UPDATE 2-Far right and newcomer make gains in Cyprus election, early results show
Cyprus's far right appeared set for gains in Sunday's election while an anti-corruption newcomer looked on track to enter parliament, according to early results that showed weaker support for centrist parties backing President Nikos Christodoulides.
Cyprus's far right appeared set for gains in Sunday's election while an anti-corruption newcomer looked on track to enter parliament, according to early results that showed weaker support for centrist parties backing President Nikos Christodoulides. With about 45% of the vote counted, results released by the interior ministry showed far-right ELAM, an offshoot of Greece's banned Golden Dawn party, with 11.1% of the vote, up from 6.8% in the last legislative elections in 2021. If the trend holds, the results suggest it could become the third-largest party in the 56-seat parliament behind right-wing DISY and Communist AKEL parties which were polling 27% and 22.8% of the vote, respectively, with a small increase for AKEL and a small decline for DISY.
While executive power rests with the presidency in Cyprus, the vote is widely seen as a gauge of political trends ahead of the 2028 presidential election and could flag the new alliances centrist Christodoulides may need to make if he wants to be re-elected. Three centrist parties backing Christodoulides — Diko, Dipa and EDEK — appeared headed for a weaker result, according to projections and the results. Corruption and cost of living concerns were prominent in the campaign. ELAM campaigned against migration and also holds a hard line in negotiations with Turkish Cypriots on the ethnically split island. ALMA, a newly formed movement campaigning on accountability and political reform, was set to secure parliamentary representation for the first time with just over 6% of the vote.
With parties backing Christodoulides appearing headed for losses and ELAM advancing, political analyst Hubert Faustmann said the result could complicate the president's path to re-election. "If he doesn't get the support of DISY, he necessarily needs ELAM support, formally or informally, for any chance of re-election," he told Reuters.
(Writing by Michele Kambas; Editing by Helen Popper and Christina Fincher)
(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

