Voter ID Replacement Applications continue to be slow

As Antigua and Barbuda gears up for its upcoming general election, official data from the Antigua and Barbuda Electoral Commission (ABEC) reveals a dramatic acceleration in voter ID replacement applications over the past two months, bringing the total number of processed requests to 27,322 to date.

The rollout of the replacement program got off to a slow start in 2026, with just 355 applications submitted in January and 508 in February. Of the current total, 18,320 unprocessed requests were carried over from 2025, but a major surge in public engagement began in March. That month alone saw 4,168 new applications, and by the first 11 days of April, 3,971 applications had already been recorded – putting the month on track to match or exceed March’s high volume. Weekly data from April breaks this early activity into two periods: 1,071 applications between April 1 and 4, and an additional 2,894 between April 5 and 11. Figures for the second half of April have not yet been published by the commission.

When broken down by constituency, the data reveals stark gaps in completion rates across the country. The parish of St. Peter has emerged as the clear leader, hitting an 85% completion rate that outpaces all other electoral districts. Following St. Peter are Barbuda at 75% and St. Philip North at 74%, while St. Philip South has hit 67% and All Saints West has recorded 60% completion.

In contrast, a number of constituencies have yet to cross the 50% threshold, or are barely above the halfway mark. St. Mary’s North posts the lowest completion rate in the country at just 48%, with St. John’s Rural West at 50% and St. John’s City East at 53%. Urban constituencies centered around the capital city of St. John’s have posted only moderate progress overall, with completion rates falling between 50% and 56% – a trend that ABEC data suggests indicates slower uptake among voters in densely populated urban areas.

While the recent surge in applications marks meaningful progress on the voter ID replacement initiative, official figures confirm that thousands of eligible registered voters have still not completed the process to replace or update their identification cards. With the general election approaching, the Antigua and Barbuda Electoral Commission is continuing its outreach campaign to encourage all eligible voters to finalize their ID replacement in advance of polling day.