Guinea’s General Directorate of Elections (DGE) on Thursday announced provisional results of the legislative elections held on 31 May.
The Génération pour la modernité et le développement (GMD) movement emerged as the dominant force across constituencies in the country and in the diaspora, while several opposition parties secured seats through proportional representation.
The DGE released the provisional results on 4 June 2026 before forwarding the electoral files to the registry of the Supreme Court, marking the start of the appeals process.
The Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) contested the election in a political alliance with the GMD, the leading force in the vote.
Out of 6,948,894 registered voters across 50 constituencies, 375 municipalities and 36 diplomatic missions, a total of 23,619 polling stations and 16,735 voting centres were deployed.
Overall, 3,741,573 voters participated, representing a turnout of 52.87%, with 3,448,994 valid votes cast.
For the national list, 49 seats were at stake. The UMP led with 636,900 votes and 9 seats, followed by Nouveau Départ and the Rassemblement guinéen du travail (RGT), each securing 7 seats.
The Forces des intègres pour la démocratie et la liberté (FIDEL) won 6 seats, the Union pour la démocratie et le développement (UDD) 5 seats, and the Front pour l’alliance nationale (FAN) 2 seats.
Several other parties each won a single seat, including the Alternance démocratique pour le changement (ADC), Avenir Guinée Nouvelle (AGN), Alliance pour le renouveau et le progrès (ARP), Bloc libéral (BL), Nouvelle Génération pour la République (NGR), PACT, PADES, RDN, RGA, RGP, RRD, UDG and UFC.
In single-member and multi-member constituencies, the GMD dominated the vote, winning the vast majority of seats across all 50 constituencies. The party prevailed notably in Dixinn, Kaloum, Lambanyi, Matoto, Ratoma, Dubréka, Kindia, Labé, Kankan and Nzérékoré, with a few exceptions including seats won by OSONS in Matam, FRONDEG in Koundara, and AGN in Bessia.
These results remain provisional and may still be subject to appeals before the Supreme Court prior to the final proclamation of the composition of the National Assembly.
AC/Sf/lb/as/APA


