elizabethconstituency

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Timeline: How Duane Sands ended up running in Bamboo Town

Duane Sands’ ratification as the Free National Movement (FNM) candidate for Bamboo Town ahead of the next general election did not happen in isolation. It follows more than a decade of running, and now his party presents a new strategy.

Click to watch Duane Sands’ introduction as an FNM candidate for Bamboo Town

Here is a timeline of the key moments that led to this decision:

2010 — Duane Sands’ first test in Elizabeth

Sands first entered frontline electoral politics during the Elizabeth by-election in 2010.
He razor-thinly lost to Ryan Pinder, signaling that Elizabeth was a competitive and difficult seat for the FNM.

2012 — Duane Sands made a second attempt, but lost again

Sands again contested Elizabeth in the 2012 General Election, facing Pinder once more.
He lost the seat a second time.

2017 — A breakthrough victory

After two losses, persistence paid off, Sands returned for a third attempt to run in Elizabeth in 2017 and won against Progressive Liberal Party Henry Storr.

The victory sent him to Parliament and to the Cabinet as the Minister of Health.

2021 — Another lost

In the 2021 General Election, Sands lost the Elizabeth seat to JoBeth Coleby-Davis, as the FNM suffered a big defeat at the polls.

Post 2021 — Duane Sands’ party reassessment period

Following the election loss, the FNM entered a rebuilding phase with new leader Michael Pintard, reviewing past performance, assessing candidate placement, and identifying constituencies most likely to return seats

Political analysts say for candidates like Sands, with ministerial experience and national profile, parties and executives can typically weigh whether continued contests in marginal seats best serve overall electoral strategy.

2025 — Duane Sands ratified for Bamboo Town

The FNM officially ratified Sands as its candidate for Bamboo Town, a constituency long regarded as an FNM stronghold, though it lost in the 2021 election.

Click to watch the ratification.

 Why Bamboo Town matters:

  • Historically leaned FNM—Tennyson Wells (1992), Branville McCartney (2007), Renward Wells (2012)
  • Can be viewed as more favorable than the Elizabeth constituency
  • It represents an opportunity for the FNM to reclaim ground since the lost to the PLP in 2021, while positioning Sands, an experienced candidate, in a constituency the party believes it can win.

Ingraham’s Endorsement Did Little to Save Sands

FNM Elizabeth MP Duane Sands did not survive at the voting polls. Instead, PLP Jobeth Coleby-Davis beat him to become the new parliamentarian for the Elizabeth constituency.

Sands expected a win at the polls. He seemed to have a good repertoire with his constituents and touted his list of accomplishments in the area.

Poll numbers showed that he and Coleby-Davis were running a close race but it was not enough for Sands to win.

Why it matters

Sands was endorsed by former Prime Minister Hubert Ingraham in the weeks leading up to the election. Ingraham showed up in the Elizabeth constituency to publicly express support for Sands, whom he called “a great man,” even expressing hope that Sands would become prime minister.

Ingraham did not endorse Minnis during this election cycle, as he had done in 2017.

Sands’ loss a the polls means he would not have the opportunity to run against Minnis for party leader when the FNM holds convention.

The big picture

In 2017, Sands won the Elizabeth constituency, doubling the votes to beat the PLP candidate.

Sands was a former minister of health but resigned last year amid controversy over donated 2,500 COVID-19 test swabs, when the donors were allowed to disembark on New Providence and quarantine at home while the country’s borders were closed.

Ingraham was hoping that Sands would have been re-elected to the House and eventually become prime minister, which he likened to his experience.