Jamaica’s political stage is officially set for what promises to be one of the most closely watched elections in recent years. Prime Minister Andrew Holness electrified a massive crowd at a Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) rally in Half-Way Tree, St. Andrew, on Sunday evening with the long-awaited announcement that the next general election will be held on September 3, 2025, and nomination day on August 18, 2025. In a strategic political twist, by-elections for four Kingston and St. Andrew Municipal Corporation divisions—Chancery Hall, Olympic Gardens, Seivwright Gardens, and Denham Town—will also take place on the same day.
The announcement capped weeks of speculation and instantly shifted the nation into full campaign mode. All 63 JLP candidates were confirmed just hours earlier at the party’s Central Executive meeting, signalling the ruling party’s readiness for battle. Ministers seized the moment to underscore the government’s track record, from infrastructure and economic expansion to crime reduction and social upliftment. “This is a different Jamaica and a different government. We are delivering like never before,” declared Minister of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade, Hon. Kamina Johnson Smith, while Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries, Hon. Floyd Green, pledged, “Forward ever, backward never!”
Holness, who has been at the helm since 2016, reminded supporters of the administration’s notable achievements over the past two terms—20 consecutive quarters of economic growth, record-low unemployment, a 150% minimum wage increase, and measurable drops in violent crime. State Minister Juliet Cuthbert Flynn pointed to “new police stations” and “stronger patrols” as proof that the country is becoming safer, while Minister Daryl Vaz highlighted transportation upgrades designed to make travel “more efficient and accessible for all.”
But the Prime Minister’s message to his team was as much about tone as it was about policy. Urging candidates to campaign “with humility, respect, and dignity,” Holness stressed that the focus should remain on improving the lives of Jamaicans, not on political mudslinging. The Electoral Office of Jamaica will extend services, including opening constituency offices on Saturdays to register voters and distribute national IDs, making it easier for citizens to participate in the democratic process.
The upcoming polls will also carry the watchful eyes of international and regional observer missions from CARICOM, the Organisation of American States (OAS), the Commonwealth Secretariat, and Jamaica’s own Citizens Action for Free and Fair Elections (CAFFE). As Holness extended a warm invitation to Jamaicans abroad to “come back home to vote,” the race between the ruling JLP and the opposition People’s National Party officially begins—setting the stage for a high-stakes political showdown that could redefine the nation’s future.