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2025–26 Myanmar general election

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2025–26 Myanmar general election

← 2020
  • 28 December 2025 (first phase)
  • 11 January 2026 (second phase)
  • 25 January 2026 (third phase)

265 of the 440 seats in the Pyithu Hluttaw
188 seats needed for a majority
157 of the 224 seats in the Amyotha Hluttaw
107 seats needed for a majority
Turnout52% (first phase)
55% (second phase)
56% (third phase)
  First party
 
Leader Khin Yi
Party USDP
Leader since 5 October 2022
Leader's seat Zeyathiri[a]
Last election 26 R / 7 N
Seats won 232 R / 108 N
Seat change Increase 206 R / Increase 101 N

President before election

Presidency vacant[b]
Min Aung Hlaing (Military) serving Pro Tem On Duty

Elected President

TBD

General elections were held in Myanmar for elected seats in the Amyotha Hluttaw and the Pyithu Hluttaw of the Assembly of the Union in three phases, beginning on 28 December 2025 and concluding on 25 January 2026. The election is being held by Myanmar's military junta that came to power after the 2021 military coup d'état. Though military ruler Min Aung Hlaing initially promised to hold the election by August 2023, the military repeatedly delayed the election in the face of increasing violence.[2][3][4][5]

Following the coup, the military ruled the country under a state of emergency, initially declared by Acting President Myint Swe for one year and extended seven times by six-month periods, which expired on 31 July 2025.[6] The constitution requires elections be held within six months of the end of the state of emergency.[7] Min Aung Hlaing provided different time frames for the election three times before the December date was confirmed. The election is expected to be a sham process intended to legitimize continued military rule. A census used for the election was conducted in October 2024.[8]

In January 2023, the military enacted a new electoral law tightening the requirements for party registration, banning the participation of people convicted of a crime including Aung San Suu Kyi and Win Myint, and switching from a first-past-the-post to a mixed-member proportional system for the Amyotha Hluttaw election.[9] Analysts see the changes as intended to improve the electoral performance of the military proxy Union Solidarity and Development Party, which performed poorly in the free and fair 2020 election. Most opposition to the USDP will be seriously weakened under the new rules. Added to the previously existing 25% reserved seats to the military, the switch to proportional representation would allow it to govern with a lower share of the popular vote.[10][11][12] The National League for Democracy, which was removed from power in the coup, announced in February 2023 that it would not register under the new law, and was declared dissolved by the Union Election Commission the following month.[13][14] The second-largest opposition party, the Shan Nationalities League for Democracy, similarly announced it would not participate in the election.[15][16] Partial official results for began to be released in January by the UEC, with an overwhelming majority of seats won by the USDP.

Background

[edit]

For most of its independent history, Myanmar, formerly known as Burma, has been ruled by Tatmadaw. Initially, under Ne Win and his Burma Socialist Programme Party, followed by a military junta. Myanmar entered a semi-democratic state in the early 2010s, which culminated in the 2015 elections, in which democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi was elected State Counsellor and her party, the National League for Democracy, won a resounding victory.[17]

2020 election performance

[edit]

Min Aung Hlaing openly questioned the validity of the 2020 election on the eve of the November election.[18] After casting his ballot, he vowed to accept the election results.[19] The Tatmadaw (military)-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party lost more seats in both chambers of the national legislature against the NLD, which won another landslide victory in the 2020 general elections. Election results were regarded as credible by both domestic and foreign observers, who found no significant anomalies.[20][21]

Nonetheless, the military claimed the vote was fraudulent, citing 8.6 million irregularities in voter lists.[22] Unable to support the military's claims, the Union Election Commission dismissed the military's fraud accusations on 28 January 2021.[22]

2021 military coup

[edit]

The military initiated a coup on 1 February 2021. Suu Kyi, President Win Myint, and other important people were taken into custody. After assuming power, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing established a junta known as the State Administration Council (SAC). A one-year state of emergency was proclaimed, and Myint Swe was named interim president. With the ultimate objective of holding "a free and fair multiparty democracy election," the SAC unveiled a five-point roadmap in late February.[23]

Aung San Suu Kyi received a number of frivolous charges, including breaching emergency COVID-19 laws, illegally importing and using walkie-talkies, violating the National Disaster Law,[24] violating communications laws, inciting public unrest, and violating the official secrets act.[25][26] On 6 December 2021, she was sentenced to four years in prison, but Min Aung Hlaing commuted her sentence to two years. Her conviction complicates her ability to hold public office.[27]

On 1 August 2021, Min Aung Hlaing formed a caretaker government, and declared himself Prime Minister, whilst remaining the Chairman of the SAC.[28]

The Tatmadaw originally promised to hold the elections when the state of emergency expired on 1 February 2022, but pushed back the elections first to 2023, and then delayed them indefinitely.[citation needed]

Dissolution of the NLD

[edit]

On 21 May 2021, the junta-appointed Union Election Commission announced plans to permanently dissolve the National League for Democracy.[29] NLD offices were occupied and raided by police authorities, starting on 2 February.[30] Documents, computers and laptops were forcibly seized, and the NLD called these raids unlawful.[30] On 9 February, police raided the NLD headquarters in Yangon.[31] Aung San Suu Kyi has commented on the possibility of her party's forced dissolution saying, "Our party grew out of the people so it will exist as long as people support it."[32]

In January 2022, the junta reversed its plan to dissolve the NLD, with spokesman Zaw Min Tun saying that the NLD will decide whether to stand in the 2023 election.[33] In February 2023, the NLD announced it would not re-register as a political party under a strict new electoral law enacted by the junta the previous month.[13] The electoral commission automatically disbanded NLD, along with 39 other parties, on 28 March 2023.[34]

Electoral system

[edit]
A ballot paper in 2020

Prior to now, Myanmar only used the first-past-the-post system, which allows a candidate to win an election with a plurality of votes in a constituency. During a press conference in Naypyidaw, on 16 June 2022, Khin Maung Oo, a member of the Union Election Commission, announced that the nation would switch to a proportional representation system for the upcoming election.[35]

Existing system

[edit]

In the existing system, the national legislature, the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw consists of a total of 498 seats elected in single-member constituencies, and 166 seats reserved for military appointees.

The Pyithu Hluttaw, or House of Representatives, is elected every five years. It is the lower house. It has 440 MPs, 330 of which are elected in single-member constituencies, one for each township. A further 110 members (one quarter) are appointed by the Tatmadaw.

The Amyotha Hluttaw, or House of Nationalities, is elected every five years. It is the upper house. It has 224 MPs, 168 of which are elected in single-member constituencies, 12 in each state or region. A further 56 members (one quarter) are appointed by the Tatmadaw.

In Myanmar, it is not uncommon for elections to be cancelled partially or completely in some constituencies due to insurrection.

Following the inauguration of the new lawmakers, the President and the two Vice-Presidents of Myanmar are chosen by the Presidential Electoral College, which is composed of MPs from three committees: one consisting of elected members from each house of the Assembly of the Union and one consisting of members appointed by the military. After one candidate has been recommended by each committee, the Assembly votes. Depending on their total number of votes, the candidates are elected to the following positions: President, First Vice-President, and Second Vice-President.[36]

Under Article 59(f) of the 2008 Constitution, individuals are disqualified from the presidency if they, their parents, spouse, or children "owe allegiance to a foreign power." As Aung San Suu Kyi’s late husband and two children are British citizens, this provision rendered her ineligible for the office.

Critics and members of the National League for Democracy (NLD) have characterized this clause as a specific measure designed by the former military junta to prevent her from holding the presidency. Following the NLD's victory in the 2015 Myanmar general election, the party created the post of State Counsellor of Myanmar for Aung San Suu Kyi, allowing her to function as the de facto head of government. During this period, President Win Myint (and his predecessor Htin Kyaw) maintained a close working relationship with Aung San Suu Kyi; while constitutional authority rested with the President, it was widely acknowledged by observers and the NLD itself that Aung San Suu Kyi exercised primary leadership over the executive branch.

Revisions to the existing system

[edit]

In December 2021, the junta-appointed Union Electoral Commission convened with 60 political parties on the electoral system. The cohort determined that it would be advisable to switch to a system of party-list proportional representation (PR). The largest remainder method will be used, and the lists will be closed, although there may be a switch to open lists "when the level of education of the electorate and the political tide rises". The townships will be merged into districts for constituencies.[37][38]

Observers and anti-junta factions have criticised the change in electoral system for politically motivated, aimed at increasing the junta's electoral performance.[39][40][41] In 2014, the Amyotha Hluttaw had previously approved a switch to the PR system, but it was not pursued further by the Pyithu Hluttaw for being "unconstitutional."[41] The PR system also implies larger multi-member constituencies, which could enable the military to avoid having to cancel elections in insecure regions.[42]

On 26 January 2023, the military junta issued the Political Parties Registration Law to force political parties to re-register within 60 days, or face automatic dissolution.[42] The law also introduced new financial (possessing at least US$35,000 (equivalent to $36,120 in 2024) in funds), party membership (having 100,000 members, an increase from 1,000), and logistical requirements (contesting half of all constituencies and operating party offices in half of all townships), effectively aimed at limiting electoral participation to few national parties like the USDP.[42] The NLD, SNLD, and 38 other parties were disbanded by the law on 28 March.[43]

System method Pyithu Hluttaw Amyotha Hluttaw The State and Region Hluttaws The ethnic constituencies for State and Region Hluttaws
FPTP 330 84 322 29
PR N/a 84 42 N/a
Total 330 (75%) 168 (75%) 364 (74,6%) 29
Military appointed 110 (25%) 56 (25%) ~124 (25,4%) N/a
Total 440 224 ~488

Conduct

[edit]

The election is expected by independent analysts and foreign bodies, including those at the United Nations, Human Rights Watch, and the US State Department, to be neither free nor fair, and rather a sham process intended to legitimise further military rule.[42][44][45][46]

The Union Election Commission (UEC) organises and oversees in Myanmar. During the 2021 coup, Hla Thein, the civilian-appointed UEC chair was arrested by military authorities, and subsequently sentenced to prison.[47] The military junta replaced him with Thein Soe, a former military general who had previously overseen the 2010 Myanmar general election.[48] Some have expressed concerns about the Tatmadaw's willingness to hold free and fair elections.

Although the past three elections in Myanmar have been semi-free,[49] there have been concerns over such things as irregularities in voter lists, misinformation, fake news, and the vilification of Burmese Muslims. In addition, under the military-designed 2008 Constitution, the military is effectively guaranteed one vice presidency, and a quarter of the seats in both chambers of the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw, veto power over voter-elected legislators, as well as a third of the seats in all state and regional Hluttaws, and key ministries.[50]

Some members of the NLD dominated Pyidaungsu Hluttaw elected in 2020 have formed an anti-cabinet known as the National Unity Government of Myanmar. The NUG claims to be the legitimate government of Myanmar, and the junta and the NUG consider each other terrorist groups.[51] The coup has since escalated into a Myanmar civil war (2021–present) between the Armed Forces, and the NUG's People's Defence Force and ethnic armed organisations (EAOs), resulting in thousands of military and civilian casualties, and the displacement of an additional 1.7 million people as of November 2022.[52][53][54][55] This, along with ongoing ethnic conflicts, means the vote will likely be cancelled in some constituencies, and may not be secure in others.

The planned election may trigger an escalation in violence, due to widespread public opposition.[42] Since January 2023, resistance forces have attacked and killed individuals associated with the planned election, including local administrators gathering data for voter lists.[42] On 29 January, the NUG declared that individuals cooperating with the election would be deemed "accomplices of high treason."[42] Major EAOs, including the Chin National Front, Karenni National Progressive Party, Karen National Union, Kachin Independence Organisation, and the Ta-ang National Liberation Army, have also criticised the planned election.[42]

According to state media, India will send teams to monitor the election.[56]

More than 4,800 candidates are competing for seats in the national and regional legislatures.[57] At least six of the likely USDP candidates are currently-serving Tatmadaw lieutenant-generals.[58]

On 26 November 2025, 8,865 people were pardoned or had their sentence commuted by the SSPC junta; 3,085 of which were convicted under the Section 505A "fake news" penal code. According to junta spokesperson, Zaw Min Tun, these commutations would allow eligible voters to participate "freely and fairly."[59]

The conduct in Karenni State of the election has reportedly been restless and seen forced voting.[60]

Timing

[edit]

The Constitution requires that elections be held within six months of the end of a declared state of emergency, which the military has extended repeatedly since the 2021 coup.[42]

In 2021, Min Aung Hlaing initially promised an election by August 2023, saying one would be held "without fail".[2] This was the latest date that would have been allowed under the constitutional rule stating two six month extensions of the state of emergency are "normally" allowed.[42] However, the election was not held and the state of emergency was repeatedly extended past the two-extension limit.[5][42] In 2024, Min Aung Hlaing announced that a census would be held between 1 and 15 October and promised to hold the election in 2025.[61][62] The census began as scheduled on 1 October.[8] During a visit in Belarus on 8 March 2025, Min Aung Hlaing announced that the election will be conducted around December 2025 or January 2026.[63] On 26 March, state media reported that at a meeting of the State Administration Council, Min Aung Hlaing set a plan for the election to be held either in the last two weeks of December or in the first two weeks of January. On 27 March, in a speech for Armed Forces Day, Min Aung Hlaing appeared to narrow the date to December.[64][65] Despite the highly destabilising 2025 Myanmar earthquake that occurred the next day, Min Aung Hlaing said on 3 April that the timeline for the election would not change.[66]

In addition to ongoing security concerns, the election date may have also been delayed to forestall infighting within the Burmese military leadership around succession planning. It remains unclear if Min Aung Hlaing will remain commander-in-chief or seek the presidency, and whether he can appoint a loyal candidate to either role, since the Constitution does not permit him to assume both.[42]

On 18 August 2025, the UEC announced that the election would be held in stages beginning on 28 December 2025.[67]

On 11 September 2025, an official from the UEC announced that the results will be announced by the end of January 2026.[68]

Phase 1

[edit]

On 20 August, the UEC announced designated phase one constitutuencies consisting of 102 townships to be held on 28 December. 121 constituencies, including 56 townships will be excluded.[69][70][71]

States/Region Townships[71]
Ayeyarwady
Bago
Chin
Kachin
Kayah
Kayin
Magway
Mandalay
Mon
Rakhine
Sagaing
Shan
Tanintharyi
Yangon
Naypyidaw (Capital)
Total 102

Phase 2

[edit]

On 28 October, the UEC announced designated phase two constitutuencies consisting of 100 townships to be held on 11 January 2026.[72][73]

States/Region Townships[73][74]
Ayeyarwady
Bago
Kachin
Kayin
Kayah
Magway
Mandalay
Mon
Sagaing
Shan
Tanintharyi
Yangon
Total 100

Phase 3

[edit]

On 25 December, the 63 constituencies of phase 3, to be held on 25 January 2026, were announced.[75][74]

States/Region Townships[74]
Ayeyarwady 9
Bago 8
Kachin
Kayin
Mandalay 8
Sagaing
Shan 9
Tanintharyi 3
Yangon 17
Total 63

Political parties

[edit]

The table below lists parties that managed to elect representatives to the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw in 2020 that have registered to contest the next election.[76][13] Most parties in Myanmar represent one of the country's many ethnic minorities.

Name Ideology Leader 2020 result (of elected seats)
Pyithu Amyotha
USDP Union Solidarity and Development Party
ပြည်ထောင်စုကြံ့ခိုင်ရေးနှင့် ဖွံ့ဖြိုးရေးပါတီ
Pro-Tatmadaw
Burmese nationalism[77]
Social conservatism[78]
Khin Yi
26 / 330
7 / 168
PNO Pa-O National Organisation
ပအိုဝ်း အမျိုးသား အဖွဲ့ချုပ်
Pa'O interests Aung Kham Hti
3 / 330
1 / 168
MUP Mon Unity Party
မွန်ညီညွတ်ရေးပါတီ
Mon interests Han Shwe
2 / 330
3 / 168
KSPP Kachin State People's Party
ကချင်ပြည်နယ်ပြည်သူ့ပါတီ
Kachin regionalism n/a
1 / 330
0 / 168
AFP Arakan Front Party
ရခိုင့်ဦးဆောင်ပါတီ
Arakanese self-determination Aye Maung
1 / 330
0 / 168
RNP Rakhine Nationalities Party
ရခိုင်တိုင်းရင်းသားများပါတီ[79]
Arakanese self-determination Ba Shein
1 / 330
0 / 168
WNP Wa National Party
‘ဝ’အမျိုးသားပါတီ
Wa interests Nyi Palot
1 / 330
0 / 168
ZCD Zomi Congress for Democracy
ဇိုမီး ဒီမိုကရေစီအဖွဲ့ချုပ်
Zomi interests
Liberal democracy
Chin Sian Thang
1 / 330
0 / 168
NDP New Democracy Party
ဒီမိုကရေစီပါတီသစ်
Liberal democracy
Kachin regionalism
San Khaung
0 / 330
1 / 168
2020 total results 39 / 330
(11.9% of seats)
16 / 168
(9.5% of seats)

The table below lists political parties that were dissolved by the junta, including the NLD and SNLD, that won 88% of the national parliamentary seats in the 2020 election.[80]

Name Ideology Leader 2020 result (of elected seats)
Pyithu Amyotha
NLD National League for Democracy
အမျိုးသား ဒီမိုကရေစီ အဖွဲ့ချုပ်
Liberalism Aung San Suu Kyi
258 / 330
138 / 168
SNLD Shan Nationalities League for Democracy
ရှမ်းတိုင်းရင်းသားများ ဒီမိုကရေစီ အဖွဲ့ချုပ်
Shan interests Hkun Htun Oo
13 / 330
2 / 168
ANP Arakan National Party
ရခိုင်အမျိုးသားပါတီ
Rakhine nationalism Thar Tun Hla
4 / 330
4 / 168
TNP Ta'ang National Party
တအာင်းအမျိုးသားပါတီ
Ta'ang interests Aik Mone
3 / 330
2 / 168
KySDP Kayah State Democratic Party
ကယားပြည်နယ်ဒီမိုကရေစီပါတီ
Karenni interests Po Re
2 / 330
3 / 168
2020 total results 276 / 330
(83.6% of seats)
145 / 168
(86.3% of seats)

Fifty-seven parties registered for participation in the election. Eight of those parties will compete nationally while the rest will compete regionally. [81] Nationally competing parties include the People's Pioneer Party, the National Unity Party, the Myanmar Farmers Development Party, the People's Party, the Shan and Ethnic Democratic Party, the Women’s Party (Mon), and the Democratic Party of National Politics.[82]

Results (Pyithu Hluttaw)

[edit]

First phase

[edit]

Pyithu Hluttaw results for the first phase were released in portions from January 2 to January 4, 2026. Agence-France Presse called the first phase for the USDP, with 89 out of 102 (87%) of the first-phase seats won.[83] Results for 14 additional constituencies were also announced in the first set of results, for a total of 116 constituencies declared, of which the USDP won 102.[84] Many USDP candidates, especially in Naypyidaw Union Territory, were powerful retired military officers, including Tin Aung San, Khin Maung Myint, USDP deputy leader Myat Hein, Maung Maung Ohn, USDP leader Khin Yi, and Hla Swe, as well as Mya Tun Oo in Mandalay Region.[85]

Results (102 constituencies assigned to phase I)
PartySeats
Union Solidarity and Development Party89
Naga National Party4
Pa-O National Organization3
National Unity Party2
Shan Nationalities Democratic Party1
Shan-Ni Solidarity Party1
Mon Unity Party1
Rakhine Nationalities Party1
Total102
Elected representatives (announced in first round of results)[86][87][88][89]
Division Constituency Winner Party Phase[71][73][74] Other candidates (party)[90][91][92]
Naypyidaw Zeyathiri Khin Yi Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Khin Myo Nwe (NUP)
  • Kyaw Ye Naing (MFDP)
  • Paing Paing (PP)
  • Zaw Myo Khant (PPP)
  • Aye Thanda (SNDP)
Pobbathiri Hlaw Swe Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Zin Waing (PP)
  • Sai Maung Maung Oo (NUP)
  • Than Myat Soe (PPP)
  • Khin Sandi Myint (SNDP)
  • Hsu Myat Sanda (MFDP)
  • Maung Maung Hlaing (Ind.)
Zabuthiri Maung Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Aung Myo (Ind.)
  • Yi Yi Win (PPP)
  • Ko Nge (NUP)
  • Zaw Hmaing (PP)
  • Thaung Htaik (Ind.)
  • Ei Thanda Cho (MFDP)
  • Zaw Lwin Oo (SNLD)
Pyinmana Khin Maung Htay Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Thi Thi Naing (NUP)
  • Win Htay Oo (PP)
  • Aung Thiha Zaw (PPP)
  • Thein Soe (MFDP)
  • Lin Lin Maung (SNLD)
  • Myint Zaw (SEPP)
Dakkhinathiri Myat Hein Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Hein Lapyae Tun (NUP)
  • Ei Ei Soe (Ind.)
  • Thein Tun Aung (PP)
  • Win Myat Mon (PPP)
  • U Thura (MFDP)
  • Zaw Aung (SNLD)
Lewe Win Htay Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Myint Oo (NUP)
  • Phyo Phyo Thwe (PP)
  • Myo Aung (MFDP)
  • Sein Win (Ind.)
  • Zin Min Oo (PPP)
  • Tun Myint Aung (SNLD)
Tatkon Maung Maung Ohn Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Tin Tin (NUP)
  • Nay Myo Aung (MFDP)
  • Kyaw Wai Phyo (PPP)
  • Min Khin Yu Maung (PP)
  • Khin Kyawt Kyawt Tun (SNLD)
Ottarathiri Tin Aung San Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Thiha Zaw (NUP)
  • Hnin Thida Tun (PPP)
  • Kyi Kyi Htay (PP)
  • Myo Thida Thein (MFDP)
  • Nan Win Aung (SNLD)
Kachin Tanai Myint Ko Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Ngwa Hsa Hse (LNDP)
  • Pwint Oo (NDP (Kachin))
  • Win Naing (NUP)
  • Tin Win Tun (MFDP)
  • Myint Win (PPP)
Khaunglanphu Hsin Hson Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Thu Hu Naing (NUP)
  • Lel Mel Ah Shwe Ram (LNDP)
  • Aung Ye Lin (PPP)
PutaO Rah Ni Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Ahdu Dwe (NUP)
  • Dein Khan Dawi (KSPP)
  • Sao Nwe No Khan (SNLD)
  • Moh Moh Lwin (PPP)
  • Michel Phonram (MFDP)
  • San Tun (NDP (Kachin))
Moenyin Soe Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Htay Aung (TLNDP)
  • Kyaw Kyaw Win (MFDP)
  • Hla Din (NUP)
  • Phyu Mar Win (PPP)
Myitkyina Nyunt Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Marit Kwam Ja (KSPP)
  • Kyaw Yazar Tun (PPP)
  • Tin Aung Soe (NUP)
  • Sein Win (TLNDP)
  • Lan Bawm (NDP (Kachin))
  • L Zaw Dang (MFDP)
  • Myat Thanda Htay (PP)
  • Daw Margaret (SNLD)
Nagmon Rel Dam Tam Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
Mansi Kwan San Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 3
Shwegu Kyaw Win Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 3
Kayah Bawlakhe Aye Maung Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Aung Thu Thein (KaySPP)
  • Maung Hsan (NUP)
  • Daw Marlar (PPP)
Loikaw Maung Shwe Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Kyaw Kyaw Moe (KaySPP)
  • Saw Nel Sae (NUP)
  • Zaw Lwin Htay (PPP)
Kayin Hpa-an Thet Naing Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Saw Myo Min Han (KNDP)
  • Nang Khin Thet Mar Win (PSDP)
  • Min Kyaw Soe (MDP)
  • Nang Aye Aye Than (PNUP)
  • Amy Than (PPP)
Myawady Khin Maung Chin Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Pyi Nel (PSDP)
  • San Win Kyi (PPP)
  • Khun Thein Oo (PNUP)
Thantaunggyi Saw Hae Thar Gyi Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Saw Petoerino (PSDP)
  • Than Sit (PPP)
Chin Tiddim Salai Aung Pyae Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Derrick Kam Za Al (ZNP)
  • Zin Shin Pyoung (NCLC)
Haka Van Ni Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • U Robin (NCLC)
  • Kan Lin (KNP)
Mon Kyaikto Soe Hla Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Ma Ma Gyi (NUP)
  • Thu Bo Htwe (NIDP)
  • Thet Paing (PPP)
Kyaikmaraw Myo Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Myint Myint Wai (MUP)
  • Cho Cho Aye Aung (NIDP)
  • Min Ko Ko Tun (PP)
  • Aung Myint Oo (PPP)
  • Thanda Hein Zaw (MFDP)
Chaungzon Soe Thu Mon Unity Party 1
  • Myo Win (USDP)
  • Aung Ko Ko (NIDP)
  • Thae Thae Ei Lwin Po Kyaw (PPP)
Mawlamyine Ohnma Htay Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Phone Win (MUP)
  • Khin Thinza Maw (NIDP)
  • Hla Oo (NUP)
  • Lin Yaung Chi (PP)
  • Ye Hein Lwin (PPP)
  • Phone Hsu Min (MFDP)
  • Thida Tun (SNLD)
Thaton Kyaw Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Su Su Pyone (NIDP)
  • Maung Aye (NUP)
  • Than Wai (PNDP)
  • Ei Ei Chaw (PP)
  • Thida Khin Kyaw (PPP)
Sagaing Minkin Wai Lin Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 2
Wuntho Soe Paing Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 2
Mawlaik Myint Soe Sint Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 2
Kani Nyan Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 3
Salingyi Saw Maung Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 3
YeU Soe Tint Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 2
Leshi Vee Hsan Naga National Party 1 Sein Tun (USDP)
Lahe Mazoh Laung Wi Naga National Party 1 Ruh San Kyu (USDP)
Nanyun Yaw Aye Hla Naga National Party 1 Kyaw Hsan Oo (USDP)
Kalay Khin Maung Than Union Solidarity and Development Party 1 Aung Moe (NUP)
Katha Tin Htay Union Solidarity and Development Party 1 May Thu Swe (NUP)
Kanbalu Myat Kyaw Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Min Zaw (PP)
  • Ei Ei Htwe (NUP)
Hkamti Gon Wam Naga National Party 1
  • Min Naung Kyaing (USDP)
  • Aung Htay (SSP)
  • Myo Myint (NUP)
Sagaing Thet Pon Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Tun Tun Wai (NUP)
  • Kyaw Ko Ko Aung (SNDP)
  • U Kyaw (MFDP)
  • Tun Maw (PPP)
  • Nay Lin Phyo (PP)
Tamu Aung Ko Latt Union Solidarity and Development Party 1 Tun Shwe (NUP)
Monywa Nyunt Nyunt Htay Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Soe San Kyaw Win (NUP)
  • Soe Ko Ko (MFDP)
  • Win Bo (PPP)
  • Nanda Myat Aung (SNLD)
Shwebo Than Win Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party 1 Min Min Htet (PP)
Homalin Naing Naing Kyaw Shan-Ni Solidarity Party 1
  • Ye Wint Khaing (USDP)
  • Hsan Tun Oo (PPP)
Shan Metmung Yan Kyaw Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 3
Pekhon Yi Yi Hlaing Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 3
Mongnai (Moenai) Sai Tun Lin Shan Nationalities Democratic Party Phase 3
Pindaya Win Zaw Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
Hopong Khun Kaung Chit Tun Pa-O National Organization 1
  • Nang Tin Myo Aye (USDP)
  • Zin Lei Lei (PPP)
Nawnghkio Kyaw Myint Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Win Oo (DNDP)
  • Saw Yu (NUP)
  • Soe Than (PP)
  • Sai Phu Aung (SNDP)
  • Zarni Aye (PPP)
Kengtung Than Tun Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Sai Ywet (SNLD)
  • Nang Hla Hla Ohnma Kyaw (NUP)
  • Thein Kyaw Khaing (PP)
  • Thanda Lwin (PPP)
Tachilek Kyaw Nyein Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Toe Toe Myint Aung (SNLD)
  • Yin May Thu (NUP)
Taunggyi Nang Sein Pa-O National Organization 1
  • Aung Aung (USDP)
  • Kyaw Zeyar Win (MFDP)
  • Thaung Tin Yi (SNLD)
  • Win Naing (NUP)
  • Nilar Aung (PPP)
  • Win Kyi (Ind.)
  • Nang Lan Nwon (PP)
  • Hsan Phone (KDUP)
Namhsan Htay Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Sai Naw Maing (SNLD)
  • Nang Kham Lay (PNO)
  • Nang Chit Thae Nu (NUP)
  • Sai Thura Ko Ko (PPP)
Muse Aung Zaw Moe Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Sai Boe Aung (SNLD)
Monghsat Moe Zaw Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Kyaw Hsan Oo (SNLD)
  • Sai Ngin Seng (NUP)
Lashio Myo Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Soe Min (SNLD)
  • Kathy Aung (NUP)
  • Shaung Woo (KDUP
  • Myint Soe (PPP)
Langhko Sai Tun San Shan Nationalities Democratic Party 1 Sai Myint Swe (USDP)
Loilem Khun Aung San Pa-O National Organization 1
  • Khin Maung Thi (USDP)
  • Sai Soe Tint (SNLD)
  • Nang Khe (NUP)
  • Zaw Moe Latt (Ind.)
Taninthayi Kawthaung Kyaw Thu Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Than Kyway (NUP)
  • Hsan Tun Oo (MFDP)
  • Hla Myo Kyaw (PPP)
Dawei Kyaw Kyaw Htay Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Yin Thun Lin (NUP)
  • Soe Win (PP)
  • Ei Zin Mar Phyo (MFDP)
  • Hla Oo (PPP)
Bokpyin Aung Lin Hlaing Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Myo Kyaw (PP)
  • Aung Thu Moe (MFDP)
Myeik Lin Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • San San Thwe (PP)
  • Myat Zaw Win (NUP)
  • Zaw Min Hlaing (MFDP)
  • Lwin Lwin Hset (PPP)
Yebyu Min Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 2
Launglon Tint Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 3
Bago Nyaunglebin Thant Zaw Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Zaw Min Htwe (PP)
  • Myint Lwin (NUP)
  • Kaung Tha Shein (PPP)
  • Soe Thida (SNLD)
Taungoo Kyaw Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Khin Maung Myint (MFDP)
  • Wai Phyo Theint (NUP)
  • Sein Tun (PP)
  • Aung Myo Win (PPP)
  • Soe Lwin (FDP)
  • Soe Oo (SNLD)
  • Ni Ni Win (UPUP)
Nattalin Tint Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Kaung Myat Thu (UMFNP)
  • Nyan Shwe (NUP)
  • Saw Ohnma Aung (FDP)
  • Aung Min (PPP)
  • Thant Zin (SNLD)
Bago Min Khant Kyaw Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Kyaw Thein (NUP)
  • Khun Myo Thant (PP)
  • Maung Maung Htay (PPP)
  • Thin Lei Lei Oo (MFDP)
  • Myint Myint Aye (SNLD)
  • Myat Nu Khaing (Ind.)
Pyay Myo Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Tin Maung Swe (NUP)
  • Khin Marlar Kyaw (PP)
  • Htin Aung Shine (SNLD)
  • Than Naing Htay (PPP)
  • Win Hlaing (Ind.)
  • Min Aung Zaw (UPUP)
  • Khaing Zin Wint (MFDP)
  • Min Min Aung (FDP)
Shwedaung Tin Shwe Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Zaw Myo Min (PPP)
  • Phyo Min Ko (NUP)
  • Nilar Soe (PP)
  • Aung Moe Han (SNLD)
  • Phyo Wai (MFDP)
  • Aung Naing Soe (FDP)
Letpadan Kyaw Thura Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Myint Myint San (NUP)
  • Lin Lin Tun (PPP)
  • Myo Thant Khaing (MFDP)
  • Thein Tan (PP)
  • Pan Ei San (SNLD)
  • Aung Win (FDP)
Thayawady Win Zaw Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Than Aung (NUP)
  • Phyo Thaw Zin (PPP)
  • Tin Htut Aung (FDP)
  • Win Naing (PP)
  • Min Min Soe (SNLD)
  • Moe Myint Lwin (MFDP)
  • Myo Lwin Oo (UPUP)
Magway Chauk Ye Tint Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Kyaw Lin (PPP)
  • Zin Zar Waing (PP)
  • Yin Yin Thein (NUP)
  • Thanda Aung (SNLD)
Yenangyoung Win Maw Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Tin Ngwe (NUP)
  • Kyaw Min Min (SNLD)
  • Saw Hla Yin Min (PPP)
Pakokku Hla Win Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Myo Tint Ko (NUP)
  • Thin Thin Khaing (SNLD)
Taungdwingyi Kyaw Swe National Unity Party 1
  • Paik Htwe (USDP)
  • Zaw Myo Aung (MFDP)
  • Shein Htet Aung (PPP)
Magway Soe Tint Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Khin San Hla (PP)
  • Aung San (NUP)
  • Maung Maung Aye (PPP)
  • Chit Ko Ko (SNLD)
Pwintbyu San Yu Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Theint Theint Wai (NUP)
  • Zeyar Myint (PP)
Minbu Khin Maung Yi Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Phyo Win Latt (NUP)
  • Zaw Min Aung (PP)
  • Khin Chaw Phyu (SNLD)
  • Phone Myat Min (PPP)
  • Phyo Ko Ko Aung (MFDP)
Thayet Naing Oo Kyaw Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Than Htay (NUP)
  • Thet Lwin (PP)
  • Daw Tin Tin Hlaing (MFDP)
Aunglan Tin Aung Chit Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Tun Nyi Win (NUP)
  • Kyaw Min Tun (PP)
  • Lin Aung Thu (MFDP)
Gangaw Ei Phyu Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party Phase 2
Mandalay Kyaukse Aung Myint Than Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Maung Maung (NUP)
  • Nyan Min Thein (PP)
  • Hsaung Ko Ko Lwin (SNLD)
  • Myo Wai (PPP)
  • Aung Soe Moe (MFDP)
NyaungU Thein Po Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Than Myint (NUP)
  • Myo Ma Ma Kyaw (PP)
  • Hla Khaing (PPP)
  • Daw Ohnma (SEPP)
PyinOoLwin Mya Tun Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Win Myint (NUP)
  • Aye Chan Kyaw (PP)
  • Moe Wai Yan Oo (SNLD)
  • Yin Yin Nwet (PPP)
  • Myint Thu (MFDP)
Chanayethazan Myint Myint Htay Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Naw Win Pa Pa Oo (PP)
  • Thein Swe (NUP)
  • Aung Kyaw Moe (PPP)
  • Phyo Hayman (Ind.)
  • Win Zaw Tun (SNLD)
  • Myo Thaw Ko (MFDP)
Meiktila Maung Thin Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Aung Kyaw Myint (NUP)
  • Htay Maung (PPP)
  • Aye Min Khant (PP)
  • Aung Myint (MFDP)
  • Okkar Kyaw (SNLD)
Pyawbwe Thaung Aye Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Tun Aung (NUP)
  • Kyaw Win Hlaing (MFDP)
  • Nyein Hlaing Oo (PP)
  • Tun Kyaw (PPP)
  • Thuza Htay (SNLD)
Yamethin Nyunt Hsaung Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Soe Lwin (NUP)
  • Yan Naing Win (MFDP)
  • Nyan Win (PP)
  • Kyaw Min Aung (SNLD)
  • Zaw Min Htaik (PPP)
  • Zaw Win (SEPP)
Aungmyaythazan Teza Kyaw Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Kyaw Kyaw Win (NUP)
  • Thin Thin Aung (PPP)
  • Yan Naing Win (PP)
  • Wutyi Htoo (SNLD)
  • That Htet (MFDP)
  • Nyi Nyi Myint (DFLP)
Rakhine Kyaukpyu Than Aye Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Ba Thein Yin (AFP)
  • Than Hlaing Htoo (RNP)
Sittway San Ngwe Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Tha Aye (AFP)
  • Than Than Aye (RNP)
  • Kyaw Hsan Oo (KNDP)
  • Khin Zarli Zaw (RSNUP)
  • Win Hlaing (MNDP)
Manaung Kyaw Than Rakhine Nationalities Party 1
  • Mya Khwa Nyo (AFP)
  • Maung Kyi (USDP)
Yangon Kamayut Ko Ko Thin Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Win Myint (NUP)
  • San San Wai (PP)
  • Phone Myint (PPP)
  • Win Myint (MFDP)
  • Hla Soe (SNLD)
Kyauktada Mya Thein Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Sin Thi Ma (PP)
  • U Zeya (Ind.)
  • Wai Phyo Kyaw (PPP)
  • Kyaw Nay Win (SNLD)
  • Win Maung (MFDP)
  • Naing Win (Ind.)
Taikkyi Khin Maung Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Tin Tun Aung (NUP)
  • Ba Soe (PP)
  • Kyaw Kyaw Han (NPA)
  • Paing Min Oo (SNLD)
  • Aung Kyaw Thet (PDP)
  • U Aryon (UDP)
  • Than Naing Soe (PPP)
  • Khin Maung Aye (MFDP)
  • Kyaw Thura (UNDP)
  • Ye Min Oo (DP)
Twantay Win Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Khin Marlar Tun (88GSYP)
  • Tha Hsaing (Ind.)
  • Aung Aung Ko (PPP)
  • Aung Soe Win (PP)
  • Aye Ko (MFDP)
  • Aye Kyu Thin (SNLD)
  • Nant Thin Thin Htwe (UNDP)
Dagon Myothit (South) San San Htay Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Kyaw Thu (PPP)
  • Aye Hset (PP)
  • Hnin Yu Soe (NUP)
  • Tin Swe (DP)
  • Saw Hlaing (Ind.)
  • Nyein Nyein Oo (UNDP)
  • Nay Win Tun (MFDP)
  • Win Zaw Tun (SNLD)
  • Than Zaw Htwe (PDP)
Botahtaung Nyan Win Htaik Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Aung San Lwin (PP)
  • Htet Htet Soe Oo (PPP)
  • Than Naing Soe (SNLD)
Mayangon Thet Khaing Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Khin Khin Kyawt (Ind.)
  • May Thu Win (PPP)
  • Nang Lei Lei Myo (PP)
  • Aye Ko Ko (NUP)
  • Zaw Tun (SNLD)
  • Saw Wai Yan Kyaw (UNDP)
  • Myint Myint Htay (TPP)
Mingaladon Khin Maung Hsint Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Kay Zar Win (PP)
  • Khin Khin Htar (PPP)
  • Hein Htet Kyaw (NUP)
  • Zaw Zaw (NNDP)
  • Naing Thu Latt (Ind.)
  • Hla Thaw (MFDP)
  • Wai Lin Phyo Thaw (SNLD)
  • Parcy Pyi Hein (PfP)
Hmawby Nay Lin Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Kyaw Win (NUP)
  • Myo Hlaing Oo (PP)
  • Mie Mie Khaing (PPP)
  • Ngwe Thit (DP)
  • Thein Thein Swe (SNLD)
  • Thet Naing Oo (MPDP)
  • Moe Aye Hlaing (Ind.)
Thingangyun Than Than Aye Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Nay Win Than (NNDP)
  • Kyaw Swa Kyaw Kyaw (PPP)
  • Khin Wai (Ind.)
  • Lwin Myint (PP)
  • Cho Nwe Oo (Ind.)
  • Thaung Myint (NUP)
  • Aung Naing (Ind.)
  • Zaw Min Htwe (SNLD)
Thanlyin Moe Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Nay Myo Win (PPP)
  • Aung Ko Win (PP)
  • Phyo Wai Lin (NUP)
  • Khin Maung Win (SNLD)
  • Lwin Min Hein (PDP)
  • Thin Thin Lei (PDP)
Ahlon Gaday Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Khin Maung Yi (Ind.)
  • Khun Tha (NUP)
  • Ye Kyaw Swa (PP)
  • Lin Maung Maung Thein (PPP)
Ayeywady Kyonpyaw Zaw Min Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Myo Thein (KPP)
  • Ko Ko Htet (PP)
  • Amar Wai (NUP)
  • Nant Than Myint Kyi (PPMFW)
  • U Kyaing (PPP)
  • San Shein (MFDP)
  • Nyein Nyein Ei (SNLD)
Pathein Than Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Kyaw Maung Maung (PPP)
  • Myint Soe Aung (NUP)
  • Saw Law La (KPP)
  • Aung Soe (NUP)
  • Saw Law La (KPP)
  • Aung Soe (PP)
  • Nay Win Tun (PPMFW)
  • Aung Min Naing (Ind.)
  • Tin Pe (MFDP)
  • Tin Oo (SNLD)
  • Aye Win Kyi (Ind.)
Maubin Kan Myint Than Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Phyo Wai Soe (PP)
  • Win Sein (NUP)
  • Naw Moe Moe Hsan (MPP)
  • Lin Min (MFDP)
  • Soe Hlaing (SNLD)
  • Min Min Zaw (PPP)
Myaungmya Myint Sanda Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Aung Khin (KPP)
  • Hla Tun (NUP)
  • Tun Myat (PPP)
  • Khin Mar Swe (SNLD)
  • U Thiha (PP)
  • Min Khaung Than (MFDP)
Kyangin Naing Min Oo National Unity Party 1
  • Myo Min Htut (USDP)
  • Tin Maung Kyaing (PP)
  • La Min Naing (PPP)
Myanaung Aung Win Swe Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Khin Yon (NUP)
  • Aung Ko Ko (PPP)
  • Myint Khaing (PP)
Labutta Win Swe Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Kyawt Kyawt Soe (NUP)
  • Kyaw Hlaing Htwe (PP)
  • Sa Jimmy Oo (KPP)
  • Kyaw Than (PPP)
  • Nay Htet Aung (MFDP)
  • Chit Min Win (SNLD)
Hinthada Htay Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 1
  • Khin Aye Mon (NUP)
  • Aung Kyaw Lwin (PP)
  • Nant Khin Thin Su (KPP)
  • Thanda Aung (PPP)
  • Zin Bo Bo Tun (MFDP)
  • Lin Lin Htet Aung (SNLD)

Second phase

[edit]

Results in phase 2 were released by the UEC on January 15 and 16, with 86 seats won by the USDP.[93]

Results (phase II)
PartySeats
Union Solidarity and Development Party86
Mon Unity Party4
Shan Nationalities Democratic Party3
National Unity Party2
Kachin State People's Party1
Kayin National Democratic Party1
Pa-O National Organization1
Danu Nationalities Democratic Party1
Independent1
Total100
Elected representatives (announced in second round of results)[94][93]
Division Constituency Winner Party Phase[73] Other candidates (party)
Kachin Machanbaw Ngua Yae Sae Kachin State People's Party 2
Moekaung Tun Tun Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Waingmaw Kyaw Kyaw Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Kayin Demawhso Daw Maw Maw Khaing Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Pruhso Sar Rel Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Papun Saw Win Htein Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Hlaingbwe Daw Thida San Kayin National Democratic Party 2
Sagaing Kalewa Tin Tun Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Kyunhla Soe Kyaw Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Myinmu Win Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Chaungu Tun Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Budalin Kyaw Min Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Ayadaw Win Tint Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Phaungpyin Khin Maung Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Taninthayi Kyunsu Aung Kyaw Hnin Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Taninthayi Aung San Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Bago Daiku Daw Theingi Myint Yi Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Shwegyin Kyaw Toe Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Htantabin Kyaw Kyaw Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Yedashe Tun Tun Moe Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Zigon Kyaw Min Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Paungde Daw Swe Swe Thin Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Kawa Myo Swe Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Thanetpin Aung Zaw Lin Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Paukkhaung Myo Zaw Thein Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Padaung Ko Ko Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Moenyo Daw Zar Chi Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Minhla Ye Htut Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Magway Seikphyu Aung Zaw Htet Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Natmauk Zaw Htay Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Myothit Soe Win National Unity Party 2
Ngaphe Moe Min Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Salin Zaw Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Sedoktara Moe Tin National Unity Party 2
Kanma Daw Sabei Min Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mindon Soe Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Minhla Khin Maung Htay Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Sinbaungwe Tint Swe Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mandalay Singaing Tun Tun Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Kyaukpadaung Win Myint Maung Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Tadau Aung Thu Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Pyigyidagun Aung Naing Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mahaaungmyay Soe Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Wundwin Myo Myint Thein Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Thazi Daw Kyu Kyu Maw Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Amarapura Thein Tun Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Madaya Hla Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mon Bilin Tun Tun Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mudon Win Myint Maung Mon Unity Party 2
Thanbyuzayat Aung Thu Mon Unity Party 2
Ye Aung Naing Oo Mon Unity Party 2
Paung Soe Naing Mon Unity Party 2
Ayeyarwady Kyaunggon Htein Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Kangyidaunt Khin Saw Mu Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Thaboung Maung Maung Soe Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
KyaikLat Aung Gyi Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Pyapon Soe Soe Yi Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Bogalay San Maung Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Pantanaw Kyaw Min Than Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Wakema Than Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Einme Tin Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Shan Ywangan Lu Zaw Danu Nationalities Democratic Party 2
Sesaing Khun Hla Thein Pa-O National Organisation 2
Kalaw Nanda Hla Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Monghkat Sai Wun Sam Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mongping Sai Laung Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mongphyat Lin Zaw Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Yaksawk Pwint San Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Tangyan Sai San Sein Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mongyae Sai Aung Nyunt Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Kunhing Sai Kyaw Hla Shan Nationalities Democratic Party 2
Mongton Htin Aung Shein Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mongyawng Sai Aung Kham Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mongyan Sai Sam Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mongpan Phyo Zaw Soe Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Maunkmai Sai Seng Nor Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Mongkai Nang Than Than Hmwe Shan Nationalities Democratic Party 2
Laikha Sai Sein Win Shan Nationalities Democratic Party 2
Yangon Bahan Hla Tint Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Pabedan Tin Htut Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Latha Hla Tint Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Kawhmu Aung Myo Than Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Kungyangon Thant Zaw Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Dagon Myothi (North) Tint Wai Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Dawbon Win Kyaw Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Pazundaung Kyaw San Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Hlaing Maung Maung Tint Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Shwepyitha San San Nwe Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Htantabin Thein Yi Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Hlegu Khin Maung Soe Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
South Okkalapa Myo Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Kokoegyun Nyo Saw Union Solidarity and Development Party 2
Kyimyindine Khin Hlaing (businessman) Independent 2
Insein Nyein Htwe Union Solidarity and Development Party 2

Third phase

[edit]

Results in phase 3 were released by the UEC on January 29, with 50 seats won by the USDP.[95]

Results (phase III)
PartySeats
Union Solidarity and Development Party57
Shan Nationalities Democratic Party3
Pa-O National Organization1
Inn National League Party1
Total62
Elected representatives (announced in second round of results)[95]
Division Constituency Winner Party Phase Other candidates (party)
Kachin Bhamo Kyaw Lin Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Hpakant Thet Paing Htoo Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Kayin Kawkareik Daw Khin Ni Ni Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Kya-in-Seikkyi Myint Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Bago Kyaukkyi Han Tha Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Kyauktaga Kyaw San Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Pyu Myint Zaw Lin Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Ottwin Win Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Thaegon Ohnma Moet Moet Zaw Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Waw Aung Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Gyopingauk Thandar Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Okpho Tin Htwe Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Mandalay Myittha Hsan Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Chanmyathazi Ko Ko Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Mahline Aung Kyaw Thu Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Taungtha Toe Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Myingyan Pyone Kyi Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Ngazun Hla Min Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Thabeikkyin Aye Mya Mya Soe Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Patheingyi Win Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Yangon Dagon Nanda Kyaw Swa Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Lanmadaw Yan Myo Aung Thein Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Seikkyi/Khanaungto Tun Tun Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Dala Tin Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Dagon Myothit (Seikkan) Shwe Pyi Soe Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Dagon Myothit (East) Aye Aye Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Mingala Taungnyunt Sai Lin Lin Htun Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Thakayta Aye Mya Mya Kyaing Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
North Okkalapa Nay Lin Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Tamway Tun Ohn Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Yankin Tin Moe Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Kyauktan Naing Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Khayan Win Swe Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Thongwa Aung Kyaw Min Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Sangyoung Myo Thant Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Hlinethaya (West) Aung Kyaw Hoe Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Hlinethaya (East) Aye Chan Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Shan Pinlaung Nan Yi Yi Win Pa-O National Organization 3
Nyaungshwe Ye Myint Soe Inn National League Party 3
Keshi Nan Tin Oo Shan Nationalities Democratic Party 3
Mongshu Sai Kan Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Hsipaw Kaung Thet San Shan Nationalities Democratic Party 3
Kyaukme Aye Htun Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Ayeyawady Yekyi Ei Ei Chaw Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Ngaputaw Khin Than Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Dedaye Aung Than Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Nyaungdon Aung Mya Than Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Danubyu Naing Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Ingapu Htay Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Mawlamyinekyun Khin Maung Win Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Zalun Hla Khine Union Solidarity and Development Party 3
Laymyethna Myint Soe Union Solidarity and Development Party 3

Overall results

[edit]
Results (all phases)
PartySeats
Union Solidarity and Development Party232
Shan Nationalities Democratic Party7
Mon Unity Party5
Pa-O National Organization5
National Unity Party4
Naga National Party4
Shan-Ni Solidarity Party1
Rakhine Nationalities Party1
Kachin State People's Party1
Kayin National Democratic Party1
Danu Nationalities Democratic Party1
Inn National League Party1
Independent1
Total264

Results (Amyotha Hluttaw)

[edit]

First phase

[edit]

31 elected representatives to the Amyotha Hluttaw were announced in the first phase of results, with the USDP winning the most seats, 21.[84]

Results (phase I)
PartySeats
Union Solidarity and Development Party21
Arakan Front Party3
Zomi National Party3
Wa National Party1
Rakhine Nationalities Party1
Naga National Party1
Mon Unity Party1
Total31
Elected representatives in first-past-the-post constituencies (announced in first round of results)[96][97][98]
Division Constituency Winner Party
Chin 1 Paung Lunn Ming Thang Zomi National Party
6 Thalal Thang Union Solidarity and Development Party
Rakhine 1 Min Min Tun Arakan Front Party
2 Mya Lin Union Solidarity and Development Party
3 Than Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party
Shan 1 M Zaw Latt Wa National Party
Kachin 4 Daw Mie Mie Kyaw Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party
6 Hsi Hue Dway Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kayah 1 Shah Rel Union Solidarity and Development Party
2 Han Htoo Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kayin 4 Saw Zaw Win Union Solidarity and Development Party
5 Myo Min Naung Union Solidarity and Development Party
Sagaing 1 Khe Chein Naga National Party
Taninthayi 1 Aung Kyu Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party
4 Zaw Min Than Union Solidarity and Development Party
Magway 1 Aung Hla Htwe Union Solidarity and Development Party
Mandalay 6 Tin Oo Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party
Mon 2 Kyaw Kyaw Lin Union Solidarity and Development Party
4 Nai M Chan Mon Mon Unity Party
Elected representatives from proportional representation lists (announced in first round of results)[97]
Division Constituency Winner Party
Chin 1 Cint Tong Mang Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kee Pie
Aung Min Naing
Zaw Lunn Aung
Ciin Ngaik Mang Zomi National Party
Nan Khin Zam
Rakhine 1 Kyaw Sein Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kyaw Sein Hla
Mya Mya Thet Arakan Front Party
2 Khine Khine Hsu Arakan Front Party
Zaw Zaw Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party
Aung Thein Htay Rakhine Nationalities Party

Second phase

[edit]

47 elected representatives to the Amyotha Hluttaw were announced in the second phase of results, with the USDP winning the most seats, 31.

Results (phase II)
PartySeats
Union Solidarity and Development Party31
National Unity Party6
Mon Unity Party4
Kayah State People's Party1
People's Pioneer Party1
Kayin National Democratic Party1
People's Party1
National Interest and Development Party1
Danu Nationalities Democracy Party1
Total47
Elected representatives in first-past-the-post constituencies (announced in second round of results)[99]
Division Constituency Winner Party
Kachin 1 Rakhwi Phong Union Solidarity and Development Party
5 Daw Dwe Bu Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kayah 3 Myint Thein Union Solidarity and Development Party
4 Su Rel Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kayin 3 Saw Thein Lwin Kayin National Democratic Party
6 Khin Zaw Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party
Sagaing 2 Aung Chit Lwin Union Solidarity and Development Party
4 Win Tint Union Solidarity and Development Party
5 Myat Myo Nyunt Union Solidarity and Development Party
6 Khin Maung Aye Union Solidarity and Development Party
Taninthayi 6 Ngwe Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party
Bago 5 Daw Khin Shwe Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party
Magway 2 Tin Myo Zaw Union Solidarity and Development Party
3 Aung Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party
4 Sein Shwe Min Union Solidarity and Development Party
5 Aung Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party
6 Khin Maung Than Union Solidarity and Development Party
Mon 1 Daw Yin Min Htike Union Solidarity and Development Party
3 U Khin Maung Htwe Mon Unity Party
5 Nai Chan Twe Mon Unity Party
6 Daw Aye Chan Mone Union Solidarity and Development Party
Yangon 3 Khin Maung Tint Union Solidarity and Development Party
Shan 2 Daw Marlar San Danu Nationalities Democracy Party
Elected representatives from proportional representation lists (announced in second round of results)[99]
Division Constituency Winner Party
Kachin 1 Jali Rel Union Solidarity and Development Party
2 Min Min Tun National Unity Party
Kayah 1 Kyaw Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party
Taw Rel Union Solidarity and Development Party
Naing Lin Union Solidarity and Development Party
Daw Naw Florence Denny Kayah State People's Party
Zaw Min Htoo People's Pioneer Party
Daw Mari Ah Mu National Unity Party
Sagaing 2 Daw Theingi Win Shwe Union Solidarity and Development Party
Tun Aung Win Union Solidarity and Development Party
Pyae Phyo San National Unity Party
Hlwan Moe Naing People's Party
Sagaing 1 Khin Maung Htay Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kyaw Thu Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party
Saw Thwin National Unity Party
2 Zaw Latt Moe Union Solidarity and Development Party
Pe Thant Zaw Union Solidarity and Development Party
Daw Khin Swe National Unity Party
Mon 1 Khin Maung Htay Mon Unity Party
Kyaw Thu Oo Mon Unity Party
Saw Thwin Union Solidarity and Development Party
Zaw Latt Moe Union Solidarity and Development Party
Pe Thant Zaw National Unity Party
Daw Khin Swe National Interest and Development Party

Third phase

[edit]

79 elected representatives to the Amyotha Hluttaw were announced in the third phase of results, with the USDP winning the most seats, 56.

Results (phase III)
PartySeats
Union Solidarity and Development Party56
National Unity Party10
People's Party4
Pa-O National Organisation3
Kayin National Democratic Party2
Phalon-Sawaw Democratic Party1
Shan Nationalities Democratic Party1
Tai-Leng Nationalities Development Party1
Kachin State People's Party1
Total79
Elected representatives in first-past-the-post constituencies (announced in third round of results)[100]
Division Constituency Winner Party
Kachin 2 Naw Tawng Union Solidarity and Development Party
3 Sein Win Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kayin 1 Aung Thein Win Union Solidarity and Development Party
2 Han Lin Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party
Sagaing 3 Daw Kyawt Yin Win Union Solidarity and Development Party
Taninthayi 2 Than Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party
3 Maung Sein Union Solidarity and Development Party
5 Moe Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party
Bago 1 Aung Soe Union Solidarity and Development Party
2 Ni Ni Mar Union Solidarity and Development Party
3 Htar Htar Nu Union Solidarity and Development Party
4 Ye Myint Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party
6 Kyaw Win Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party
Mandalay 1 Khin Maung Win Union Solidarity and Development Party
2 Bo Thein Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party
3 Hein Min Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party
4 Win Pe Maung Union Solidarity and Development Party
5 Maung Maung Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party
Yangon 1 Win Hlaing Union Solidarity and Development Party
2 Aung Win Than Union Solidarity and Development Party
4 Zaw Win Thant Union Solidarity and Development Party
5 Aung Thiha Union Solidarity and Development Party
6 Aye Paing Union Solidarity and Development Party
Shan 3 Khun Tai Pa-O National Organisation
6 Kyaw Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party
Ayeyawady 1 Yan Naing Win Union Solidarity and Development Party
2 Nwe Nwe Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party
3 Khine Win Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party
4 Aung Kyaw Min Union Solidarity and Development Party
5 Htein Lin Union Solidarity and Development Party
6 Myo Thant Union Solidarity and Development Party
Elected representatives from proportional representation lists (announced in third round of results)[100]
Division Constituency Winner Party
Kachin 2 Zung Loke Union Solidarity and Development Party
Aung San Htoo Union Solidarity and Development Party
Sein Lwin Oo Tai-Leng Nationalities Development Party
Manam Tu Ja Kachin State People's Party
Kayin 1 Saw Nay Lin Aung Union Solidarity and Development Party
Chit Wai Union Solidarity and Development Party
Saw Myat Htut Win Kayin National Democratic Party
Nan Saw Saw Mon Kayin National Democratic Party
Naw Yuzana Wah Phalon-Sawaw Democratic Party
Khun Win Oo Pa-O National Organisation
Sagaing 1 Thein Hlaing Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kyaw Zin Tun National Unity Party
Taninthayi 1 Yu Naing Union Solidarity and Development Party
Tin Maung Win Union Solidarity and Development Party
Nyan Tun Union Solidarity and Development Party
Than Aye National Unity Party
Soe Kyi National Unity Party
Wai Yan Myo People's Party
Bago 1 Zin Min Htet Union Solidarity and Development Party
Thein Zaw Union Solidarity and Development Party
Thaung Shwe National Unity Party
2 Hla Thein Union Solidarity and Development Party
Phyo Wai Lin Union Solidarity and Development Party
Min Sein National Unity Party
Mandalay 1 Kyaw Tin Union Solidarity and Development Party
Myint Oo National Unity Party
2 Khin Maung Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party
Myint San National Unity Party
3 Aung Lin Dwe Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kyaw Tint National Unity Party
Yangon 1 Ye Yint Soe Nyunt Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kyi Lin Htet People's Party
2 Yan Naing Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kyaw Kyaw Latt People's Party
3 Tint Zaw Union Solidarity and Development Party
Wunna Soe People's Party
Shan 1 Khin Maung Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party
Khun Saw Lwin Pa-O National Organisation
Tun Lin Union Solidarity and Development Party
Sai Win Khine Shan Nationalities Democratic Party
3 Shamwe La Shan Union Solidarity and Development Party
Nang Woe Sein Union Solidarity and Development Party
Ayeyawady 1 Myint Kyaing Union Solidarity and Development Party
Aung Tin Myint Union Solidarity and Development Party
Kyin Thein National Unity Party
2 Chit Swe Union Solidarity and Development Party
Zin Pa Pa Oo Union Solidarity and Development Party
Khin Than Oo National Unity Party

Overall results

[edit]
Partial results (all phases)
PartySeats
Union Solidarity and Development Party108
National Unity Party16
Mon Unity Party5
People's Party5
Kayin National Democratic Party3
Pa-O National Organisation3
Arakan Front Party3
Zomi National Party3
Kachin State People's Party1
Phalon-Sawaw Democratic Party1
Shan Nationalities Democratic Party1
Tai-Leng Nationalities Development Party1
Wa National Party1
Rakhine Nationalities Party1
Kayah State People's Party1
People's Pioneer Party1
National Interest and Development Party1
Danu Nationalities Democracy Party1
Naga National Party1
Total157

Reactions

[edit]

In March 2023, the governments of the United States, European Union, United Kingdom, Japan, France, Germany, and Australia strongly condemned the military junta's dissolution of the NLD and other political parties. The US and Germany stated they expect the election will not be free and fair.[101] The German government posited that the junta's moves threaten to escalate violence in the country, and further destabilise the country.[101] Japan's ministry of foreign affairs called for the release of all NLD officials, and noted the NLD's exclusion will hamper attempts to peacefully improve the country's political situation.[101][102] Australia's Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade characterised the junta's moves as a "further narrowing of political space in Myanmar." The European Union reiterated its support for ASEAN's Five-Point Consensus.[103] ASEAN also declared that it did not recognise the elections.[104]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Not the incumbent but stood for this seat and won
  2. ^ Min Aung Hlaing has been exercising presidential duties on the National Defence and Security Council on behalf of Acting President Myint Swe since 2024, and has been the country's ruler since 2021. The position has been formally vacant since Myint Swe's death in 2025.[1]

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