Students vow to propel professor to upset Tunisia win
At the political science faculty where Tunisian presidential candidate Kais Saied taught law, a devoted following of young voters swayed by his campaign propelled the political novice to the second round.
Now they are determined to help him to victory in next month’s runoff against fellow outsider, populist media mogul Nabil Karoui. “Many young people voted in his favor because they wanted to revolt against the system, to say that we can take things into our own hands,” said Balkis, a 19-year-old student at the faculty near the capital Tunis where Saied taught constitutional law until recently.
Eight years after Tunisia’s youthled revolution that toppled longtime ruler Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali, Saied, 61, led the first round of the North African country’s second freely contested presidential election by universal suffrage with 18.4 percent of the votes.
According to a poll by Sigma Conseil institute, Saied garnered more than 37 percent of the votes among 18 to 25 year olds, after a grassroots campaign organized by young volunteers.
Saied’s surprise victory in the first round was “a new youth revolution: A ballot box revolution,” said Balkis.
While admitting she did not vote for him in the first round, having not seen him as a “statesman,” she said she had “no doubt of his integrity, his modesty and his respect for everyone.”
For Ghofrane Bejaoui, 20, there was no question of her support for Saied.
“Of course I voted for him. He is the best candidate, respectful and above all very honest,” she said. Saied “is very respected and has a very good reputation in this faculty,” said Sana Ben Nomane, a professor of public law and former colleague of Saied’s. “You hear nothing but good things about him.”
Despite a stern appearance, rigid self-presentation and speech — earning him the nickname “Robocop” — former students and colleagues described Saied as a considerate teacher, who did not hesitate to support all his students. While Saied drew young people to the polls, many others abstained in a vote that only saw 49 percent turnout, according to the electoral commission ISIE.
Ibtihel Kahla, 20, did not vote in the first round, believing that any “honest” candidate would not stand a chance of winning.
But, surprised by Saied’s victory, she now says she will “not miss the next round of the presidential election and will vote for Kais Saied.”
For Mourad, another student, “young people have the right to exclude the old system and look for a new alternative.”
Both Saied and his second round opponent Karoui are political outsiders who drew on “antisystem” sentiment in Tunisia, spurred by exasperation with high unemployment, a rising cost of living and failing public services. Karoui, a media mogul and founder of a TV channel, is contesting the election from behind bars where he has been awaiting trial on money laundering charges since Aug. 23.
Many on campus said they were not surprised by the youth support for Saied.