Ten Elections to Watch in 2026
from The Water's Edge and Diamonstein-Spielvogel Project on the Future of Democracy
from The Water's Edge and Diamonstein-Spielvogel Project on the Future of Democracy

Ten Elections to Watch in 2026

A woman casts her vote at a polling station in Seoul, South Korea, May 29, 2025.
A woman casts her vote at a polling station in Seoul, South Korea, May 29, 2025. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji

Numerous countries will hold elections in 2026. Here are ten to watch.

December 9, 2025 10:16 am (EST)

A woman casts her vote at a polling station in Seoul, South Korea, May 29, 2025.
A woman casts her vote at a polling station in Seoul, South Korea, May 29, 2025. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
Article
Current political and economic issues succinctly explained.

Voters in seventy countries turned out in 2025 to pick their leaders. Many of these elections went as predicted. Daniel Noboa won reelection as president in Ecuador, and Friedrich Merz led the center-right Christian Democrats to victory in Germany. Other elections did not. Incumbent Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese led the Labor Party to a surprise landslide victory, while Canada’s Conservative Party lost an election it was expected to win when President Donald Trump began talking about America’s northern neighbor as the fifty-first state.

More From Our Experts

Elections in 2026 will also no doubt deliver a similar mix of the expected and unexpected. It is a good bet that the results of Russia’s Duma elections, which are set to take place before September 20, will see the pro-Putin United Russia Party retain its majority. Vietnam’s legislative elections, set for March 15, will almost certainly affirm the will of the country’s ruling Communist Party. Elsewhere the surprise might be whether a country actually goes to the polls. South Sudan plans to hold elections in December. However, internal conflict and unresolved constitutional questions derailed plans to hold elections two years ago. On the flip side, new elections could materialize as governments fall, whether because of routine parliamentary maneuvers, protests in the streets, or coups. Based on what is currently on the calendar, here are ten elections to watch:

Bangladesh’s General Election, by February 17.

More on:

Elections and Voting

Diamonstein-Spielvogel Project on the Future of Democracy

International Institutions and Global Governance Program

Authoritarianism

Israel

Bangladesh’s February election will be the first since Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and her Awami League government were ousted from power in August 2024 by student-led protests. She had dominated Bangladeshi politics for fifteen years and increasingly suppressed political opponents and eroded Bangladesh’s democracy. Bangladesh’s military appointed eighty-four-year-old Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus to lead an interim government to restore law and order and return the country to democratic rule. The 2026 electoral field is fractured, and the parties disagree on the electoral rules and enforcement. The Bangladesh Nationalist Party was the leading opposition party when Sheikh Hasina was in power and a target of her repression. Jamaat-e-Islami is seeking to lead a coalition of Islamist parties pressing for constitutional reform and is running a slate of new candidates to signal generational change. The National Citizen Party is campaigning on a pledge to create a “Second Republic” based on a new constitution. The Awami League, however, is barred from competing; Hasina, who was sentenced to death in absentia for crimes against humanity, is living in exile in India. February’s vote, Bangladesh’s first competitive election in more than a decade, will be held alongside a referendum on the July Charter, which proposes to remake the country’s constitution. Besides lofty constitutional questions, voters will be worried about bread-and-butter issues. Unemployment, especially youth unemployment, is high, and Bangladesh ranks 151st on the 2024 Corruption Perception Index.

Hungary’s Parliamentary Elections, April 12.

Hungary is the poster child of democratic backsliding. Since becoming prime minister for a second time fifteen years ago, Viktor Orbán and his Fidesz Party have consolidated control over the courts, regulatory bodies, and cultural institutions while rewriting electoral laws to entrench an illiberal political system. In 2022, Fidesz won 54 percent of the popular vote, which translated into the party’s fourth consecutive two-thirds supermajority in parliament. Orbán used that supermajority to restrict LGBTQ+ rights and increase censorship of public debate. The question for 2026 is whether Hungarian voters have grown tired of Orbán and Fidesz after more than fifteen years of rule. The campaign will likely center on inflation, energy costs, and slow economic growth. The question is whether the opposition, which fell into disarray after the 2022 election, can tap into public dissatisfaction. Péter Magyar, who broke with Orbán and Fidesz last year over a corruption scandal and joined the Tisza (Respect and Freedom) Party, may do just that. After Magyar joined, Tisza won nearly 30 percent of the Hungarian vote in the 2024 European parliamentary election, the best showing by a non-Fidesz party in nearly two decades. Tisza is now leads Fidesz in many polls, and several smaller opposition parties have decided to support Tisza by not running their own candidates. Orbán has responded to this new electoral threat by engineering the passage of a redistricting law that will make it harder for Tisza to secure a parliamentary majority. Autocrats do not go down easily.

Colombia’s Presidential Election, May 31.

Colombia’s presidential election will test whether the recent rightward shift in politics in Latin America will continue. Incumbent President Gustavo Petro, a former leftist guerilla, is barred from running for reelection. His presidency has been marred by corruption scandals, a faltering effort to implement the terms of the historic 2016 agreement to end Colombia’s half-century long civil war with the Marxist-revolutionary FARC, and growing political tensions with the United States. Frustrated by how Colombia’s conservative-majority Senate and the Colombian courts blocked much of his domestic legislation, Petro has called for convening a National Constituent Assembly to re-write the country’s constitution. Petro’s declining popularity has come amidst rising political violence. Opposition Senator Miguel Uribe Turbay, widely expected to run for president in 2026, was shot while giving a speech in June and died two months later. Meanwhile, FARC dissidents and other guerrilla groups and criminal gangs have battled with government security forces. Petro’s Historic Pact Party nominated Senator Iván Cepeda as its candidate. His main opponents will most likely be Sergio Fajardo, a centrist running for a third consecutive time, and right-wing outsider Abelardo de la Espriella, a lawyer campaigning on anti-corruption and family values. If no candidate receives a majority of the vote in the May 31 election, the two leading candidates will face off against each other in a runoff election. Recent polls suggest a close race, with Cepeda and Fajardo each with 24 percent support.

More From Our Experts

Ethiopia’s General Election, June 1.

Elections can promote democratic governance or consolidate authoritarian rule. Ethiopia’s forthcoming election looks to be an example of the latter. The ruling Prosperity Party, which was formed in 2019, continues to rely on the coercive tactics of its predecessor, the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front, while selectively addressing regional grievances to maintain support. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed inspired optimism about Ethiopia’s democratic future in 2018 when he released political prisoners and welcomed exiled groups back home. Then in 2019, he negotiated the end to Ethiopia’s long-standing border dispute with Eritrea, which earned him the Nobel Peace Prize. But a year later he launched a war against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front, stifled dissent with anti-terrorism laws, and manipulated electoral rules in his favor. Prosperity then won 96.8 percent of parliamentary seats in the 2021 elections. Regional conflict persists in Ethiopia, with insurgencies in the provinces of Amhara, Oromia, Somali, and Tigray. In many cases, Prosperity is the only party that can run, and the lack of free movement makes it impossible for citizens to vote. Hanging over the election is the possibility of renewed war with Eritrea. Meanwhile, Prosperity is pushing a civil society law that would formalize restrictions on the registration and funding of civil society organizations, criminalize undefined “political advocacy,” and eliminate judicial oversight. With independent media, rights groups, and civic actors already having been shut down or forced into exile, Ethiopia is likely to slip deeper into one-party rule.

Armenia’s Parliamentary Elections, June 7.

Most elections turn on debates over domestic affairs. Some elections, however, ask voters to decide on their country’s identity and place in the world. Armenia’s 2026 parliamentary elections offer an example. The country’s longstanding conflict with neighboring Azerbaijan hangs over the election. In March 2025, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan signed the Agreement on Peace and Establishment of Interstate Relations with Azerbaijan that the Trump administration helped broker and that could pave the way for reconciliation between the two neighbors. It is unclear, however, that Armenians believe Pashinyan made the right choice. A further complication for Pashinyan is his own low political standing; just 13 percent of Armenians say they trust him. The good news for Pashinyan is that he nonetheless remains Armenia’s most popular politician and his Civil Contract party is the dominant political force in the country. As Armenia heads into its first regularly scheduled elections since 2017—the 2021 vote was a hastily called snap election—Pashinyan is promising to work to revise Armenia’s constitution to create a “fourth republic.” The core idea is accepting Armenian sovereignty within its current borders and abandoning aspirations for the country’s far larger historical borders. In theory, that vision would deepen Armenia’s regional integration, lessen tensions with neighboring countries, and reduce Armenia’s historical reliance on Russia as an economic and security partner. A diverse array of opposition parties offers a different view of Armenia’s future, however, and Russia no doubt will continue its long tradition of meddling in Armenian politics.

More on:

Elections and Voting

Diamonstein-Spielvogel Project on the Future of Democracy

International Institutions and Global Governance Program

Authoritarianism

Israel

Sweden’s General Election, September 13.

Sweden’s parliamentary elections will provide an indicator of the strength of populist politics in Europe—and the impact of foreign influence campaigns. The country has been governed since 2022 by a center-right government led by Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson and composed of the Moderate, Sweden Democrats, Christian Democrat, and Liberal parties. The government is confronting a surge in gang violence as well as debates over immigration and citizenship rules. The latter has been a political flashpoint for a decade and helped bring Kristersson’s government to power. Energy policy also divides Swedes: the right champions nuclear expansion and faster permitting to stabilize prices, while the left argues for renewables and targeted green-industry investment. Kristersson recently unveiled a controversial eighty-billion-SEK 2026 budget that called for broad tax cuts as well as increased defense spending. The opposition criticized the plan for failing to fix structural weaknesses in housing construction, workforce integration, and energy capacity. One issue that will not be up for debate is Sweden’s membership in NATO. Polls show that seven-in-ten Swedes have a positive view of the alliance. Magdalena Andersson’s Social Democrats currently top all parties in the polls, but the other center-left parties that might join it in a coalition government are polling poorly. Meanwhile, Sweden faces heightened cyber and foreign-influence activity coming from Russia. Last month, Sweden’s civil defense minister warned that the country faces a “serious security situation” heading into the general election.

Brazil’s Presidential Election, October 4.

Everything is on the table when Brazilians head to the polls next fall: the presidency, vice presidency, both houses of the National Congress, and every state governorship and assembly. The top concerns for voters are likely to be slowing economic growth, inflation, and crime. Brazil’s economy may be entering a recession, and inflation is just under 5 percent. Donald Trump’s 50 percent tariffs mean additional economic headwinds. Brazil’s homicide rate remains one of the highest in the world, and a police raid on two neighborhoods in Rio de Janeiro last month left 132 people dead without breaking the power of criminal gangs. Incumbent President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva said in 2022 that he would not seek a fourth term. He had a change of heart, however, and in October he declared his candidacy, saying: “I’m turning 80, but you can be sure I have the same energy I had when I was 30.” Former President Jair Bolsonaro has begun serving a twenty-seven-year sentence for fomenting a coup after losing to Lula four years ago and is barred from running. Bolsonaro’s son Eduardo and Tarcísio de Freitas, the governor of Brazil’s most populous state, are likely competitors to carry the banner for Brazil’s right. They face considerable competition, however. The younger Bolsonaro also faces charges that he interfered in his father’s criminal case. Early polls have Lula ahead, but his edge may reflect a temporary rally-around-the-flag effect as a result of his recent clashes with Trump.

Israel’s Knesset Election, by October 27.

Elections can settle policy disputes or produce political paralysis. Israel has experienced both outcomes recently. Between 2018 and 2022, Israelis went to the polls five times but failed to produce a stable governing coalition. That changed in 2022 when Benjamin Netanyahu pieced together the most right-wing and religious government in Israel’s history. The seventy-six-year-old Netanyahu has dominated Israeli politics for three decades, having been prime minister for eighteen of the last twenty-nine years. He was indicted in 2019 on charges of breach of trust, accepting bribes, and fraud; his trial is still underway. After his 2022 victory, he pushed legislation to curb judicial oversight. That effort triggered massive public protests, as opponents accused him of seeking to shield himself from prosecution and weakening the judiciary’s check on his government. Hamas’s October 7, 2023, attack briefly ended that political crisis as Netanyahu formed a national unity government. It collapsed after just eight months, however, as disagreements emerged over Gaza strategy, settler violence in the West Bank, and post-war plans for Gaza. The Knesset must pass a new budget by March or elections are automatically triggered; otherwise, elections need to be held by the end of October. Besides obvious security issues like the future of Gaza, Israeli voters will be debating issues such as the cost of living, judicial reform, investigating the October 7 intelligence failures, and the exemptions that ultra-Orthodox Israelis have from mandatory military service. The opposition remains split, creating an opportunity for Netanyahu to remain as prime minister.

U.S. Midterm Elections, November 3.

The results of next November’s midterm elections could dramatically change the course of American politics. The midterm vote for the House of Representatives generally functions as a referendum on the incumbent president, with voters historically being tough graders; the president’s party has picked up House seats in just two of the past fifteen midterm elections. The average loss has been twenty-four seats. To put that in perspective, Republicans currently have just a seven-seat margin in the House. These numbers are why President Donald Trump recently pushed Texas, Missouri, North Carolina, and other red states to remake their electoral maps to squeeze out more Republican seats and why some blue states are seeking to respond in kind. Republicans like their Senate chances, even though they are defending twenty-four of the thirty-five seats up for grabs. Twenty-two of those twenty-four seats are in states that Trump won in 2024 by ten percentage points or more. Whatever the historical trends, the voters look to be headed to the polls in a sour mood. Roughly 60 percent of them say the country is headed in the wrong direction and economic anxiety is high as Americans face an affordability crisis with living costs rising, wages stagnating, and growing fears that artificial intelligence could destroy more jobs than it generates. Polls show that both parties are unpopular, and they are each debating what their message to the electorate should be. If Democrats retake one or both houses of Congress, political bitterness in Washington will likely deepen as both parties immediately turn their attention to 2028.

The Gambia’s Presidential Election, December 5.

How long is too long for a president to serve, even one who has done good things for his country? Gambians face that question next year when they decide whether to give incumbent President Adama Barrow a third term in office. Barrow was the surprise winner of the 2016 election, ousting long-time ruler Yahya Jammeh. Once in office, Barrow abandoned many of Jammeh’s authoritarian practices and moved to give independence to the judiciary, expand civil liberties, relax restrictions on the press, and allow civil society groups to operate more freely. Gambians rewarded Barrow for embracing democratic practices by reelecting him in 2021. Upon winning reelection, Barrow proclaimed himself “a big fan of term limits” and vowed to amend the constitution to limit presidential tenure as part of his “legacy.” However, this past summer, the Gambian parliament rejected a draft constitutional amendment that would have imposed term limits because the wording did not prevent Barrow from running for two additional terms. Polls showing that most Gambians oppose Barrow’s plan to run again have not changed his mind. His pursuit of reelection has fueled concerns that The Gambia may be returning to the sort of entrenched political leadership it rejected in 2016. The question is whether an opposition figure will emerge who can beat Barrow at the ballot box. The United Democratic Party, one of The Gambia’s main opposition parties, is deeply divided, and numerous senior officials have abandoned the party.

Oscar Berry and Sofia Park Jadotte assisted in the preparation of this post.

Other posts in this series:

Ten Elections to Watch in 2025

Ten Elections to Watch in 2024

Five Elections to Watch in 2023

Ten Elections to Watch in 2022

Ten Elections to Watch in 2021

Ten Elections to Watch in 2020

Ten Elections to Watch in 2019

Ten Elections to Watch in 2018

Ten Elections to Watch in 2017

Ten Elections to Watch in 2016

Ten Elections to Watch in 2015

Ten Elections to Watch in 2014 

Creative Commons
Creative Commons: Some rights reserved.
Close
This work is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) License.
View License Detail
Close

Top Stories on CFR

Democratic Republic of Congo

In shallowly engaging with Kinshasa and Kigali, Washington does little to promote peace and risks insulating leaders from accountability.

United States

Immigrants have long played a critical role in the U.S. economy, filling labor gaps, driving innovation, and exercising consumer spending power. But political debate over their economic contributions has ramped up under the second Trump administration.

Haiti

The UN authorization of a new security mission in Haiti marks an escalation in efforts to curb surging gang violence. Aimed at alleviating a worsening humanitarian crisis, its militarized approach has nevertheless raised concerns about repeating mistakes from previous interventions.