Of seats, swings and voter turnout

Prime Minister Mia Mottley has cemented her place as one of the most consequential leaders in Caribbean political history following the official 2026 Barbados general election results released last week by the country’s Electoral and Boundaries Commission (EBC). The election, the second called by Mottley during her tenure, marks her third straight electoral victory, opening the Barbados Labour Party (BLP)’s unprecedented second consecutive three-term term of office since the country gained independence. This historic milestone has only been achieved once before by the opposing Democratic Labour Party (DLP), across the pre- and post-independence era.

What makes Mottley’s win even more remarkable is its standing as a first for the entire Caribbean region. While a handful of regional leaders have managed to secure all available parliamentary seats in an election, and Dr Keith Mitchell of Grenada led his party to three full clean sweeps, none have claimed three successive full seat sweeps. This alone puts Mottley’s victory in uncharted territory for Caribbean politics.

The win also defies a widespread regional trend that has plagued incumbent administrations for decades. Across Caribbean democracies, parties that win a first term almost always lose both seats and popular support in subsequent second and third terms. Very few prime ministers have managed to grow their electoral support while holding office, putting Mottley in an extremely exclusive club alongside former PM Owen Arthur of Barbados, Roosevelt Skerrit of Dominica, and Gaston Browne of Antigua. This rare feat is more than just a statistical curiosity: it represents an extraordinary public endorsement of Mottley’s leadership and policy agenda, confirming her status as one of the most popular leaders in modern Caribbean history.

Beyond the historic election results, the contest has sparked renewed discussion of voter participation and the EBC’s methods for calculating turnout. Official EBC data puts 2026 turnout at a historic low of 42%, a 1.8 percentage point drop from the 2022 election that is technically statistically insignificant, but still signals a downward trend. Digging into the raw numbers reveals a more nuanced picture: 1,146 more voters cast ballots in 2026 than in 2022, but the voter registration roll grew by 7,608 names over the same period, which accounts for the lower calculated turnout.

Critics have long argued that the EBC’s approach to calculating turnout produces misleading results, a concern echoed across many Caribbean jurisdictions. The national voter roll remains bloated with the names of thousands of people who are ineligible or unable to vote for a range of reasons, from migration to death, creating an artificial illusion of lower turnout than actual participation. A 2025 by-election in St James North illustrated this problem clearly: 2,068 listed voters were unavailable to cast ballots, accounting for 20% of the total roll. At the national level, official population estimates for eligible voters over 18 put the true number of eligible voters at roughly 223,312, compared to the EBC’s listed 273,947 – a gap of more than 50,000 names. If the true eligible population were used to calculate turnout, the 2026 figure would rise to 51%, around half of all eligible voters.

Even accounting for measurement issues, comparison of turnout across constituencies reveals key insights into what drives Barbadian voters to participate. The three constituencies with the highest turnout were all highly competitive races, where candidates on both sides worked aggressively to mobilize their bases. By contrast, constituencies with the lowest turnout tended to be seen as lopsided contests with predictable outcomes, breeding voter indifference. This aligns with findings from a 2025 CADRES post-by-election survey, which found that voter motivation drops sharply when most voters assume the election outcome is a foregone conclusion.

Analysis of party support and vote share further illuminates the shifting political landscape in Barbados. In 2026, the BLP won three times as many votes as the DLP, with all minor parties and independent candidates combined capturing just 3% of the national vote. Tracing growth in average vote share back to 1971, the first year of single-member constituency contests, the BLP has grown its average support by 9% over decades, while the DLP has seen a 1% contraction. This translates to an average election vote haul of 68,670 for the BLP, compared to 53,879 for the DLP. In 2026, the BLP outperformed its average with 79,321 votes, while the DLP underperformed with just 32,059. This gap makes clear that low turnout is not a generalised trend across the electorate: the problem is rooted largely in the DLP’s failure to mobilize its own base of supporters.

While the BLP’s third straight full seat sweep dominates headlines, analysis of electoral swing between the 2022 and 2026 elections reveals unexpected details. Nationally, the BLP saw a tiny 0.4% drop in its support share, while the DLP gained a 1.4% swing. In raw numbers, the BLP added 522 votes, while the DLP added 1,786 – both changes that are statistically insignificant. While the DLP may frame this small gain as progress, political observers note that the trajectory is underwhelming: for a major opposition party holding less than 30% of the national vote, a gain barely above the margin of error is far weaker than what would be expected for an opposition seeking to unseat a long-ruling incumbent.

At the constituency level, however, some candidates recorded statistically significant improvements that stand out, regardless of whether they won their seats. The analysis identified top-performing candidates from both parties who outperformed their party’s national swing. Most notably, independent or opposition candidate Ryan Walters recorded a 10% swing, the largest improvement of any candidate in the 2026 contest, even though he did not win his seat. For the BLP, first-time candidate Ryan Brathwaite recorded an 8% improvement in the constituency’s vote share compared to 2022, against a national 0.4% drop for the party.

One final key takeaway from the 2026 election addresses a common debate over minor candidates and spoiler effects. Unlike many contests across the region, every BLP winning candidate secured a majority of valid votes, rather than a plurality. This confirms that no minor party or independent candidate split the opposition vote to cost the DLP any seats. At both the national and constituency levels, minor candidates and independents had no significant impact on the final outcome of the election.

This analysis was contributed by Peter W Wickham, political consultant and director of Caribbean Development Research Services (CADRES).