May 29, 2024
Only 8.8% of Tunisian voters show up to election that critics decry as presidential power grab | CBC News

Only 8.8% of Tunisian voters show up to election that critics decry as presidential power grab | CBC News

Only 8.8 per cent of Tunisian voters cast ballots in Saturday’s parliamentary elections, authorities announced, after most political parties boycotted the vote as a charade aimed at shoring up presidential power.

The provisional turnout figure is lower than November’s 9.8 per cent inflation rate — underscoring the economic pressures that have left many Tunisians disillusioned with politics and infuriated with their leaders.

“Why should I vote? … I am not convinced by this election,” said Abdl Hamid Naji as he sat near a polling station on Saturday morning. “In the previous elections, I was the first to arrive… But now I’m not interested.”

The election comes 12 years to the day after vegetable seller Mohamed Bouazizi set himself on fire in an act of protest that sparked the Arab Spring and brought democracy to Tunisia.

But that democratic legacy has been thrown into ever more doubt by political changes made by President Kais Saied since he shut down the previous, more powerful, parliament in July 2021 and moved to rule by decree, amassing ever more power.

A person speaks into a microphone stand as another looks on.
Tunisian President Kais Saied speaks outside a polling station in Tunis on Saturday. (Tunisian Presidency/Reuters)

Saied, a former law lecturer who was a political independent when elected president in 2019, wrote a new constitution this year diluting parliament’s powers to make it subordinate to the presidency with little sway over government.

The president has presented his changes as necessary to save Tunisia from years of political paralysis and economic stagnation, and on Saturday morning he urged voters to take part in the election.

However, few Tunisians that Reuters has spoken to over recent weeks said they were interested, seeing the new parliament as irrelevant and the vote as a distraction from an economic crisis wrecking their lives.

Saturday’s very low turnout will give Saied’s critics fresh ammunition to question the legitimacy of his agenda.

Election workers count and sort ballots.
Election workers count ballots at a polling station in Tunis on Saturday. (Yacine Mahjoub/AFP/Getty Images)

That may become a problem for the president as his government wrestles with implementing unpopular economic reforms such as subsidy cuts to secure an international bailout of state finances.

The economy shrank by more than 8 per cent during the COVID-19 pandemic and the recovery has been slow. Some basic foodstuffs and medicines have disappeared from shelves and ever more Tunisians are braving the dangers of an illicit Mediterranean crossing to seek a new life in Europe.

Boycotts by main parties

The political parties that dominated the previous parliament, elected in 2019 with a turnout of about 40 per cent, have accused Saied of a coup for his shutdown of parliament last year and say he has instituted one-man rule.

Under Saied’s new electoral law, which he passed by decree, political parties would have had a far smaller role in the election even if they had taken part. Party affiliation was not included on ballot papers next to candidate names.

The electoral commission head Farouk Bouasker, who announced the turnout figure, described it as “modest but not shameful,” ascribing it to the new voting system and a lack of paid election campaigning.

A person speaks at a lectern.
Farouk Bouasker, the President of Tunisia’s Independent High Authority for Elections, is seen in Tunis on July 26. (Hassene Dridi/The Associated Press)

At one polling station voter Faouzi Ayarai had said she was optimistic about the new parliament. “These elections are an opportunity to fix the bad situation left by others over the past years,” she said.

But I Watch, a non-governmental watchdog organization formed after the 2011 revolution, said the new parliament had been “emptied of all powers.”

Al Bawsala, another NGO that has monitored the work of parliament since the revolution, has said it will halt its work at a legislature that it also thinks will be an instrument for the president.

With the main parties absent, a total of 1,058 candidates — only 120 of them women — were running for 161 seats.

For 10 of those — seven in Tunisia and three decided by expatriate voters — there was just one candidate. A further seven of the seats decided by expatriate voters had no candidates running at all.

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