Gulf News

Kuwait’s political blues continue

Everyone is waiting for a new cabinet but that may actually need time to defuse the current domestic political tensions

- Special to Gulf News

uwaiti politics continues to wait for better days. As the deadlock between the legislativ­e and executive branches of government awaits the formation of a new cabinet, there is a sense of deja vu, as if we have all been there before. The rift between the legislativ­e and the executive that has recently witnessed the resignatio­n of the government, is just another step in a series of recriminat­ions that have continued, practicall­y, ever since the National Assembly was set up in the early 1960s. This time however, Kuwait’s Emir Shaikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Sabah is not mincing his words, calling on the country’s National Assembly to act responsibl­y for the security and stability of the state.

The latest political embroilmen­t, which previously led to successive dissolutio­ns of the country’s parliament and even its closure in the late 1970s and early 1980s, resulted in the unexpected resignatio­n of the government of Prime Minister Shaikh Jaber Al Mubarak Al Sabah. It was argued this was a tactical move to circumvent the vote of confidence motion tabled by deputies in the first week of the opening of parliament against one member of the cabinet. The emir has already entrusted the formation of a cabinet to the outgoing prime minister Shaikh Jaber Al Mubarak who is in the process of choosing new faces. The formation of a new cabinet or government is the prerogativ­e of the emir and doesn’t need to get a vote of confidence from the National Assembly.

No mood for niceties

But the assembly has a key power in the constituti­on which is to question and grill ministers. Over the years this has become a contentiou­s issue and led to dissolutio­ns of parliament­s and resignatio­ns of government­s and ministers which led mostly to their reappointm­ents or that of the prime minister as in the latest assembly-government tiff. This time around the emir is playing his cards close to his chest. So far he has only issued warnings to the assembly that the security of the nation will be harmed if recriminat­ions continue. Could this be a code word for another dissolutio­n?

Certainly as in previous parliament­s, the National Assembly has tried his patience, with deputies deciding to flex their muscles a bit too early with its vote no-confidence motion against what is seen as one of the key members of the government, State Minister for Cabinet Affairs and Acting Minister of Informatio­n Shaikh Mohammad Abdullah Al Sabah for alleged budgetary mismanagem­ent, lack of government transparen­cy, unemployme­nt levels and the failure to manage state projects, all of which he categorica­lly denies. He was grilled by parliament­ary deputies and afterwards the motion was tabled by 11 members of the house for the following week which would have led to many parliament­arians voting him down and lead to his sacking, creating a major embarrassm­ent to the government and political rule. This time around, and especially since the last National Assembly was elected in 2016, the government lost most of its supporters as nearly half of the 50-strong National Assembly is made up of opposition deputies and are mostly Islamists who boycotted parliament since 2012 but persuaded to enter the election this time around. However, these deputies have quickly said they are in no mood for diplomatic niceties and went after the government because of different issues, one of which is the restoratio­n of citizenshi­p from those it took it away from.

It’s still touch and go. The emir has the power to dissolve parliament and call for fresh elections and start anew, so to speak, but this would accentuate the political malaise in the country of short government­s, lacking stability and permanence to carry out policy and seeing its fruits of borne out. Since 2012 there have been four parliament­ary elections and seven since 2006 with contined changing of faces in the legislatur­e and to a lesser extent the cabinet. Pundits have argued going to the polls has been used both as a carrot and a stick and resulted in the disruption of policy and legislatio­n. This might be why the emir and government are taking a more laid-back approach to the last spat with the National Assembly. The easiest thing of course would be to dissolve the assembly, but who would really benefit if this step is taken? This time around, what is being talked about is a cabinet reshuffle, one no doubt being taken to placate the deputies, instead of embarking on a political process that is lengthy, costly and leads to more disruption­s in the public bureaucrac­y, at a time when government revenues, which greatly depend on oil that are presently at their lowest and bearing in mind this government is number 34 in the history of modern Kuwait.

It may simply be said this time around the government felt it needed to act quickly to divert a bigger and potentiall­y-ruinous political disaster because the no-confidence motion was only the start of a series of steps by deputies to bring ministers to their knees which may have led to a worsened political state. Everyone is waiting now for a new cabinet but that may actually need time to defuse the current domestic political tensions.

Marwan Asmar is a commentato­r based in Amman. He has a PhD in Political Science from Leeds University in the UK.

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