Akel formally submitted its 56 parliamentary candidacies on Wednesday, completing the official registration process ahead of the 24 May elections under the banner of the Akel-Left-Social Alliance. General Secretary Stefanos Stefanou, who headed the party's Nicosia ballot, described Akel as "a guarantee and support for society" and called on voters to back a strong left-wing presence in parliament.
"The parliamentary elections are taking place at a time when our country is facing many problems and challenges. There is a need for society to be protected and supported in practice," Stefanou said after filing his candidacy. He added that Akel "fights for society and the individual, who is facing difficulties and is struggling," and that "a strong force is needed in parliament and that force is Akel."


Wednesday's submission carries additional personal significance for Stefanou. The 61-year-old, who comes from the occupied village of Yerolakkos in the Nicosia district, will be standing for the last time under the party's internal term-limit rules. He was keen to frame the race as a forward-looking one. "We are running in this election with a list of candidates which combines the new generation with knowledge. With this ballot we are certain that we will succeed for society and for our Cyprus," he said.
A ballot built on renewal
Akel's lists were assembled through a broad internal process in which thousands of party members and supporters participated, with district-level conferences selecting candidates by secret ballot before the Central Committee ratified the full slate in November. The party has placed particular emphasis on the increased participation of women and younger candidates across the six districts.
In Nicosia, where 19 seats are at stake, the party fields 19 candidates. The list mixes sitting MPs with new faces, including social worker and visual artist Marina Andreou, who heads the party's bureau for people with disabilities; accountant Marios Argyrides, who chairs the Omonoia Nicosia Sports Club; TV journalist Konstantinos Konstantinou and Seviros Koulas, the 35-year-old General Secretary of the Edon youth organisation. Sitting MPs Stefanou and Christos Christofidis are seeking re-election, while longtime MPs Aristos Damianou and Giorgos Loukaidis are also on the list. Irene Charalambidou, who has sat as an Akel MP in Nicosia but has increasingly distanced herself from the party's positions in recent months, will not be standing again, having reached the party's term limit.
In Limassol, where 12 seats are up for election, the list includes sitting MP Laki Gavriil, actress Danae Christou, who has featured in leading roles across major Cypriot TV channels for 16 years, and 23-year-old Efraim Christou, a mathematics and economics graduate, folk poet and former president of the University of Cyprus student union, who represents the party's push for younger voices on the ballot.
The Famagusta list, covering 11 seats, is anchored by three sitting MPs: Giannakis Gavriil, Nikos Kettiros and Giorgos Koukkoumas. New names on the district ballot include academic Andreas Siamaros and lawyer Giorgos Hadjiyeorgiou.
In Larnaca, where six seats are available, the list is headed by sitting MP Andreas Pasiourtidis, a lawyer and legal adviser. Panikos Xiouroupas, head of the Larnaca Social Alliance and president of the Ray of Light foundation, also features, alongside 28-year-old Fotini Charalambous, the Larnaca district secretary of the Edon youth organisation, reflecting the party's deliberate inclusion of younger candidates.
In Paphos, which now returns five MPs following the redistribution of one seat from Nicosia, Akel runs five candidates led by sitting MP Valentinos Fakontis, alongside Mariella Theofanous, Andreas Nikolaou, Nikos Savvidis and Giorgos Skouros.
In Kyrenia, where three seats are allocated, the party fields Kostakis Konstantinou (Pagdatis), Avraim Louka and Anastasia Hassikou.
The stakes
Akel enters the race as the second-largest party in the outgoing House of Representatives, holding 15 of the 56 seats, and is in a statistical dead heat with Disy in current polling. The party has centred its campaign on social issues, including inflation, housing costs and energy prices, deliberately avoiding migration and the Cyprus problem as central battlegrounds. Both traditional parties face pressure from new entrants, with Alma and Direct Democracy expected to draw significant support on 24 May.
The election also marks a generational shift inside Akel. Beyond Stefanou's final race, a number of other sitting MPs are departing under term limits, giving the party's new names greater weight on the ballot than in previous cycles.

