Kuwait Times

Strong showing by opposition, outgoing Assembly punished

Amir thanks state officials Turnout high 2 ex-ministers lose

- By B Izzak

Opposition groups and individual­s made an impressive showing in the National Assembly elections by winning almost half of the 50 seats, with Kuwaiti voters dealing a heavy blow to the previous Assembly that failed to stop the government from raising petrol prices. The Islamist, nationalis­t and liberal opposition, which returned to the polls after a four-year boycott, won at least 15 seats, with between seven and 10 seats won by its allies.

This will enable the opposition to grill ministers and vote them out of office, which will considerab­ly boost its power in the next Assembly. Islamists make the backbone of the opposition, with the Islamic Constituti­onal Movement (ICM), the local arm of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d, bagging four seats and a few supporters. They include Jamaan Al-Harbash, Osama Al-Shaheen and Mohammad Al-Dallal. Salafist Islamists also won four seats, including veteran former MPs Waleed AlTabtabae­i, Mohammad Hayef and Nayef Merdas.

HH the Amir Sheikh Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber AlSabah sent cables to state senior officials and government bodies, voicing appreciati­on for the efforts they lavished to provide favorable conditions for the National Assembly elections to make it easy for voters to cast their votes. HH the Amir lauded the huge turnout by citizens and their positive response to their national duty and responsibi­lity, as well as the spirit of cooperatio­n that dominated the scene between candidates and the electorate. The Amir voiced deep thanks to members of the higher judiciary commission for their efforts in supervisin­g the elections. HH the Crown Prince Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah also sent similar cables.

The voting saw a heavy turnout with unofficial figures putting the turnout at least at 70 percent, much higher than the previous two elections boycotted by the opposition. Kuwaiti voters severely punished the dissolved Assembly members, with only 20 of the 50 members re-elected. They included former speaker Marzouq Al-Ghanem and former MPs Adnan Abdulsamad and Saleh Ashour.

Twenty-two members of the dissolved house failed in their re-election bid, while eight others did not run in the polls. Two of three former ministers - Ali Al-Omair (public works) and Yacoub Al-Sane (justice and Islamic affairs) were not reelected, but former minister of communicat­ions Essa Al-Kandari won easily. People are upset from the previous Assembly for approving a large number of unpopular laws and for failing to prevent the government from raising the prices of petrol and other services.

But the opposition’s win raises fears that the country will return to political crises like before the 2013 era. Opposition candidates have raised a number of key issues as their priorities. These include a pledge to prevent the government from applying austerity measures against Kuwaiti citizens and a promise to settle the controvers­ial issue of revoking citizenshi­ps. They also vowed to amend or completely change a number of highly oppressive legislatio­ns like the DNA test law, imposing controls on the Internet and others.

The election passed without any incident and without allegation­s of rigging or deliberate errors. The Shiite minority was reduced to just six MPs from nine in the previous Assembly. They won only four seats in their main stronghold in the first electoral district.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? (Left) Former National Assembly speaker Marzouq Al-Ghanem celebrates with supporters in Abdullah Al-Salem following his victory in the parliament­ary elections early today. (Center) Former MP Safaa Al-Hashem celebrates in Adailiya. (Right) Former MP...
(Left) Former National Assembly speaker Marzouq Al-Ghanem celebrates with supporters in Abdullah Al-Salem following his victory in the parliament­ary elections early today. (Center) Former MP Safaa Al-Hashem celebrates in Adailiya. (Right) Former MP...
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait