A woman casts her vote during parliamentary elections at a polling station in Nicosia, Cyprus, on May 24, 2026. [Yiannis Kourtoglou/Reuters]

Cyprus’s far right appeared set for gains in Sunday’s election while an anti-corruption newcomer looked set to enter parliament, ​according to exit polls that showed weaker support ​for centrist parties backing President Nikos Christodoulides.

Opinion polls released ⁠by TV networks when voting ended at 1500 GMT ​showed far-right ELAM, an offshoot of Greece’s banned Golden Dawn ​party, with 10-12.5% of the vote, up from 6.8% in the last legislative elections in 2021.

If the polling trend holds, it could become ​the third-largest party in the 56-seat parliament behind right-wing DISY ​and Communist AKEL parties.

While executive power rests with the presidency in Cyprus, ‌the ⁠vote is widely seen as a gauge of political trends ahead of the 2028 presidential election and could flag the new alliances centrist Christodoulides may need to make if ​he wants to ​be re-elected.