Tunisia constitutionally cleansed of Brotherhood: Kais Saied's old attempts close to being realized
Tunisian reports indicate that
President Kais Saied is close to defining the parameters of the next stage of
the country’s life after freezing the parliament and dissolving the government
on July 25, reinforcing his recent media statements when he told Sky News
Arabia that the possibility of amending the constitution is not excluded.
Rebirth and
political criticism
Walid Hajjem, advisor to President
Saied, said on Thursday, September 9, that there is a tendency to amend the
political system in Tunisia, perhaps through a referendum, and that it is
assumed that the constitution should be suspended and a temporary system of
powers issued.
Prior to the recent events and
decisions taken by Saied, the Tunisian system of government that was sanctioned
by the 2014 constitution received criticism, as some described it as hybrid,
being neither fully parliamentary nor presidential.
The constitution requires that the
president be chosen through direct elections in which the people participate,
but at the same time it does not grant powers that translate the volume of
votes he has obtained. This entitlement also remains an obstacle to a complete
parliamentary system that grants powers to representatives.
In support of these criticisms,
Tunisia witnessed a negative translation that ended in violent conflicts in the
country prior to July 25 between the presidency, represented by Kais Saied, and
the parliament, led by Rached Ghannouchi and the prime minister.
Political
battles
These conflicts caused a stalemate
in the political scene, which affected the mainly deteriorating economic and
living situation since 2011 and before, as well as the outbreak of the corona
virus, which the Tunisian state failed to reduce at first.
Against this background, political
battles erupted between the three institutions over powers, which ended in each
party pushing its own advantage. The Ennahda movement, which controls the parliament,
defended the marginalization of the president and the pursuit of a purely
parliamentary system, while Saied called for a presidential system that
respects the votes that Tunisians give directly to the president.
July 25 and its
aftermath
All Saied’s attempts at amending the
system of government were unrealistic in light of the resistance of the
Ennahda-led parliament, but his decisions on July 25 in which he froze the
parliament and dissolved the government, and the subsequent procedures that tracked
the corrupt and the beneficiaries of the pre-historic political situation, have
made Tunisia closer to a presidential system that gives the president
additional powers other than those he enjoyed in the 2014 constitution, which
are represented in the country's foreign affairs.
Any constitutional amendment needs
to disrupt the current constitution and set general frameworks to run the
country until the completion of the amendments that will be put to the people
in a popular referendum.
After 2011, Tunisia proceeded to
write a constitution that was ratified by the people and was put into effect in
2014. It is believed that this constitution was put under the control of
religious groups, led by the Ennahda movement, whose priority was to control
the state’s joints, which justified the provision of the parliamentarism of the
regime, as Ennahda was betting on winning parliament. When that actually
happened, Ennahda took over the reins of power, since the constitution was
drafted until July 25.