Jump to navigation

Tunisia

President Kaïs Saïed extends his suspension of parliament as he confronts Islamist opposition

Public backing said to be growing for rule by decree and sacking of prime minister

After dismissing Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi and suspending the National Assembly on 25 July, President Kaïs Saïed has seen his popularity grow as he promises 'strong leadership' to resolve the country's serial political crises (AC Vol 62 No 16, Saïed lashes out).

President Saïed has extended his rule by decree and the suspension of parliament, both of which were coming up for review on 25 August. Last week, he said that he had no plans to open dialogue with the main political parties. Neither does he plan to call snap elections.

The country's biggest parties, which described Saïed's moves as a coup, are debating their options, veering between outright opposition and some limited cooperation.

Ennahda, the Islamist grouping and the largest party in parliament, reported attacks on several of its offices last month but says it might be willing to vote for a new prime minister should Saïed propose a nominee.

Senior Ennahda party officials told Africa Confidential that they expect the presidency to suspend the parliament for another month. Saïed's rule by decree could continue for several more months but he faces deepening economic problems.

The political crisis is making their resolution harder. Without a deal with the parliament, Saïed cannot pass and implement the budget for the 2021-22 financial year. So far, he insists that he has no interest in a new support package from the IMF.



Related Articles

Saïed lashes out

Public delight greeted the president's sudden suspension of parliament and dismissal of the premier, but taking the reins himself may spell trouble

President Kaïs Saïed's decision to sack his prime minister, Hichem Mechichi, after the massive anti-government protests on Republic Day (25 July) took few by surprise. Th...


Slim pickings

Slim Riahi, a 42-year-old Bizerta-born businessman with British and Tunisian citizenship, is pitting himself against political heavyweight Béji Caïd Essebsi of Nidaa To...


Critical votes and toxic loans

Ahead of key national elections, concern is mounting about the legacy of bad loans from the time of President Ben Ali

Dealing with bad debts from the Zine el Abidine Ben Ali era which threaten the banking system has proved so problematic that the government has been contradicting itself. On the mo...


Saïed channels Mussolini

The president has carried out an absolutist 'constitutional coup' and so far has the public on his side

The Muslim Brotherhood affiliate Ennahda dominated the decade after the fall of President Zine el Abidine Ben Ali, but in successive governments it failed to revive the faltering ...


Finance smiles on government

Multilateral lenders and Western governments shower Tunisia with credit in the hope the country does not go the way of neighbouring Libya or Egypt

The World Bank became the latest lender to signal its support for the interim government in Tunis when it lent it US$100 million last week to help banks to lend to small businesses...