Oman Daily Observer

A CLOUDY FUTURE

- TAREK AMARA

Prime Minister Youssef Chahed’s new government promises to be the most inclusive since Tunisia’s 2011 revolution, encompassi­ng all six major parties, independen­ts and allies of often hostile trade unions. But even before parliament votes to approve it, Chahed’s experiment with diversity is running into the kind of pressures and divisions that have doomed his predecesso­rs’ attempts to win the political capital needed to push through reforms.

Tunisia’s transition since a 2011 uprising overthrew Zine El Abidine Ben Ali has been hailed as a model for the Arab world with free elections and a new constituti­on.

But successive government­s in the North African state have struggled with growing militant violence, social unrest and slow progress on economic reforms demanded by internatio­nal lenders and needed to create growth and jobs. Dissent is already visible inside Chahed’s own Nidaa Tounes party, some of whose 54 parliament­arians threatened over the weekend to quit.

“At least 19 lawmakers threatened to resign from the party because the government included some incompeten­t people,” Issam Mattoussi, a lawmaker told reporters on Sunday after an angry meeting of Nidaa Tounes parliament­arians.

Rached Ghannouchi, chief of the largest party in parliament, the Ennahda, said it endorsed the government, praising the inclusion of leftists, liberals and syndicalis­ts for the first time.

But the head of Ennahda’s Shura Council, the party’s supreme ruling authority, said he had reservatio­ns over the premier’s choices. Ennahda has 69 seats.

“Ennahda will not accept any official suspected of corruption or those looking to exclude others,” Abd El Karim Harouni said, in an indirect reference to Ennahda’s leftist critics.

An ally of President Beji Caid Essebsi, Chahed is likely to get the 109 votes he needs to win a confidence ballot in the 217-seat parliament, and some of the sniping may simply reflect manoeuvrin­g from parties looking to secure more influentia­l posts in the cabinet.

But the early resistance points to a high risk of the sort of splits developing that dogged previous government­s.

Chahed’s predecesso­r, Habib Essid, was toppled by lawmakers in a vote of no confidence, partly because of perceived delays to economic reforms made more acute by a wave of strikes and sit-ins.

Meanwhile, sources said Chahed will meet with parties that have reservatio­ns about his cabinet.

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