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Bahamas Heads for Early Election on May 12

April 1 (Reuters) – Voters ⁠will ⁠head to the ⁠polls in the Bahamas for an early ​election on May 12, the prime minister said on Wednesday, ‌as the Caribbean nation ‌battles affordability issues.

The announcement came the day ⁠the government ⁠scrapped a value-added tax on unprepared grocery items to ​help ease a cost of living ranked as the world’s sixth highest by statistics site Numbeo.

Prime Minister Philip ​Davis said he would dissolve parliament on April 8 ⁠and formally ⁠call the election ⁠the ​following day. An election had not been due until mid-October.

“As ​we move through ⁠this election season, I ask every Bahamian to remember one simple truth: wherever we may fall politically, we all love this country,” Davis said in ⁠a statement.

At the last election in September 2021, Davis’ Progressive ⁠Liberal Party ousted the then governing Free National Movement.

The May election is expected to be a contest mainly between the two main parties, the PLP and the FNM, though a smaller third party, the Coalition of Independents, which has recently drawn attention, will also be in the ⁠fray.

No prime minister of an independent Bahamas has ever been elected from a third party, and the last time a prime minister was reelected ​was in 1997.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward in Washington; ​Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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