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Guyana vs Timor-Leste: UN Voting Alignment

How often do Guyana and Timor-Leste vote the same way at the UN General Assembly? Agreement over every shared roll-call vote since 1946, by year, decade, and topic — plus the resolutions where they split.

Overall agreement

89.8%

of 1,364 shared UN General Assembly votes since 1946

Agreement by year

0%25%50%75%100%20022024
Guyana–Timor-Leste UN General Assembly voting agreement, 20022024. Latest: 1% agreement in 2024.

Agreement by decade

GuyanaTimor-Leste UN voting agreement by decade
DecadeAgreementShared votes
200086.6%561
201092.0%802
2020100.0%1

Agreement by topic

GuyanaTimor-Leste UN voting agreement by topic
TopicAgreementShared votes
Israel–Palestine94.3%228
Nuclear weapons98.4%250
Disarmament98.4%313
Colonialism93.8%193
Human rights76.2%353
Economic development99.4%165

Biggest splits

Biggest UN voting splits between Guyana and Timor-Leste
ResolutionDateGuyanaTimor-Leste

R/65/206

HUMAN RIGHTS ADVANCEMENT

2010-12-21noyes

R/65/224

HUMAN RIGHTS ADVANCEMENT

2010-12-21yesno

R/64/156

HUMAN RIGHTS ADVANCEMENT, RELIGIOUS INTOLERANCE

2009-12-18yesno

R/63/168

HUMAN RIGHTS ADVANCEMENT

2008-12-18noyes

R/58/43

Confidence-building measures in the regional and subregional

2003-12-08yesno

R/71/272

nan

2016-12-23yesno

A/RES/71/187

Moratorium on the use of the death penalty : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly

2016-12-19noyes

R/71/174

nan

2016-12-19yesno

R/71/177

nan

2016-12-19yesno

R/69/186

2014-12-18noyes

Frequently asked questions

How often do Guyana and Timor-Leste vote together at the UN?

Guyana and Timor-Leste voted the same way in 89.8% of 1,364 shared UN General Assembly votes since 1946.

Do Guyana and Timor-Leste agree on human rights votes?

On human rights resolutions, Guyana and Timor-Leste largely agree: they voted the same way in 76.2% of 353 shared human-rights votes at the UN General Assembly.

When did Guyana and Timor-Leste last disagree at the UN?

Among their biggest recent splits, on 2016-12-23 Guyana voted "yes" and Timor-Leste voted "no" on R/71/272 (nan).

Data source: Erik Voeten et al., 'United Nations General Assembly Voting Data', Harvard Dataverse.