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Palestinian President announces end-of-year elections

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has announced the scheduling of presidential and general elections for November 1, marking the first such elections in 20 years. The decree includes changes such as lowering the minimum candidate age for legislative elections from 28 to 23 and requiring at least one-third of candidates on electoral lists to be women. The Palestinian Legislative Council will also expand from 132 to 200 seats. This follows increased international recognition of Palestine by over 80% of UN member states.

A man casts his ballot in the municipal elections at a polling station in the West Bank city of Hebron in March 2022. EPA

A man casts his ballot in the municipal elections at a polling station in the West Bank city of Hebron in March 2022. EPA

Decree mandates the participation of women and lowers the age of candidacy

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has issued a decree scheduling presidential and general elections for November 1, the first in 20 years.

The decree lowers the minimum candidate age for legislative elections from 28 to 23 and requires at least one in three candidates on electoral lists to be a woman.

The Palestinian Legislative Council will expand from 132 to 200 seats, reflecting efforts to broaden democratic representation across Palestinian territories.

More than 80 per cent of UN member states now formally recognise Palestine, following decisions by Canada, the UK, France and Australia, increasing pressure on the Palestinian Authority to reform.

Mr Abbas had previously promised that "this year will be the year of elections" and that the Palestinian government "will become more democratic," said the Palestinian president at the UN General Assembly.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas issued a decree announcing presidential elections next year and general elections on November 1.

Elections are scheduled to take place in November for the Palestinian National Council – the parliament of the Palestine Liberation Organisation , representing all Palestinians inside the occupied territories and abroad. It has more than 700 members, intended to reflect the support of different political factions, although Mr Abbas's Fatah is the dominant party. The votes will run in conjunction with the Legislative Council (PLC) elections.

The decree has also made significant changes concerning the participation of women and the minimum age of candidates.

At least one in three people on an electoral list must be a woman – and candidates as young as 23, down from 28, can now participate in PLC elections. The PLC would be staging elections for the first time in 20 years. The law also increases the number of seats in the PLC from 132 to 200.

In February, the President ordered a new interim constitution for Palestine covering matters about national identity, civil rights and elections. Palestine has only a Basic Law to outline the relationship between the government and its people, which was last amended in 2005.

Presidential and legislative elections were scheduled for 2021, but Mr Abbas cancelled them, citing Israel's refusal to allow Palestinians in occupied East Jerusalem to take part as the reason. Experts said he was taking the easy way out after opinion polls showed that a candidate list led by imprisoned Palestinian activist Marwan Barghouti would win the legislative elections.

The Palestinian Authority has been under increasing pressure to reform, both from its citizens and internationally, as more countries formally recognise the Palestinian state. Canada, the UK, France and Australia were among those to do so last year, resulting in more than 80 per cent among UN member states.

Conversations about reform took centre stage at the UN General Assembly last year, when the Global Alliance for the Implementation of the Two-State Solution was announced. Part of the alliance's aims is to help the Palestinian Authority make reforms.

There, Mr Abbas made promises that this year will be the year of elections – and that the Palestinian government will become more democratic.

Last year, he appointed a potential successor, Hussein Al Sheikh and a Prime Minister, Mohammad Mustafa , in 2024. But corruption is a long-standing problem in the ruling PA.

The election could push rivals Hamas and Fatah to hold substantive conversations, which have largely remained symbolic in recent years.

Hamas has lost its political grip over Gaza , particularly with the formation of a US-backed interim technical committee , which does not involve the armed group that has ruled Gaza for the past decade.

Updated:

June 16, 2026, 9:18 AM

Read the full article at The National
Source document: Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas

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The NationalState / PublicCenter5 days ago
Palestinian President announces end-of-year elections

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas has announced the scheduling of presidential and general elections for November 1, marking the first such elections in 20 years. The decree includes changes such as lowering the minimum candidate age for legislative elections from 28 to 23 and requiring at least one-third of candidates on electoral lists to be women. The Palestinian Legislative Council will also expand from 132 to 200 seats. This follows increased international recognition of Palestine by over 80% of UN member states.

Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about election reforms without overtly favoring any political side. It reports on procedural changes and international recognition but does not include biased language, one-sided sourcing, or omissions that would indicate a clear ideological lean.

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