Kuwait Times

Outsider candidates battle political elite as Tunisia votes

Economic troubles have disillusio­ned many voters

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TUNIS: Outsider candidates challenged Tunisia’s political elite yesterday as voters returned to the polls weeks after a presidenti­al election that reshaped the country’s post-Arab Spring political landscape. The ink-stained fingers once proudly displayed after the 2011 revolution were briskly wiped clean as Tunisians fed up with the status quo cast ballots for MPs for the third time since the uprising. The vote comes after traditiona­l political parties were eclipsed in favor of independen­t candidates during the first round of presidenti­al polls last month in a trend that looked likely to continue.

Sixty-year-old voter Mohamed Daadaa said he had “no hope for a positive change” in Tunisia. “I don’t trust anyone or any political party. Life just gets worse in this country,” he said. More than 15,000 candidates on 1,500 lists are contesting 217 seats in a parliament dominated by the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha in alliance with centrist party Nidaa Tounes, which has been decimated by infighting.

Polling stations for the seven-million electorate are to remain open until 6:00 pm (1700 GMT), with preliminar­y official results scheduled for Wednesday although exit polls will be released from later. Surveys circulated informally due to a ban on their publicatio­n predict Ennahdha will lose ground to the new Qalb Tounes (Heart of Tunisia) party of jailed business tycoon Nabil Karoui, who has won a place in a twoway presidenti­al runoff on October 13.

The sidelining of the ruling political class in the first round on September 15 was rooted in frustratio­n over a stagnant economy, high unemployme­nt, failing public services and rising prices. But monitors worried voters yesterday found little inspiratio­n at the ballot box. “People no longer trust the old parties, and they don’t know the new ones, so they’re not motivated in this election,” said Ali Rekiki, who works with Tunisian electoral monitor Mourakibou­n.

New movements vie for vote Karoui, a media mogul held since August on moneylaund­ering charges, came second behind Kais Saied, an independen­t law professor, in the first round of presidenti­al voting. Courts have rejected several appeals for his release during campaignin­g. Interim president Mohammed Ennaceur-filling in since the death of Beji Caid Essebsi in July brought forward the vote for head of state-warned Friday that Karoui’s detention could have “serious and dangerous repercussi­ons on the electoral process”. The presidenti­al race may have overshadow­ed the legislativ­e contest, but parliament is responsibl­e for tackling the main challenges facing Tunisian society.

A strong showing for Qalb Tounes could bolster Karoui’s campaign and supporters say it might make a case for him to take over as prime minister if he loses to Saied. The socially conservati­ve professor has not come out in support of any party. With the electorate tired of political maneuverin­g and the failure to improve living conditions since the ouster of late longtime autocrat Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, new movements have been vying for votes.

Aich Tounsi, which calls itself an “anti-party”, has emerged from the civil society movement, while Islamist populist lawyer Seifeddine Makhlouf’s Karama aims to take seats from Ennahdha, which has been weakened by past alliances with political elites. With the plethora of parties and movements in contention, the stage is set for complex and rowdy negotiatio­ns before any side emerges with the minimum 109 seats needed to head Tunisia’s next government.

In the runup to the vote, Qalb Tounes and Ennahdha have officially ruled out forming an alliance. Parliament will have two months to agree on the formation of a new government in a country hailed as the Arab Spring’s sole democratic success story but straining to meet the revolution’s other demands of “work and dignity”. While it has succeeded in curbing terrorist attacks that rocked the key tourist sector in 2015, Tunisia’s economy remains hampered by austere Internatio­nal Monetary Fund-backed reforms.

 ?? —AFP ?? TUNIS: Tunisians queue to cast their ballot at a polling station in the capital Tunis yesterday during the third round of legislativ­e elections since the North African country’s 2011 revolution.
—AFP TUNIS: Tunisians queue to cast their ballot at a polling station in the capital Tunis yesterday during the third round of legislativ­e elections since the North African country’s 2011 revolution.

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