Preliminary results saw the opposition JLP gaining a total of twelve seats, taking a slender three-seat majority over the governing PNP in the House of Representatives. No other parties were elected. Among those elected were
Robert Montague, Chairman of the JLP, and
Juliet Holness. The voter turnout of 47.7% was the lowest since 1983, the year when the
PNP boycotted the election. JLP leader
Andrew Holness became Prime Minister-designate, regaining the position he lost to Simpson-Miller after the previous election in 2011. Subsequently, however, a recount in the
St. Mary South Eastern constituency led to a 127-vote margin in favour of the JLP being overturned and the result being called for the PNP by 9 votes, narrowing the margin in the House to 32–31. The recount in St. Mary South East had also called into question results in St. Ann South West, St. James South,
St. Catherine North Eastern, and
St. Andrew Eastern, which were decided by similarly narrow margins. After recounts, the JLP was declared to have 32 seats to the PNP's 31, a bare majority of one. The JLP planned to contest the St. Mary South East recount that saw its margin narrow. The final count, as authorised by the Electoral Commission, was announced on 2 March. A similarly close election occurred in
2007, in which two seats changed hands on recounts. ==Aftermath==