2026 Barbadian general election
11 February 2026
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All 30 seats in the House of Assembly 16 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
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General elections are scheduled to be held in Barbados on 11 February 2026 to elect the 30 members of the House of Assembly. Parliament was dissolved on 19 January and nomination day was on 27 January.[1]
Background
[edit]According to the Constitution of Barbados, the Parliament shall stand dissolved no later than every five years from the first sitting of Parliament.[2] The previous general elections were held on 19 January 2022, and the first sitting of the new session of Parliament was held on the 4 February 2022.[3] After the dissolution of Parliament, the President of Barbados must issue a writ for a general election of members to the House of Assembly and for appointment of Senators to the Senate within 90 days.[4]
On 17 January 2026, Prime Minister of Barbados Mia Mottley called for a new general election to be held less than a month away on 11 February of the same year. [5]
Democratic Labour Party (DLP) leader and leader of the opposition Ralph Thorne made several claims throughout the election campaign of the Barbados Labour Party (BLP)-led government "interfering" with the voter list and the work of the Electoral and Boundaries Commission, disenfranchising potential electors and called for a delay of the election.[6] Mottley in response refuted these claims and invited authorities from the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and Commonwealth of Nations to act as official election observers.[7] She stated this decision was made in a bid to “protect the reputation of Barbados.” [8]
Early voting was held for police officers and election day workers on 12 January.[9]
Electoral system
[edit]The 30 members of the House of Assembly are elected by first-past-the-post voting in single-member constituencies.[10]
Candidate affiliation
[edit]Ten political parties nominated candidates for this election. Including 2 independents, there were a total of 93 candidates. The slate of potential electors vying disclosed their affiliation under eight (8) main political affiliations:[7]
- The Barbados Labour Party (BLP) – the previous ruling party administration,
- The Democratic Labour Party (DLP),
- Reform Barbados (RB),
- Solutions Barbados (SB),[11]
- Friends of Democracy (FOD),
- Barbados Sovereignty Party (BSP),
- Bajan Free Party (BFP) and,[12]
- The People's Coalition for Progress (PCP),
An independent coalition of smaller parties was announced involving an alliance comprising candidates running under the banner of: the New National Party (NNP), the United Progressive Party (UPP) and the Conservative Barbados Leadership Party (CBLP).[13]
Parties
[edit]| Party | Position | Ideology | Leader | Leader since | Leader's seat | 2022 election | Seats at dissolution |
Contested seats | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | Seats | |||||||||
| Barbados Labour Party | Centre-left | Social democracy Republicanism |
Mia Mottley | 26 February 2013[14] | St. Michael North East | 69.26 | 30 / 30
|
29 / 30
|
30 seats | |
| Democratic Labour Party | Centre-left | Social democracy Republicanism |
Ralph Thorne | 19 February 2024[15] | Christ Church South Standing in St. John | 26.41 | 0 / 30
|
1 / 30
|
30 seats | |
| People's Coalition for Progress (NNP–UPP–CBLP) |
Centre-left to centre-right |
Social democracy Progressivism Conservatism Multiculturalism |
Kemar Stuart Lynette Eastmond Corey Beckles |
19 January 2026 [16] | Standing in St. John (Stuart) Standing in St. Philip West (Eastmond) Standing in City of Bridgetown (Beckles) |
New | 0 / 30
|
0 / 30
|
12 seats | |
| Friends of Democracy | Centre-left | Social democracy | Karina Goodridge | 18 May 2025[17] | Standing in St. Phillip West | New | 0 / 30
|
0 / 30
|
12 seats | |
| Bajan Free Party | Government transparency Anti-corruption |
Alex Mitchell | 1 October 2012[18] | Standing in St. Michael South | 0.17 | 0 / 30
|
0 / 30
|
3 seats | ||
| Barbados Sovereignty Party | Michael Thompson[19] | None | 0.11 | 0 / 30
|
0 / 30
|
2 seats | ||||
| Solutions Barbados | Centre | Third Way | Grenville Phillips II | 1 July 2015[20] | None | 0.69 | 0 / 30
|
0 / 30
|
1 seat | |
| Reform Barbados | Steve Prescott | 2018[21] | Standing in Christ Church East | New | 0 / 30
|
0 / 30
|
1 seat | |||
Candidates by constituencies
[edit]Source: The Nation Barbados [22]
| Name | Barbados Labour Party | Democratic Labour Party | Friends of Democracy | People's Coalition for Progress | Solutions Barbados | Bajan Free Party | Barbados Sovereignty Party | Reform Barbados | Independent |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| City of Bridgetown | Michael Lashley | Dale Row | Corey Beckles | Patrick King | |||||
| Christ Church East | Wilfred Abrams | Amoy Bourne | Ingrid Best | Steven Prescott | |||||
| Christ Church East Central | Ryan Straughn | Quincy Jones | Dominique Yorke | Natalie Parris | |||||
| Christ Church South | Shantal Knight | Corey Greenidge | Christopher Alleyne | Robert Toussaint | |||||
| Christ Church West | William Duguid | Andrew Cave | |||||||
| Christ Church West Central | Adrian Forde | Rasheed Belgrave | |||||||
| St. Andrew | Romel Springer | Ramon Goodman | |||||||
| St. George North | Toni Moore | David Walrond | |||||||
| St. George South | Dwight Sutherland | Felicia Dujon | Suzanne Holligan | ||||||
| St. James Central | Kerrie Symmonds | Paul Gibson | Kerry Thomas | Erskine Alleyne | |||||
| St. James North | Chad Blackman | Charles Worrel | Steffanie Williams | ||||||
| St. James South | Sandra Husbands | Pedro Greaves | Matthew Thorne | ||||||
| St. Lucy | Peter Phillips | Ian Griffith | Sherlan Davis | Wayne Griffith | |||||
| St. Michael Central | Tyra Trotman | Andre Worrel | Raymond Wiggins | Anthony Hinds | |||||
| St. Michael East | Trevor Prescod | Ensley Grainger | Carolyn Clarke | ||||||
| St. Michael South | Kirk Humphrey | Nathaniel Boyce | Alex Mitchell | ||||||
| St. Michael South Central | Marsha Caddle | Richard Sealy | David Gill | ||||||
| St. Michael South East | Santia Bradshaw | Pedro Shepherd | Roy Turney | ||||||
| St. Michael North | David Ishmael | Dawn Armstrong | Ricardo Harrison | ||||||
| St. Michael North East | Mia Mottley | Jamal Sandiford | Clarene Howard | ||||||
| St. Michael North West | Neil Rowe | Ryan Walters | Ricardo Williams | ||||||
| St. Michael West | Christopher Gibbs | Damien Fanus | Patsie Nurse | ||||||
| St. Michael West Central | Ian Gooding-Edghill | James Paul | Katrina Ramsay | ||||||
| St. Peter | Colin Jordan | Jason Phillips | |||||||
| St. Philip North | Dr. Sonia Browne | Simon Clarke | Anya Lorde | Nigel Newton | |||||
| St. Philip South | Indar Weir | Neil Marshall | Omar Smith | John Scantlebury | |||||
| St. Philip West | Kay McConney | David Estwick | Karina Goodridge | Lynette Eastmond | |||||
| St. John | Charles Griffith | Ralph Thorne | Kemar Stuart | ||||||
| St. Joseph | Ryan Brathwaite | Randall Rouse | |||||||
| St. Thomas | Gregory Nicholls | Rolerick Hinds | Irving Wittaker |
Opinion polls
[edit]| Polling firm | Last date of polling[a] | Link | BLP | DLP | Others | Margin | Sample size | Lead | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Nation Barbados Starcom Network [b] |
31 January 2026 | [23] | 77.1 | 18.6 | 4.3 | ±3pp | 1 145 | 58.5 | |||||
| Mia Mottley announces 2026 Barbadian general election | |||||||||||||
| 2022 election | 22 January 2022 | [24] | 69.26 | 26.41 | 4.35 | N/a | 114,013 | 42.85 | |||||
References
[edit]- ^ Clarke, Sherrylyn (18 January 2026). "General Election in Barbados on February 11, 2026". Nation News. Retrieved 18 January 2026.
- ^ Constitution: Section 61 (3): "Subject to the provisions of subsection (4), Parliament, unless sooner dissolved, shall continue for five years from the date of its first sitting after any dissolution and shall then stand dissolved. (4) At any time when Barbados is at war, Parliament may extend the period of five years specified in subsection (3) for not more than twelve months at a time:"
- ^ "Document Details". Barbados Parliament. Retrieved 18 January 2026.
- ^ Constitution: Section 62 (1) (2): "After every dissolution of Parliament the Governor General shall issue writs for a general election of members of the House of Assembly returnable within ninety days from that dissolution. (2) As soon as may be after every general election the Governor General shall proceed under section 36 to the appointment of Senators."
- ^ McLeod, Sheri-kae (18 January 2026). "Barbados to head to polls on February 11, 2026 as Mottley calls early election". CNW Network. Retrieved 30 January 2026.
- ^ Mounsey, Colville (29 January 2026). "Thorne: Govt interfering in EBC's work". nationnews.com. Retrieved 29 January 2026.
- ^ a b Clark, Joanne (28 January 2026). "PM Mottley invites CARICOM, Commonwealth to observe Barbados elections".
- ^ Graham, Lourianne (27 January 2026). "PM Mottley invites CARICOM, Commonwealth observers to monitor poll". Barbados Today. Retrieved 29 January 2026.
- ^ admin (4 February 2026). "First ballots cast in 2026 General Election". Caribbean Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 5 February 2026.
- ^ Electoral system IPU
- ^ Today, Barbados (28 January 2026). "Solutions Barbados to contest poll with single candidate". Barbados Today. Retrieved 28 January 2026.
- ^ Escamilla, Lauryn (27 January 2026). "Bajan Free Party candidates pay deposits ahead of Nomination Day". Barbados Today. Retrieved 28 January 2026.
- ^ Joseph, Emmanuel (28 January 2026). "Nomination Day passes smoothly as general election campaign begins". Barbados Today. Retrieved 28 January 2026.
- ^ "Mottley replaces Arthur as opposition leader in Barbados". Caribbean360. 26 February 2013. Archived from the original on 11 September 2014.
- ^ @KevzPolitics (19 February 2024). "#BREAKING - CBC: Barbados Leader of Opposition Ralph Thorne announced as the new Political Leader of the Democratic Labour Party - granting the party its first seat in Parliament since 2018. Dr Ronnie Yearwood will remain DLP President" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
- ^ Graham, Lourianne (20 January 2026). "New coalition pushes for reform, fairer representation, voter re-engagement". Barbados Today. Retrieved 28 January 2026.
- ^ Greaves, Tre (18 May 2025). "Friends of Democracy to become a full political party". nationnews.com. Retrieved 27 January 2026.
- ^ "Caribbean Political Parties | Bajan Free Party". caribbeanelections.com. Retrieved 25 January 2022.
- ^ "Solutions Barbados and two other parties broker deal to team up". Barbados Today. 1 January 2022. Retrieved 25 January 2022.
- ^ "Caribbean Political Parties | Solutions Barbados". www.caribbeanelections.com. Retrieved 25 January 2022.
- ^ Joseph, Emmanuel (18 January 2026). "New Party: Reform Barbados enters political arena". Barbados Today. Retrieved 28 January 2026.
- ^ "Candidates for 2025 General Election". The Nation News. 5 February 2026. pp. 20–21.
- ^ Devonish, Dwayne (2 February 2026). "The Swing Factor". The Nation Barbados. p. 12.
- ^ "Report on the Barbados General Election 2022" (PDF). The Barbados Parliament. 29 June 2025. Archived (PDF) from the original on 29 June 2025. Retrieved 29 June 2025.