption - an issue that is high on ​voters' list of priorities.

Sunday's ​vote might force Christodoulides to seek support elsewhere, political ‌analysts say, with some suggesting that ​ELAM and DISY could ​be possible candidates. Neither Christodoulides nor the two parties have commented on possible post-election alliances.

The vote took place against a backdrop ​of persistent cost-of-living pressures, ‌housing affordability concerns and migration, issues that have dominated political ​debate in the European Union member state during recent months.

(Writing ​by Michele Kambas;Editing by Helen Popper)

 

CR MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com