Saied's growing popularity divulges fragility of Muslim Brotherhood in Tunisia
Speculation has been rife on Kais Saied's ability to have influence on the Tunisian political scene, since his election to the office of president in the North African state in September 2019.
The argument over this issue was
credible, given the domination the Islamist Ennahda Movement imposed on this
political scene as well as rivalry between the movement and secular parties in
Tunisia.
Saied started his tenure quietly. Some
people, including the members of Ennahda, were misled into believing that the
new president was not politically shrewd enough to influence events.
However, the president took measures
to ensure that the Islamist movement would not totally dominate the political
stage in Tunisia in line with its ambitions and the ambitions of the Muslim
Brotherhood, its mother organization.
He reached a climax in July this
year when he dissolved the Ennahda-controlled parliament and sacked the whole
cabinet.
President Saied also vowed to fight
rampant corruption in his country and put Tunisia back on track.
Ennahda worked tooth and nail in the
past period to distort the decisions taken by the president since July.
Nevertheless, ordinary Tunisians
strongly welcomed the same decisions which – among other things – trimmed the
influence of Ennahda on the Tunisian political scene. The same decisions
reflected positively on Saied's popularity on the streets.
Survey
This rise in the popularity of the
president was evident in a recent survey.
Almost 90% of those interviewed
within the survey said they would re-elect Saied for a second term in the
office of president.
The results of the survey were
announced on Sunday.
It showed Saied winning 90.1% of all
votes, whereas the leader of the Free Destourian
Party, Abeer Moussi, won 2.3% of the votes and journalist Safi Saied 1.5%.