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History of Guyana
Past results for 2020 Elections - 2015 Elections - 2011 Elections Results - 2006 Elections Results - Comparision chart results from 1992,1997,2001 and 2006.
Guyana is divided into ten geographic constituencies that correspond with the ten Administrative Regions.
Updated September 7th. 2025
Election
2025 Official Results
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Source: GECOM
Ali declared as President after GECOM certifies election results
-PPP/C win 36 seats, WIN 16, APNU 12, FGM 1
The Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) last night declared Irfaan Ali as President of Guyana and confirmed the People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C) as the winner of the September 1 general and regional elections.
The declaration was made during a specially convened statutory meeting, held at 11 pm at GECOM headquarters, and in accordance with Article 177(2) of the Constitution, which provides that the presidential candidate on the list securing the most votes shall be deemed elected.
Following a report presented by Chief Election Officer Vishnu Persaud, GECOM Chair Claudette Singh announced, according to the Deputy Chief Election Officer Aneal Giddings, that the PPP/C captured 242,497 votes, translating into 36 seats in the National Assembly.
The party’s presidential candidate, Ali, was therefore declared elected to serve a second consecutive term as Head of State.
General elections were held in Guyana on 1st September 2025. The vote count concluded on 3 September, with incumbent president Irfaan Ali winning a second and final term.
As results were finalised on 3 September, it became clear that inumbent president Irfaan Ali had won a second term, with his PPP/C party commanding 36 of the 65 seats in the National Assembly and victories in eight of the ten regions.
In what was described as a "tectonic political shift", newcomer party We Invest in Nationhood came second with 16 seats, leaving the previous opposition Partnership for National Unity–led alliance in third place with 12.
The last Assembly seat went to Amanza Walton-Desir of the Forward Guyana Movement.
Six parties contested this year’s election, with three major parties capturing the majority of votes at the polls, those being the incumbent PPP/C, A Partnership for National Unity (APNU) and newcomer We Invest in Nationhood (WIN).
The win by the incumbent PPP/C, according to the data provided in the declarations published by the Guyana Elections Commission (GECOM) for the General Election, shows that significant gains have been made in several regions that had previously supported the APNU.
The most significant of these regions would be Region Four, which has traditionally supported that party.

The figures showed a shake-up for the South American country's opposition - the upstart We Invest in Nationhood (WIN) party, which was founded just three months ago by business magnate Azruddin Mohamed, was second in votes, winning 109,066 votes and a majority in two districts.
Long-time opposition heavyweights A Partnership for National Unity (APNU) were trailing with 77,998 votes nationwide.
Voting to choose 65 members of parliament and a government came after a campaign focused on how riches from the country's hydrocarbon boom should be spent.
The country of 800,000 people has earned some $7.5 billion in revenue from oil sales and royalties since ExxonMobil started pumping offshore oil in late 2019, making Guyana one of the world's fastest-growing economies.
Ali's government, which took power in 2020, has funneled oil revenue into building roads, schools and hospitals, and made studying at the state university free.
But opposition parties have decried what they say is unfair distribution of oil earnings to groups connected to the PPP. The PPP denies the allegation. "The PPP will go into the national assembly with a bigger majority than it did in 2020.
That's very clear from the trend you're seeing," PPP general secretary and Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo told local media on Tuesday.
WIN leader Mohamed was sanctioned by the U.S. last year over allegations that he and his father, Nazar Mohamed, defrauded the Guyanese government of tax revenue and bribed public officials.
They deny any wrongdoing. Mohamed has attracted grassroots support, especially among poor and Indigenous communities, through his philanthropy and WIN has called for fairer access to housing and opportunities for everyone.


