Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 12
Bahamas Opens 41 Seats to 200,000 Voters as Immigration and $7 Gas Dominate Election
Updated
Updated · The Guardian · May 12

Bahamas Opens 41 Seats to 200,000 Voters as Immigration and $7 Gas Dominate Election

9 articles · Updated · The Guardian · May 12
  • More than 200,000 registered voters are casting ballots across 41 constituencies in a tightly contested Bahamian election that will decide whether Prime Minister Philip Davis and the PLP win a second term.
  • Immigration from Haiti and living costs have dominated the campaign, with the FNM hardening its message on illegal entry and pointing to gasoline prices of about $7 a gallon in New Providence.
  • Davis has argued that keeping the PLP in office would preserve stability and protect post-pandemic gains, including record tourism growth, while analysts still expect his party to retain power.
  • The Coalition of Independents is also being watched after winning nearly 8,000 votes in 2021, though third parties have historically struggled to convert support into parliamentary seats.
  • The vote was called early, ahead of the usual October timetable and before hurricane season, turning a race shaped by economic strain and sovereignty fears into a test of the PLP's large parliamentary majority.
Will NBA legend Rick Fox's star power be enough to win a parliamentary seat for the opposition in a key district?
With a new credit upgrade but looming global inflation, can the next government truly solve the Bahamian cost-of-living crisis?
Is this snap election a smart defense against climate threats or a political gamble before global economic turmoil arrives?