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

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.


Reuters | Updated: 24-05-2026 13:54 IST | Created: 24-05-2026 13:54 IST
Cyprus votes for new parliament with corruption and living costs in focus

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

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)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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