Poll: Even the Loyal Are Losing Faith—The PPP Should Take Note

By Randy Gopaul

I was recently sent a copy of a national poll of 1,000 registered Guyanese voters, drawn from all 10 administrative regions using a demographically balanced sample. The poll reveals a political landscape in quiet but undeniable transition. The sample included 51% female and 49% male respondents, and was carefully weighted by ethnicity, 43% Indo-Guyanese, 31% Afro-Guyanese, 16% Mixed, and 8% Indigenous, closely mirroring the country’s actual demographic profile.

At first glance, the headline figures appear to support the People’s Progressive Party/Civic (PPP/C): President Irfaan Ali remains the most popular individual political figure, with 41% of respondents naming him as the most suitable person to lead the country, well ahead of Opposition Leader Aubrey Norton, who received just 26%. But a deeper dive into the veri reveals a more sobering truth for the ruling party, even its traditional base is growing weary.

The clearest indicator of this dissatisfaction comes from the poll’s question on national leadership: a decisive 62% of respondents said they believe Guyana needs a new national leader. That number is far too high to be composed of opposition voters alone. It necessarily includes a meaningful segment of the PPP’s own supporters, likely Indo-Guyanese respondents who may still select Ali as the best of the current options but increasingly feel disconnected from the government’s performance on core issues like cost of living, service delivery, and corruption.

This isn’t conjecture, it’s grounded in the poll’s issue-based findings. Across all demographic groups, the rising cost of living was identified as the most urgent national concern. In a country where oil revenues are fueling record-breaking GDP growth, that contradiction has become impossible to ignore. Voters are asking: how can a country so rich on paper still feel so poor to the average citizen?

Moreover, more than 60% of respondents said they believe oil wealth is not being fairly distributed, and fewer than 30% trust that government development programs are being implemented equitably. These concerns are not the exclusive domain of the opposition or disenfranchised regions. They are present nationwide, in PPP-dominated and APNU-dominated areas alike. This reflects a widening perception gap between the party’s rhetoric of national development and the everyday experiences of its supporters.

Nowhere is this more apparent than in the erosion of confidence among the youth and the politically undecided. The poll shows that nearly 80% of undecided voters would consider voting for an independent or third-party candidate if that person were credible and committed to national progress. This signals a desire not just for a change in personalities, but for a break from the ethnic and patronage politics that have defined Guyana’s post-independence history.

To be clear, these are not voters who are naturally opposition-aligned. Many are young, aspirational Indo- and Afro-Guyanese citizens who feel the current system no longer reflects their values or meets their needs. Their parents may have voted PPP out of loyalty or history, but this new generation is not bound by the same political gravity.

It is also worth noting that traditional loyalty may inhibit Indo-Guyanese respondents from expressing open criticism of the PPP in public settings, particularly in rural regions where the party’s influence is pervasive. This makes the 62% figure calling for new leadership even more striking. It suggests that dissatisfaction is strong enough to override those cultural and political barriers to dissent.

What does this mean for the PPP? In short, complacency would be a grave mistake. While President Ali still enjoys name recognition and relative favorability, the party’s broader brand is deteriorating. Public frustration with corruption, seçkine enrichment, poor governance, and rising inequality is not going away, and it’s no longer confined to opposition talking points.

If the PPP fails to respond with serious reforms, greater transparency, and a reorientation toward inclusion and fairness, it risks losing not only swing voters but its own base. Guyana’s electorate is evolving. The loyalty of yesterday cannot be taken for granted tomorrow.

In a democracy, no party, no matter how deeply rooted, can afford to ignore the will of its people. This poll is not just a snapshot; it’s a warning.