Explorer
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These symbols illustrate a party's political orientation to facilitate quick comparison. These categories offer a broad classification; for detailed policy positions, please visit the individual party pages.
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1053 respondents
The next General Election in Cyprus takes place in 13 days.
Based on the Explorer projection, the incumbent governing parties would currently secure 10.7% of the parliamentary seats.
According to the latest national poll in Cyprus by Explorer, DISY leads with 23.2%. They are followed by AKEL: 22.5%, ELAM: 14%, ALMA: 13.4%, DIKO: 9.6%, Ámesi Dimokratía: 7.4%, EDEK: 2.8%, Volt: 2.6%, DEPA: 1.3% and KOSP: 1.3%. Other parties secure 1.9% of the votes.
Explorer achieved a PolitPro Score of ? out of 100.
On average, Explorer's figures deviate by percentage points between their final pre-election polls and actual election results.
The electoral threshold for the election in Cyprus is 3.5%.
According to data from Explorer, 6 parties are projected to surpass the electoral threshold and enter the Cyprus parliament: DISY with 15 representatives, AKEL with 14 representatives, ELAM with 9 representatives, ALMA with 8 representatives, DIKO with 6 representatives and Ámesi Dimokratía with 4 representatives.
Cyprus's House of Representatives (Vouli ton Antiprosopon) is elected through a proportional representation system across six constituencies. These constituencies align with the island's administrative districts. While 80 seats are allocated, only 56 are effectively filled; the 24 seats reserved for the Turkish-Cypriot community have remained vacant since the constitutional conflicts of 1963/64. Voters can influence the selection of specific candidates within a party list through preference votes, fostering intra-party competition.
To enter the Cypriot Parliament, parties must clear a nationwide electoral threshold, raised to 3.6% of valid votes in 2015. Meeting this threshold is crucial for parties to participate in seat allocation during the second and third phases of the counting process. The threshold increase aimed to prevent excessive parliamentary fragmentation and foster more stable majorities, while still allowing smaller political movements a realistic chance at representation.
Cyprus operates as a presidential republic, strictly separating its executive and legislative branches. The President, directly elected by the people, serves as both head of state and head of government. The President independently forms their cabinet, distinct from parliamentary influence. However, for stable legislation, the President relies on majorities within the House of Representatives, often leading to the formation of parliamentary alliances or coalitions. These alliances are frequently purpose-driven, formed to pass critical legislative initiatives or the state budget.