Georgeland presidential election, 2020

The 2020 Georgeland presidential election will be held on Friday, 6 May 2020. It will be the fourth quadrennial presidential election in Georgeland, and will elect the President of Georgeland for a four-year term, beginning on 1 July 2020. Incumbent President Campbell Rhodes is running for a full term, having been elected by parliament to complete the term of Eileen Purves, who was elected in 2012 and re-elected in 2016, but resigned in 2017.

The Liberal Democratic Party of the United Islands will not be fielding a candidate in the election, and the incumbent, a former LDP member, will run as an independent. All the major and some minority parties in Georgeland will contest the election, with candidates to be chosen in the February-April period. Nominations for the presidency open on 1 March, and end on 1 April.

New Coalition

 * Ken Romani, Senator from Scoita (2008-2014) and Scoitan legislator (1998-2007)
 * Linda Aigh, party official and academic
 * Jack Walker, Chief Minister of Scoita (1988-93)

Vox

 * Ross Golding, comedian, activist and Ita founder

Green Party of Georgeland

 * Luther Karamanlis, environmental scientist and writer
 * Hilde Logan, youth leader and climate change activist
 * Sarah Ling, party activist and media personality
 * Brenda Leech, environmentalist

Rally for Freedom

 * Nick Sheridan, Conservative Member of Parliament (1995-2013) and Attorney General of Georgeland (2007-2010)

National Front
Iain Langley, President of the National Front since 2002, and candidate for president in 2008, 2012 and 2016.

Independents and others
A former Liberal Democrat, Rhodes resigned from the LDP after the 2019 general election at which the party was heavily defeated. He announced he would contest the upcoming presidential election as an independent to maintain his political distance from the new government and to more effectively work with all parties in the new multiparty system.
 * Campbell Rhodes, President of Georgeland since 2017

Liberal Democrats
The LDP resolved in September 2019 that it would not contest the presidential election, instead focussing on rebuilding its parliamentary prospects. The LDP has endorsed Rhodes, the party's founder, but will not run a candidate.