Tunisia’s ‘Robocop’ elected president on youth tide - GulfToday

Tunisia’s ‘Robocop’ elected president on youth tide

Tunis-Election

People react after exit poll results were announced in a second round runoff of the presidential election in Tunis. Reuters

The electoral commission announced on Monday that voters gave conservative political outsider Kais Saied a sweeping mandate to be Tunisia’s next president, thanks largely to young people who flocked to his side.

 In a contest that reflected Tunisia’s shifting post-revolution political landscape, Saied, an independent, scooped 72.71 per cent of votes in Sunday’s runoff.

 Saied garnered 2.7 million votes against one million for his rival, charismatic business tycoon Nabil Karoui, the commission said.

 “He was elected very comfortably,” political scientist Selim Kharrat said.

 This win “is a message to parliament,” Kharrat added. “Voters have opted for a plan to clean up politics, fight corruption, and give more power to local entities.”

 The vote reflected Tunisia’s shifting political landscape since the 2011 Arab Spring uprising that ousted an autocratic regime.

 Saied, a retired law professor with a rigid and austere demeanour that earned him the nickname “Robocop”, was swept to victory on a tide of support from young voters, wooed by his anti-establishment platform.

 Around 90 per cent of 18- to 25-year-olds voted for Saied, according to estimates by the Sigma polling institute, compared with 49.2 percent of voters over 60.

 Under Tunisian law, the results can be appealed within two weeks before the new president is sworn in at the end of the month.

 The electoral commission ISIE said turnout was 55 percent, slightly lower than an initial figure of 58 percent announced for the runoff but higher than the first round contested on September 15.

 Saied, a 61-year-old constitutional law expert, campaigned on the values of the revolution of eight years ago, based on opposition to Westernised and corrupt elites, and in favour of radical decentralisation.

 Tunisia’s second free presidential election since its revolt followed president Beji Caid Essebsi’s death in July. Elected in Tunisia’s last presidential poll held in 2014, Essebsi had said he would not run for a second term.

 In his first reaction on Sunday as exit polls showed he was the clear victor, Saied thanked the country’s young people “for turning a new page” and vowed to try to build “a new Tunisia”.

 Thousands of people took to the streets of the capital Tunis to celebrate Saied’s victory, honking horns and singing the national anthem.

 “Kais Saied, voice of the people,” a gathered crowd chanted. “Long live Tunisia!”

 The runoff pitted Saied against another newcomer, businessman Karoui, who has been dubbed Tunisia’s “Berlusconi”.

 Karoui had been jailed for the majority of the campaign, only walking free on Wednesday after more than a month behind bars on suspicion of money-laundering. He has dismissed the charges as politically motivated.

 Saied and Karoui both trounced the old guard in last month’s first round, highlighting voter anger over a stagnant economy, joblessness and poor public services in the cradle of the Arab Spring.

 The country’s high unemployment rate disproportionately affected young graduates, fuelling their calls for political change.

 “Tunisians were looking for integrity,” said newly elected conservative lawmaker Lotfi Mraihi who won a seat in legislative polls held on October 6 that also swept aside the old guard.

 He said Saied embodied “the will to cut ties with the old system and to revive the hope raised by the revolution” that toppled longtime autocrat Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, who died in exile on September 19.

Tunisians took to social media voicing pride in a successful democratic process, a view shared by political analysts.

 “Congratulations to Tunisia... for showing a continued commitment to resolving differences via peaceful transitions,” tweeted H.A. Hellyer, a senior fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London.

 The Ennahdha party, which won the most seats in parliament in the general election, had called on its supporters to back Saied.

 While the candidates were both seen as anti-establishment figures, the contrast between them was sharp.

Agence France-Presse

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