FRI 22 - 11 - 2024
 
Date: Jan 25, 2020
Source: The Daily Star
Tunisia's designated PM makes employment, services the priority
Reuters
TUNIS: Tunisia's designated prime minister Elyes Fakhfakh wants a government based on the values of the 2011 revolution that would address unemployment and improve public services, he said Friday.

"Economic politics will surely change towards a social policy that returns hope for the unemployed youth and for improving public services," he said at a news conference.

"The result of the presidential election was a strong message in favour of big change," he said, indicating he would only seek to bring into his government parties "aligned to the values of the revolution".

However, he said he would keep up with economic reforms that the country has been carrying out for years aimed at tackling big deficits and a growing public debt burden.

President Kais Saied designated Fakhfakh as the next prime minister Monday, giving him a month to form a government that can win majority backing in the deeply fragmented parliament.

His attempt to form a government follows an unsuccessful bid by Habib Jemli, whose proposed coalition lost a confidence vote on Jan. 10. If Fakhfakh is also unsuccessful there will be another parliamentary election.

The young democracy, which threw off autocratic rule in a 2011 uprising, held two separate elections for parliament and president in September and October.

The votes took place against a backdrop of economic troubles that have undermined public trust in politics with years of high unemployment and declining services as the government attempted to control the debt by reining in spending.

Saied, an independent, won the presidency with a modest campaign that emphasised his belief in the principles of the revolution and that compared his personal integrity to the widespread perception of corruption in the political class.

The failure of Jemli, who was nominated by the biggest party in parliament, to push through his proposed government meant Saied had the right to nominate Fakhfakh, a former finance and tourism minister.


 
Readers Comments (0)
Add your comment

Enter the security code below*

 Can't read this? Try Another.
 
Related News
Tunisair workers to strike on Friday, union says
Tunisia PM designate to form technocratic govt without parties
Tunisians emerge from lockdown into mosques and cafes
Tunisians protest over jobs amid economic downturn
Hundreds of Tunisians blocked by virus on Libya border crossing
Related Articles
Crime, excessive punishment in Tunisia
How President Béji Caid Essebsi Helped Build Tunisia's Democracy
Can Tunisia’s democracy survive the turmoil?
Tunisian politics between crisis and normalization
A community approach to militants’ rehab in Tunisia
Copyright 2024 . All rights reserved