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Political deadlock seen continuing after first Kuwait poll under new emir

Kuwait's very first parliamentary election under the new Emir Sheikh Meshal alAhmad alSabah has led to couple of modifications, suggesting that continuous tensions in between government and lawmakers that have actually paralysed decisionmaking are likely to persist.

The outcomes of Thursday's survey revealed only 11 new members of parliament, out of a total of 50 elected MPs in the Gulf Arab state.

The new emir is eager to press through financial reforms after lengthy deadlock between appointed federal governments and elected parliaments impeded development.

Sheikh Meshal's reform-minded approach, with scant tolerance for political bickering, appears aimed at assisting the OPEC manufacturer to overtake Gulf neighbours which have been implementing ambitious plans to wean their economies off oil.

He strongly criticised the last National Assembly and the government in his first speech before parliament after taking office in December, stating they were damaging the interests of the country and its people.

The government of Sheikh Ahmed Al-Nawaf resigned hours after the speech. Sheikh Muhammad Sabah Al-Salem Al-Sabah formed a new government that consisted of brand-new ministers of oil, financing, foreign affairs, interior, and defence.

Sheikh Meshal, 83, succeeded his late brother Sheikh Nawaf Al-Ahmad in December and liquified parliament on Feb. 15, less than 2 months into his tenure.

His decree cited the assembly's violation of the constitutional principles as a reason for dissolution.

REGULAR ELECTIONS

Kuwait prohibits political celebrations, and candidates run for election as individuals in spite of their political affiliations. Its legislature has more impact than similar bodies in other Gulf monarchies, including the power to pass and obstruct laws, question ministers and send no-confidence movements.

Political deadlock, however, has led to unlimited cabinet reshuffles and dissolutions of parliament, paralysing policy-making, however the Emir holds the edge.

Thursday's election was the 4th because Dec. 2020.

Frequent elections limit citizen capability to keep an eye on parliamentarians and result in re-selecting the exact same prospects, political expert Saleh al-Saeedi told .

Succeeding votes reduce the rate of modification and deal less room for brand-new faces to emerge, he said.

Outcomes on Friday revealed a single female candidate was chosen, the same as in the previous parliament, while Shi'ite Muslim legislators secured eight seats in the mainly Sunni Muslim Gulf Arab state, another than in 2015.

Seats for the Islamic Constitutional Motion, which represents the Kuwaiti branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, fell to one from the previous three.

(source: Reuters)