The 2026 General election has brought with it a selection of new websites providing information about Malta’s voting system, visualisations showing data trends, and even a prediction market-like webpage.
Maltaelections.io is a statistics-based website, turning data from every general election in the country since 1921 into visual graphs and other forms of visualisations, even pitting the data of the two major political parties – the Labour and Nationalist Parties – side by side, showing the total number of election wins, winning streaks, and total votes over the years.
It plots and visualises the voting outcomes in each electoral district in past elections, and shows the results of the different surveys in the lead up to the current 2026 election in the form of a ‘survey battleground’, while providing details of the number of candidates of each party on each district.
Glen Sultana, founder of 110analytics, the company behind the website, told BusinessNow.mt that while everyone is interested in politics, “there isn’t a proper quick and easy repository where anyone can find out how parties performed over the years, the districts and segmentation, vote gaps and a survey checklist. So we wanted to create a kind of single repository where anyone who is interested in elections in Malta can access it all. It also includes a timeline of the campaign in terms of what needs to be done, such as the deadline by when nominations need to be filed.”
Vot.mt is a website aimed at informing voters about how elections work in Malta. It explains the Single Transferrable Vote system and the website also comes with a voting simulator in which users cast a simulated vote in past elections and can see how their vote transfers through the system.
Speaking to WhosWho.mt earlier this month, Alex Portelli, one of the masterminds behind the new tool, said: “We have one of the most representative voting systems in the world, and yet a lot of people don’t actually use it to its full potential.”
As a tool, it can be used to understand how your votes in past elections passed through candidates through the transferable vote system.
Elezzjoni.app gathers information about candidates and political parties in one place.
It includes biographies about the political parties, and even lists the proposals made by each party during the election campaign, dividing them up by theme.
The site includes information about the different electoral districts and which candidates are contesting where. The website also provides biographies for some of the candidates.
Elections.bookie.tax is a simple website which allows users to view the electoral proposals made by the different political parties so far in the campaign.
It includes links to the source websites for each proposal listed.
A very different website. A self-described ‘polling platform for now’, it allows users to ‘predict’ the result of future issues, very much like a prediction market site.
The site includes a number of election ‘predictions’ on which people can vote, such as who will win the election, and whether an independent third-party candidate will make it to Parliament, and the percentages are based on the number of votes.
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