2020 Guernsey general election

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Registered30,899[1]
Turnout79.70% (Increase 7.79 pp)[2][3]
2020 Guernsey general election

 2016 7 October 2020 (2020-10-07) 2025 

38 of the 40 seats in the States of Guernsey
Registered30,899[1]
Turnout79.70% (Increase 7.79 pp)[2][3]
  First party Second party Third party
 
Leader N/A Gavin St Pier Mark Helyar
Party Independents GPI Guernsey Party
Seats won 22 10 6
Seat change Decrease16 New New
Popular vote 399,155 153,119 63,844
Percentage 62.6% 24.0% 10.0%
Swing Decrease37.4pp New New

President of the Policy and Resources Committee before election

Gavin St Pier
Guernsey Partnership of Independents

President of the Policy and Resources Committee after election

Peter Ferbrache
Independent

The 2020 Guernsey general election took place on 7 October 2020 to elect 38 members of the States of Guernsey. Originally scheduled to be held in June 2020, it was delayed by a year to 2021, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, before being brought forward to its final date.[4][5][6]

This election was the first on the island to include political parties, as the first ones were organised and registered in 2020. The parties were partly created to help candidates cope with the 2020 change to an Island-wide voting system, it being considered difficult and expensive for one candidate to reach out to the 30,000 electors, with those holding similar views being able to produce a joint manifesto for a party. It was equally difficult for electors to read 119 individual candidates' manifestos. A candidate needed around 7,000 votes to get elected in 2020, compared to as few as 700 under the previous district system.

On 16 October 2020, Peter Ferbrache was elected president of the Policy and Resources Committee by a vote of 23–17, ahead of incumbent Gavin St Pier.[7]

  • 21 August: Last day the public was able to register to vote / Electoral roll closed[5]
  • 1 September: Candidate nomination period opened[6]
  • 4 September: Deadline (4 pm) for the delivery of candidate nomination papers[6]
  • 25 September: Deadline (midnight) to apply for a postal vote[5][8]
  • 3–6 October: Advance "super" polling stations are open.[5]
  • 6 October: Advance parish polling stations are open.[5]
  • 7 October: Polling day. Polling stations open at 8 am and close at 8 pm.[5][9] 6 am deadline for posting postal ballots.[10]
  • 8 October: Counting of votes[6]
  • 10–11 October: Recount

Electoral system

The electoral system was changed as a result of a 2018 referendum. The 38 members of the States were now elected from a single island-wide constituency by plurality-at-large voting, with voters being able to cast up to 38 votes.[11]

Prior to the elections, the age for candidates to stand was reduced from 20 to 18. The voting age is 16.[12] Campaign spending per candidate was also reduced from £9,000 to £6,000.[11]

For the first time, a Guernsey election was scrutinised by a team of international observers who were to produce two reports on the process.[13]

Candidates

A total of 119 candidates filed nominations.[14][15][16] There were 28 female candidates (24%), which was an increase over the previous two elections, with 10 of 12 current female deputies standing for re-election.[17] Twenty-nine candidates in total stood for re-election. The election was the first including political parties, as the first parties were organised in 2020.

Rick Lowe, a candidate for the Guernsey Party, withdrew from the election following a medical diagnosis.[18]

All but six candidates provided a manifesto for printing in a book which was then sent to every address that had a registered voter. The book and the mandates from the other six candidates were published on the election2020 website.[19] A small number of candidates paid the cost of sending their expanded manifestos to registered voters.

Party Leader Seats at
dissolution
Candidates
Independent N/A 38 78
Guernsey Party Mark Helyar 0 8
Guernsey Partnership of Independents Gavin St Pier 0 21
Alliance Party Guernsey Barry Weir 0 11

Hustings

An all-day public hustings event at Beau Sejour on Sunday 20 September with 116 candidates showed disappointing numbers of the public attending. Those that did were mainly elderly people, with islanders thinking that having over 100 candidates made it too difficult and time-consuming to research which candidates have acceptable views on matters of personal interest.[20]

Postal votes

Over 21,000 postal votes were requested, representing over 67% of registered voters.[21]

Results

References

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