2019 Tunisian presidential election

Presidential elections were held in Tunisia on 15 September 2019,[3] the second direct vote for the presidency since the 2011 revolution.[4] The elections had originally been planned for 17 and 24 November,[5] but were brought forward after the death of incumbent president Beji Caid Essebsi on 25 July to ensure that a new president would take office within 90 days, as required by the constitution.

2019 Tunisian presidential election

15 September 2019 (first round)
13 October 2019 (second round)
Turnout48.98% (first round)[1]
55.02% (second round)[2]
 
Candidate Kais Saied Nabil Karoui
Party Independent Heart of Tunisia
Popular vote 2,777,931 1,042,894
Percentage 72.71% 27.29%

President before election

Mohamed Ennaceur (interim)
Nidaa Tounes

Elected President

Kais Saied
Independent

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As no candidate received a majority of the vote in the first round, a runoff was held on 13 October between the top two candidates, Kais Saied and Nabil Karoui. Saied won the second round with 72.7% of the vote.[6]

Background

In April 2019, incumbent President Beji Caid Essebsi said that he would not seek re-election, opening the candidate field to other candidates. However, Essebsi died on 25 July at age 92, with five months left in his term. The President of the Assembly of the Representatives of the People, Mohamed Ennaceur, became interim president, according to the Constitutional provision for presidential succession.[7] According to Article 84 of the Tunisian constitution, an interim president may serve for a maximum of 90 days, meaning Ennaceur's role is due to expire on 23 October 2019.[8] In order to comply with this, the High Authority for Elections announced the election will be held sooner than scheduled,[9] being moved up from 17 and 24 November to 15 September and 13 October.[10]

Electoral system

The President of Tunisia is directly elected by universal suffrage using the two-round system. If no candidate receives a majority of the vote in the first round, a second round is held between the top two candidates.[11] Candidates must be at least 35 years old on the day of filing for candidacy, and are also required to be Muslim. Candidates must have Tunisian citizenship, and are required give up any other citizenship they hold.

Electoral reform controversy

On 18 June 2019, the Assembly of Representatives passed amendments to the country's electoral law, accused by some of blocking candidates like Nabil Karoui and Olfa Terras from being eligible to run in the election.[12] The amendments prohibited those with a criminal record, as well as those who run charitable organizations or received foreign funding for political advertising in the year preceding an election.[13] On 25 June, members of Nidaa Tounes and the Popular Front filed a motion in the Assembly of Representatives, calling the move unconstitutional.[13]

Candidates

Approved candidates

Image Candidates Party Reference
Mohamed Abbou Democratic Current [14]
Saïd Aïdi Beni Watani [15]
Hatem Boulabiar Independent [16]
Abid Briki Tunisia Forward [17]
Youssef Chahed Long Live Tunisia [18]
Selma Elloumi Al Amal [19]
Elyes Fakhfakh Democratic Forum for Labour and Liberties [20]
Hechmi Hamdi Current of Love [21]
Hamma Hammami Popular Front [22]
Néji Jalloul Independent [23]
Hamadi Jebali Independent [24]
Mehdi Jomaa Tunisian Alternative [25]
Nabil Karoui Heart of Tunisia [26]
Seifeddine Makhlouf Dignity Coalition [27]
Omar Mansour Independent [28]
Mohsen Marzouk Machrouu Tounes [29]
Moncef Marzouki Al-Irada [30]
Abdelfattah Mourou Ennahda Movement [31]
Abir Moussi Free Destourian Party [32]
Lotfi Mraihi Union of the Republican People [33]
Mohamed Esghaier Nouri Independent [34]
Mongi Rahoui Popular Front [35]
Slim Riahi New National Union N/A
Safi Saïd Independent (supported by People's Movement) [36][37]
Kais Saied Independent [38]
Abdelkrim Zbidi Independent (supported by Nidaa Tounes) [39]

Rejected candidates

  • Mounir Baatour,[40] the first openly LGBT candidate in the Arab world.[41] Leader of the Liberal Party.

Candidates who declined to run

Televised debates

For the first time in the country's history, presidential election debates were held in Tunisia. Organised by the Munathara Initiative and sanctioned by Tunisia's election authority, ISIE, the debates were held on 7, 8 and 9 September 2019. The debates were broadcast on 11 public and private Tunisian TV channels, on Al Jazeera, as well as on Algerian, Libyan, and Iraqi TV stations.[44] Some three million viewers, or 42 percent of the country's registered voters, followed the first debate. The figure does not include live streaming audiences or audiences outside Tunisia.[45]

Participating candidates in the ISIE-sanctioned debates[46]
Candidate

 P  Present  A  Absent  I  Invited  O  Invited to other debate  W  Withdrawn

1A - 7 Sept1B - 8 Sept1C - 9 Sept
Abbou POO
Aïdi OOP
Boulabiar OPO
Briki POO
Chahed OOP
Elloumi OOP
Fakhfakh OPO
Hamdi OPO
Hammami OOP
Jalloul POO
Jebali OPO
Jomaa POO
Karoui AOO
Makhlouf OOP
Mansour POO
Marzouk OPO
Marzouki POO
Mourou POO
Moussi POO
Mraihi OPO
Nouri OPO
Rahoui OPO
Riahi OOA
Safi Saïd OOP
Kais Saied OOP
Zbidi OPO

Opinion polls

Results

Candidate Party First round Second round
Votes % Votes %
Kais SaiedIndependent620,71118.402,777,93172.71
Nabil KarouiHeart of Tunisia525,51715.581,042,89427.29
Abdelfattah MourouEnnahda Movement434,53012.88
Abdelkrim ZbidiIndependent361,86410.73
Youssef ChahedLong Live Tunisia249,0497.38
Safi SaïdIndependent239,9517.11
Lotfi MraihiRepublican People's Union221,1906.56
Seifeddine MakhloufDignity Coalition147,3514.37
Abir MoussiFree Destourian Party135,4614.02
Mohamed AbbouDemocratic Current122,2873.63
Moncef MarzoukiMovement Party100,3382.97
Mehdi JomaaTunisian Alternative61,3711.82
Mongi RahouiPopular Front27,3550.81
Hechmi HamdiCurrent of Love25,2840.75
Hamma HammamiIndependent23,2520.69
Elyes FakhfakhEttakatol11,5320.34
Saïd AïdiBeni Watani10,1980.30
Omar MansourIndependent10,1600.30
Mohsen MarzoukMachrouu Tounes7,3760.22
Hamadi JebaliIndependent7,3640.22
Néji JalloulIndependent7,1660.21
Abid BrikiTunisia Forward5,7990.17
Selma Elloumi RekikAl Amal5,0930.15
Mohamed Esghaier NouriIndependent4,5980.14
Slim RiahiNew National Union4,4720.13
Hatem BoulabiarIndependent3,7040.11
Blank votes23,86715,912
Invalid votes68,34455,348
Total3,465,184100.003,892,085100.00
Registered voters/turnout7,074,56648.987,074,56655.02
Source: ISIE, ISIE

References

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  6. Tunisians Seeking Change Get an Unlikely President Bloomberg, 14 October 2019
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  41. Simon Speakman Cordall (14 July 2019). "Meet the man hoping to become the Muslim world's first openly gay president". Independent.
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