1961 British Guiana general election

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← 1957 21 August 1961 1964 →

35 seats in the Legislative Assembly
18 seats needed for a majority
Registered 246,120
Turnout 89.44%
  First party Second party Third party
  130x130px 130x130px 130x130px
Leader Cheddi Jagan Forbes Burnham Peter D'Aguiar
Party People's Progressive Party People's National Congress (Guyana) The United Force
Seats won 20 11 4
Seat change Increase11 Increase7 New
Popular vote 93,085 89,501 35,771
Percentage 42.63% 40.99% 16.38%
Swing Decrease4.88pp Increase15.5pp New

Premier before election

Cheddi Jagan
PPP

Elected Premier

Cheddi Jagan
PPP

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General elections were held in British Guiana on 21 August 1961.[1] The result was a victory for the People's Progressive Party, which won 20 of the 35 seats.

Electoral system

The elections were the first to be held under the 1961 constitution, which had created a bicameral Legislature with an appointed Senate and an elected Legislative Assembly. The 36 members of the Legislative Assembly included 35 members elected in single-member constituencies and the Speaker, who was elected by the other members.[2] The 13 members of the Senate included eight nominated by the ruling party, three by the opposition and two by the Governor.

Campaign

A total of 98 candidates contested the elections. The PPP ran 29 candidates, the People's National Congress 35 and the United Force 34.[3]

Results

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Following the elections, the People's National Congress (PNC) were allocated two of the Senate seats reserved for the opposition, with one given to the United Force. The PNC claimed they should have been given all three seats, and its members attempted to block Governor Richard Luyt from entering the Legislature for its ceremonial opening on 6 October, requiring the police to remove them.[4]

Aftermath

Although the PPP had only received 1.6% more of the vote than the new People's National Congress, it had won almost double the number of seats. This resulted in mass demonstrations led by the PNC, a general strike and severe inter-racial violence. After a few weeks the British authorities intervened by sending in troops and the Governor declared a state of emergency.[1] Following these events, the country's electoral system was changed to use proportional representation. The first elections held under the new system took place in 1964.[1]

References