Tunisia: Political conflicts between tools of power fed by Brotherhood

The coming days could bring more complexity to the Tunisian crisis that has raged since the beginning of the year, while experts summarize it in the struggle for power between the head of state, the head of government and the parliament speaker.
In a new escalation, Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi rejected
the condition announced by Tunisian General Labor Union Secretary-General
Noureddine Taboubi, said that President Kais Saied told him that he required Mechichi’s
resignation before engaging in any political dialogue.
In his first comment, Mechichi said that the president linking
the launch of the national dialogue to his resignation is meaningless,
stressing that his resignation is not on the table.
Mechichi said that Tunisia needs stability and a government
that responds to the aspirations of the people, adding that he will not abandon
his responsibility towards the country, its democratic institutions and the
people's entitlements.
“We have battles that distract us, from political bickering
and scoring political points. I am not interested in them,” he added, stressing
that his hand is always extended to dialogue and that “battles against
windmills are not good.”
Ennahda, the Brotherhood’s arm in the country, stands behind
Mechichi and aims to prevent him from submitting his resignation, as the
movement competes with the head of state over power while seeking to
consolidate the parliamentary system of government.
Tunisian political analyst Hassan Ayadi believes that the
condition of conducting the national dialogue proposed by President Saied
through close associates reveals that the crisis is likely to extend for a long
period, given that the parties to the conflict have set conditions that prevent
the dialogue.
Ayadi said that there is a struggle between the three
government institutions, a struggle in which the parliament speaker and the
prime minister moved from the defense to criticizing the president for
violating the powers conferred on him by the constitution in order to acquire
powers not stipulated in the constitution.
This was evidenced by the prime minister's contact with the
Russian foreign minister and his desire to deliver a message that he would
address the shortcomings in the performance of the presidency in the diplomatic
file.
In turn, Parliament Speaker and Ennahda leader Rached
Ghannouchi began a policy of expanding his authority in defense of the
parliamentary system, as he met with the head of the Agriculture Committee and
a member of parliament from Ennahda to follow up on the promotion of spoiled
foodstuffs in the markets and to open an investigation and hold accountable
those involved. In doing so, Ghannouchi embodied what he had aspired to build
from a parliamentary system in which the powers of parliament and its president
exceed oversight and accountability.
Tunisia is going through a severe economic crisis, which
prompted citizens to demonstrate on the tenth anniversary of the Jasmine
Revolution, raising the same slogans of the revolution to overthrow the regime,
indicating the similarity of current conditions to those before the revolution.
Accordingly, observers confirm that Tunisia cannot tolerate
all these political contradictions between the tools of power, as the country
needs transformations that improve the lives of citizens and save the
collapsing economic situation.