Kais Saied

president of Tunisia
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External Websites
Also known as: Qays Saʿīd
Quick Facts
Also spelled:
Qays Saʿīd
Born:
February 22, 1958, Banī Khiyār, Nābil province, Tunisia (age 66)
Also Known As:
Qays Saʿīd

Kais Saied (born February 22, 1958, Banī Khiyār, Nābil province, Tunisia) is a Tunisian law professor and politician who serves as president of Tunisia (2019– ). He rose to prominence through the popular support of Tunisians who hoped he could repair a dysfunctional political system. However, his term in office has been marred by controversy for his use of emergency decrees and his unilateral replacement of a parliamentary system with a “super-presidential” constitution, which has undone what many saw as the Arab Spring’s most successful transition to democracy.

Early career and rise to the presidency

Saied gained renown in Tunisia as an expert in constitutional law. He taught at the university level for several years, although he never completed a doctorate. Still, what he lacked in academic credentials he earned through experience: he served as a legal expert for the General Secretariat of the Arab League (1989–90) and at the Arab Institute for Human Rights (1993–95), and he acted as secretary-general of the Tunisian Association of Constitutional Law (1990–95). In 2013, at the height of the factional tensions that followed the Jasmine Revolution (2010–11), Saied was among the Council of Elders (Majlis al-Ḥukamāʾ) appointed by Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali to advise the government on its democratic transition.

Saied’s appearances in the news media during Tunisia’s democratic transition elevated him to the status of a familiar public figure. His commentary on the political process gained acclaim not only for its depth and insight but also for its charismatic eloquence and apparent concern about corruption and mismanagement. He frequently criticized the 2014 constitution for strengthening national political parties over individual candidates and decentralized, local governance. After constant political wrangling between factions prevented the parliament (called the Assembly of People’s Representatives) from passing meaningful legislation through the end of the decade, Saied appeared to be vindicated in the eyes of many Tunisians. Strong grassroots support, especially on social media, mobilized to encourage the seemingly impartial and knowledgeable Saied to run for president in 2019.

The crowded presidential race included firmly established political figures, among them Youssef Chahed (the incumbent prime minister), Abdelfattah Morou (cofounder of one of the country’s largest political parties, Ennahda), and Nabil Karoui (a wealthy media mogul). Saied ran a minimal and dry campaign, which was driven mainly by his grassroots supporters. He managed to advance to a runoff against Karoui—Morou and Chahed having come in third and fifth, respectively—and won the election in a landslide with a voter turnout of 55 percent. For many Tunisians, it was a major victory for the people, but the ease with which Saied won foreshadowed just how commanding his presidency would be.

Presidency

Early in Saied’s term, Tunisia’s governing bodies became paralyzed by a hole in their constitutional composition. Disagreement arose between Saied and the parliament over the separation of powers, particularly the executive powers of the president and the prime minister. Moreover, no arbiter was available to mediate: while the 2014 constitution instituted a Constitutional Court to interpret the constitution in response to matters of dispute, the deeply divided parliament had yet to appoint members to the court.

Amid an outbreak of violent anti-government demonstrations that followed months of stalemate between the president and the parliament, Saied invoked emergency powers and suspended the parliament. In 2020 he pushed a constitutional referendum that greatly strengthened the presidency.

Confrontation with the parliament

The parliamentary elections of 2019, held between the first and second rounds of the presidential election, had left the Assembly of People’s Representatives more fractured than ever. After months of attempts to form a government, Ennahda, which commanded a plurality of seats, put forward a candidate for prime minister whom the legislature ultimately rejected. Saied, seeking to break the stalemate, gave the task of forming a government to Elyes Fakhfakh, a former finance minister (2012–14) who had the support of some of the smaller centrist parties. Fakhfakh was able to gain the reluctant support of Ennahda and became prime minister in late February 2020. But in July, after less than five months in office, he came under investigation for corruption and resigned. His interior minister, Hichem Mechichi, took over as prime minister in September.

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A power struggle ensued between Saied and Mechichi in the months that followed. Saied asserted his influence on Mechichi’s technocratic cabinet, and Mechichi, already facing pressure from the Assembly of People’s Representatives to account for more input from the parliament, attempted to replace ministers deemed to be too close to Saied. His proposed replacements won a confidence vote from the parliament in January 2021, but Saied refused to swear in the new ministers, which led to months of paralysis in Tunisian governance.

Emergency rule and a constitutional referendum

The protracted confrontation fueled mounting frustration over government dysfunction and a lack of economic progress. Patience wore thin in July after the poorly organized rollout of a vaccine to fight the COVID-19 pandemic—a situation exacerbated by a record spike in both COVID-19 cases and COVID-related deaths. Later that month Mechichi dismissed the health minister, an ally of Saied’s, and the ministry subsequently addressed the overwhelmed vaccination drive by restricting access to the vaccine. Demonstrations calling on Mechichi and the leaders of Ennahda to step down turned violent. Amid the chaos, Saied dismissed Mechichi and suspended the parliament by invoking an emergency provision in the constitution. He later suspended most of the constitution and indicated his intention to put a new one to a referendum. Because Tunisians were disaffected by the failure of the postrevolutionary system of government to address crises, the president’s power grab enjoyed popular support (see populism).

But Saied’s lack of transparency and his tendency to act unilaterally were disquieting for many other Tunisians. In the months that followed his suspension of the parliament, many of the country’s lawmakers and power brokers were detained, as were some of Saied’s critics. Moreover, major political actors were excluded from consultations over the provisions of the new constitution. An Internet survey in January–March 2022 asked the Tunisian citizenry for their preferences. Presented in the form of a multiple-choice questionnaire, with predetermined choices and no opportunity to provide additional input, that survey induced less than 5 percent of the citizenry to participate.

Meanwhile, Saied dissolved the independent Supreme Judicial Council in February and named his own appointees to it in March. When the Assembly of People’s Representatives attempted to reconvene in March and repeal many of Saied’s decrees, he formally dissolved the parliament through an existing constitutional provision. His dissolution of the judicial and legislative bodies enjoyed popular backing, as their actions (or lack thereof) had frequently been held in low esteem by many Tunisians.

In late June 2022 Saied released a draft constitution that would transform Tunisia’s government into a presidential system with few parliamentary or judicial checks on presidential power. The document was put to a referendum in July, with neither public debate nor input from the opposition. According to the official results, 96 percent of those taking part in the vote had approved the new constitution, but low turnout, due to voter apathy and a boycott by the opposition, indicated that the reforms’ detractors had simply not participated.

As Tunisia slid toward autocracy, the hopes that many Tunisians had once placed in Saied were dashed. Poverty worsened, and economic indicators either remained stagnant or deteriorated further, albeit exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and a yearslong drought that began in late 2019. Security forces clamped down on critics and committed abuses with impunity, most notably against Black migrants and organizations that assist them. Press freedom and political competition were severely curbed; indeed, hundreds of journalists and political opponents were jailed. When Saied ran for reelection in October 2024, he won in a landslide—almost all of his challengers having been disqualified or jailed before the election. Voter turnout was under 30 percent.

Adam Zeidan