Malta's Prime Minister and Labour Party leader Robert Abela waves to supporters after the party won a record-breaking fourth consecutive general election, at the party headquarters in Hamrun, Malta, May 31, 2026.

| Photo Credit: Reuters

Prime Minister Robert Abela’s Labour Party claimed a record fourth ​successive general election victory in Malta on Sunday (May 31, 2026), riding voter ⁠confidence in a strong economy, although the size of its overall majority was reduced.“This is a victory of all the people based on the programme we presented for all ‌the people,” Mr. Abela told reporters, saying results showed his party had “won a strong mandate”.Conceding defeat, Opposition leader Alex Borg said his supporters ‌had cut the winning margin to around 18,000 votes from some ‌39,000 ⁠at the last election in 2022.“I know that for many, ⁠this is a disappointing day. But you should never regret believing in hope,” he said on social media.Full results are not due until later on Sunday (May 31, 2026), but journalists following the ​count said Labour looked on ‌course to win a comfortable parliamentary majority, although with less than the 55% share of ballots cast it took in 2022.The election on the southern Mediterranean island was held on Saturday (May 30, 2026) and drew a turnout of ‌87.4%, slightly up on 2022.Celebrations and car paradesAs soon as ​the opposition Nationalist Party conceded defeat, cheers erupted from Labour supporters at the Naxxar counting complex, with many holding up four ⁠fingers to mark the historic fourth straight victory.Supporters later celebrated at party headquarters and held traditional car parades in the European Union’s smallest state which has a ‌population of about 5,50,000.Mr. Abela called the snap election a year ahead of schedule, citing the challenges from an uncertain international situation.Malta’s economy is among the best performers in Europe, growing 4% last year, with no real unemployment. However, the conflict in West Asia has raised concern in Malta as elsewhere of a possible spike in inflation.As a country reliant on ‌imports and tourism, it is particularly vulnerable to the impact of higher oil prices and of ​costly aviation fuel.For much of the legislature, the Nationalist Party appeared divided. Mr. Borg became leader only months before the election, leaving ⁠him little time to consolidate authority or craft a fully coherent alternative vision.Six ⁠political parties were on the ballot, but Labour and the Nationalist Party have been the only ones to make it to parliament since ‌1966, with smaller parties garnering less than 5% of the vote - the threshold to win a seat.Mr. Abela, who succeeded Joseph Muscat as ​Labour leader in 2020, will be sworn in on Monday (June 1, 2026). Published - May 31, 2026 10:27 pm IST