Date | 15 December 2020 — |
---|---|
Location | Kuwait |
Cause |
|
The Kuwaiti political gridlock, ongoing since 2020, is marked by a persistent standoff between the appointed cabinet and the elected parliament in Kuwait. This crisis is set against a backdrop of successive internal succession crises within the ruling Al Sabah family, beginning with the death of Emir Sabah Al Ahmad in 2020. Leadership transitioned to his half-brother Nawaf, who died in 2023, subsequently elevating Mishal Al Sabah to the role of emir. Mishal, the last surviving member of his generation and son of Ahmad Al Jaber Al-Sabah, has yet to appoint a successor. [5]
Under the constitution, the emir appoints the prime minister, with members of the Al Sabah family traditionally holding key cabinet portfolios, including the prime ministership. Additionally, the emir appoints the crown prince, who must receive approval from at least 50% of the elected parliamentarians. This entrenched practice has fueled the political stalemate, as next-generation succession candidates use populist strategies to gain parliamentary support for their bids for the emirate. These tactics frequently involve the selective prosecution of rivals on corruption charges, granting pardons for supporters, and sweeping personnel changes across government levels to forge alliances within both the ruling family and the parliament. [5] [6] [2] [4]
This ongoing crisis has significantly impacted Kuwait’s political landscape, resulting in the appointment of four different prime ministers, the dissolution of parliament three times, the annulment of one parliamentary session, and the formation of ten different cabinets over three years. [7] [4] [3]
Article 4 of the Kuwaiti Constitution mandates that the nomination of a crown prince by the emir must receive approval from over 50% of the parliament, a requirement that has brought internal disputes into the public and parliamentary sphere, moving beyond mere palace intrigue. Kuwaiti political scientist Mohammed Alwuhaib contends that members of the Al Sabah family have engaged in the manipulation of political and economic factions to undermine one another, with rival sheikhs frequently employing accusations of corruption as a strategy. [6] [2]
Beginning in late 2010, parliamentarians supportive of Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohamed initiated criticisms against Sheikh Ahmad Al Fahad. In November of that year, MP Adel Al-Saraawi charged Sheikh Ahmad in the Kuwaiti parliament with creating an unauthorized, shadow government within Kuwait. The situation was intensified by the appointment of his brother, Sheikh Athbi Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, as the head of the Kuwait State Security apparatus, suggesting Sheikh Ahmad had influence beyond his designated governmental duties. [8] By March 2011, MPs Marzouq Al-Ghanim and Adel Al-Saraawi proposed an inquiry into Sheikh Ahmad, at that time the deputy prime minister, concerning alleged mismanagement of government contracts. These developments resulted in Sheikh Ahmad's resignation from his government positions by June 2011. [9] [10]
In August 2011, allies of Ahmad Al-Fahad unearthed documents implicating as many as one-third of the members of parliament in what swiftly emerged as the most significant political corruption scandal in Kuwait's history. By October of the same year, allegations had surfaced against 16 MPs, accusing them of accepting payments totaling $350 million in exchange for their backing of government policies. [11] [9]
Also in October 2011, MP Musallam Al-Barrack, an ally of Ahmad Al-Fahad, claimed that significant sums of Kuwaiti dinars had been funneled from Kuwait's Ministry of Foreign Affairs to the foreign bank accounts of Prime Minister Nasser Al-Mohammed. This accusation prompted the resignation of the Foreign Minister, Dr. Mohammed Al-Sabah, the last representative of the Al-Salem branch within the Sabah family, as a form of protest. Nasser Al-Mohammed refuted these claims, asserting that "all transfers were conducted in the interests of Kuwait without any personal gain." He was later cleared of these allegations by a special judicial tribunal in Kuwait. [12] [9]
Large-scale political demonstrations in November 2011 prompted Emir Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah to accept the resignation of Nasser Al-Mohammed on November 28, 2011. [13] Following this, he appointed the then-outgoing Defense Minister, Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak, as Prime Minister. [14]
In December 2013, supporters of Ahmad Al-Fahad asserted they had tapes allegedly showing Nasser Al-Mohammed and former Parliament Speaker Jassem Al-Kharafi planning to overthrow the Kuwaiti government. This incident came to be known as the Kuwait Complaint ( Arabic: بلاغ الكويت). Ahmad Al-Fahad discussed these allegations on Al-Watan TV. [15] [16] [17]
In response to these allegations, the Kuwaiti public prosecutor initiated an investigation in April 2014, enforcing a comprehensive media blackout to prevent any discussion or reporting on the matter. [18] To persuade the public prosecutor of the tapes' authenticity, Ahmad Al-Fahad and his associates orchestrated a fake legal confrontation in Switzerland. This involved backdating documents and using a Delaware-based shell company they controlled. This sham arbitration, later exposed as fraudulent in Swiss courts, was submitted to the High Court in London to assist in validating the tapes. [19]
By March 2015, the Kuwaiti public prosecutor had ceased all inquiries into the alleged coup attempt, and Ahmad Al-Fahad publicly withdrew his accusations on Kuwait state television. [20] Simultaneously, Athbi Al-Fahad, Ahmad's brother and former head of state security, along with associates known as the " Fintas Group," embarked on a campaign of misinformation. They produced and circulated a low-quality video falsely showing the head of the constitutional court accepting a bribe, suggesting this influenced the public prosecutor's decision to halt the investigation. Subsequently, Athbi Al-Fahad and the Fintas Group members were legally prosecuted and found guilty for their involvement in these acts. [21] [22] [23]
In November 2018, Ahmed and four co-defendants were charged in Switzerland with forgery connected to their involvement in fabricating an arbitration in Switzerland to validate their spurious video alleging a coup plot. [24] This action followed a criminal complaint filed by the legal representatives of Nasser Al-Mohammad and Jassem Al-Kharafi. [25] [26]
Sheikh Ahmed was convicted of forgery on September 10, 2021, alongside the four other individuals involved, receiving a sentence of 30 months in prison, with half of the sentence suspended. [27] [28] [29] [30]
In November 2019, Sheikh Khaled Al Jarrah Al Sabah, the former Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior of Kuwait, was removed from his position following allegations by Nasser Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, the Minister of Defense. The allegations were presented to the Kuwaiti Attorney General, accusing the Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak and the Defense Minister Sheikh Khaled of embezzling 240 million Kuwaiti dinars (approximately $794.5 million) from government funds during his tenure as Minister of Defense. [31] Sheikh Jaber Al Mubarak resigned as Prime Minister, but upon reappointment by the emir, he declined the position, stating his desire to first clear his name in court. [32] [33] [34] [35] Following this, Emir Sabah appointed the then-outgoing Foreign Minister, Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled, as Prime Minister. [36]
On 21 June 2012, the Constitutional Court annulled the opposition-majority parliamentary session elected in February 2012. [37] Sunsequently, Emir Sabah Al-Ahmad issued a decree modifying the voting system for Kuwaiti citizens from four non-transferable votes to a single non-transferable vote. This adjustment led to the opposition boycotting the December 2012 and 2013 parliamentary elections. [38]
Under the speakership of Marzouq Al-Ghanim, the 14th and 15th sessions passed some unpopular laws. In June 2016, parliament passed a lèse-majesté law that banned citizens who defamed the dignity of the emir from running in elections. [39] This law disqualified multiple opposition members like Musallam Al-Barrak and Bader Al-Dahoum from running for office. In August 2016, as part of economic reforms aimed at countering falling oil revenues, parliament approved a bill that increased heavily subsidised gasoline prices, some of the lowest globally, by 40-80%. This marked the first time gas prices were raised in 50 years. [40]
In the December 2020 parliamentary election, two-thirds of the incumbents lost their seats. On December 11, 40 MPs jointly announced their intention to vote for Bader Al-Humaidi to replace Marzouq Al-Ghanim as speaker of parliament. [41]
On December 15, the opening session of 2020, Marzouq Al-Ghanim was elected as speaker of parliament with 33 votes including 16 government members against Al-Humaidi’s 28. [42] Al-Ghanim’s election led to discontent between the elected MPs leading to a request to interpolate Al-Khalid as head of government. The was interpolation requested by MPs Al-Dahoum, Al-Suwait, and Al-Otaibi. Al-Suwait stated that Sabah Al-Khalid put forward his interests instead of the interests of the people. [43] After the interrogation, a no-confidence motion was passed with support from 31 MPs. [44] On 18 January 2021, Sabah Al-Khalid’s government resigned after staying in office for one month and four days. [45]
On 2 March, Al-Khalid appointed his new cabinet. [46] On 31 March, Al-Khalid’s government took oath in session which saw the boycott of opposition members leading to an attendance of 33 members, 16 of whom were Al-Khalid and his ministers, out of 65 members. Al-Khalid requested that all of his current and future interrogations should be delayed till after the end of the second parliamentary session. Which was agreed by the attending MPs. The session also saw the announcement of the vacancy of Bader Al-Dahoum’s seat in parliament, the announcement being the main reason for the opposition’s boycott. [47]
On 13 April, opposition members pushed a motion calling for the cancellation of the postponement of Al-Khalid’s interrogations. The motion was rejected by 33 members of the attending 60. During voting, chaos occurred after opposition members went to the podium to protest the rejection. Mohammed Al-Mutair brought a megaphone with him and started shouting “This request shouldn’t pass!” while Saleh Al-Shallahi tried to take polling paper from the secretary-general. [48] On 28 April, opposition members sat on the government ministers’ designated seats in parliament demanding that Al-Khalid should go to the “interpolation podium”. This action led the government to boycott the session and therefore abandon it. [49] On 25 May, opposition members continued to sit on the government seats continuing the government’s boycott. [50]
On 8 June 2014, Bader Al-Dahoum was sentenced to one year and eight months in jail after insulting the emir Sabah Al-Ahmad. [51] After Al-Dahoum was voted into office, the validity of candidacy was questioned by the Constitutional Court. [52] On the 15th of May, the constitutional court annulled Al-Dahoum's candidacy after he violated the candidacy laws passed two years after his speech. [53]
On 23 April, Obaid Al-Wasmi announced that he was going to run a by-election for Al-Dahoum’s vacated seat. [54] Multiple opposition MPs welcomed Al-Wasmi’s announcement including Abdulkarim Al-Kanderi, Marzouq Al-Khalifa, and Bader Al-Dahoum himself. [55] In the by-election held on May 21, Obaid Al-Wasmi got a historic 93% of the total votes amounting to 43,810 votes. [56] Obaid’s number of votes broke Musallam Al-Barrak’s number in the February 2012 election of 31,263 votes.
Thirteen days before the opening of the second session on October 26, Emir Nawaf Al-Ahmad invited opposition members and the government into a national dialogue in hopes that both branches would cooperate in the next session. [57] On 8 October, the emir pardoned multiple opposition members who resided in Türkiye. Musllam Al-Barrak, Salem Al-Namlan, Jamaan Al-Harbash, Faisal Al-Muslim, and others were all part of the emir’s pardon list. [58] Controversially, the pardon also included twenty Kuwaiti citizens who were part of the Abdali Terrorist Cell case. A “cell” that was affiliated with Hezbollah which stored weapons in the town of Abdali. [59] On 24 October, Marzouq Al-Ghanim and Sabah Al-Khalid were appointed to a committee for future Amiri Pardons. [60]
On 28 December, as part of the National Dialogue, Sabah Al-Khalid announced multiple MPs as part of his new cabinet. MPs that were part of the 39th cabinet are Essa Al-Kandari, Mohammed Al-Rajhi, Hamad Rouheddine, and Mubarak Al-Arou. The dialogue formed a permanent scar between opposition members who rejected cooperation between them and Al-Ghanim like Mohammed Al-Mutair and other members who cooperated with the dialogue efforts like Obaid Al-Wasmi.
As part of the National Dialogue, the motion that all of Al-Khalid’s interrogations should be postponed was scrapped. On the 29th of March, 2022, Muhannad Al-Sayer, Muhalhal Al-Mudhaf, and Hassan Jawhar brought on a request to interpolate Sabah Al-Khalid. [61] The interpolation turned into a no-confidence vote supported by 26 MPs leading to Al-Khalid’s resignation on April 5. After his government that lasted 99 days, Nawaf Al-Ahmad accepted his resignation on 10 May. [62]
As a protest against Al-Khalid’s delaying his government’s formation. On 15 June, 17 MPs organized a sit-in called “The House of the Nation Sit-in”. The members called for the return of political life in Kuwait which they claimed had been interrupted by Sabah Al-Khalid’s premiership. [63]
On 22 June, Crown Prince Mishal Al-Ahmad announced his intention to dissolve parliament after rising tensions between both sides. [64] This ended the sit-in on the same day. [65]
{{
cite web}}
: |first=
has generic name (
help)
:2
was invoked but never defined (see the
help page).This article needs additional or more specific
categories. (April 2024) |
Date | 15 December 2020 — |
---|---|
Location | Kuwait |
Cause |
|
The Kuwaiti political gridlock, ongoing since 2020, is marked by a persistent standoff between the appointed cabinet and the elected parliament in Kuwait. This crisis is set against a backdrop of successive internal succession crises within the ruling Al Sabah family, beginning with the death of Emir Sabah Al Ahmad in 2020. Leadership transitioned to his half-brother Nawaf, who died in 2023, subsequently elevating Mishal Al Sabah to the role of emir. Mishal, the last surviving member of his generation and son of Ahmad Al Jaber Al-Sabah, has yet to appoint a successor. [5]
Under the constitution, the emir appoints the prime minister, with members of the Al Sabah family traditionally holding key cabinet portfolios, including the prime ministership. Additionally, the emir appoints the crown prince, who must receive approval from at least 50% of the elected parliamentarians. This entrenched practice has fueled the political stalemate, as next-generation succession candidates use populist strategies to gain parliamentary support for their bids for the emirate. These tactics frequently involve the selective prosecution of rivals on corruption charges, granting pardons for supporters, and sweeping personnel changes across government levels to forge alliances within both the ruling family and the parliament. [5] [6] [2] [4]
This ongoing crisis has significantly impacted Kuwait’s political landscape, resulting in the appointment of four different prime ministers, the dissolution of parliament three times, the annulment of one parliamentary session, and the formation of ten different cabinets over three years. [7] [4] [3]
Article 4 of the Kuwaiti Constitution mandates that the nomination of a crown prince by the emir must receive approval from over 50% of the parliament, a requirement that has brought internal disputes into the public and parliamentary sphere, moving beyond mere palace intrigue. Kuwaiti political scientist Mohammed Alwuhaib contends that members of the Al Sabah family have engaged in the manipulation of political and economic factions to undermine one another, with rival sheikhs frequently employing accusations of corruption as a strategy. [6] [2]
Beginning in late 2010, parliamentarians supportive of Prime Minister Sheikh Nasser Al-Mohamed initiated criticisms against Sheikh Ahmad Al Fahad. In November of that year, MP Adel Al-Saraawi charged Sheikh Ahmad in the Kuwaiti parliament with creating an unauthorized, shadow government within Kuwait. The situation was intensified by the appointment of his brother, Sheikh Athbi Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, as the head of the Kuwait State Security apparatus, suggesting Sheikh Ahmad had influence beyond his designated governmental duties. [8] By March 2011, MPs Marzouq Al-Ghanim and Adel Al-Saraawi proposed an inquiry into Sheikh Ahmad, at that time the deputy prime minister, concerning alleged mismanagement of government contracts. These developments resulted in Sheikh Ahmad's resignation from his government positions by June 2011. [9] [10]
In August 2011, allies of Ahmad Al-Fahad unearthed documents implicating as many as one-third of the members of parliament in what swiftly emerged as the most significant political corruption scandal in Kuwait's history. By October of the same year, allegations had surfaced against 16 MPs, accusing them of accepting payments totaling $350 million in exchange for their backing of government policies. [11] [9]
Also in October 2011, MP Musallam Al-Barrack, an ally of Ahmad Al-Fahad, claimed that significant sums of Kuwaiti dinars had been funneled from Kuwait's Ministry of Foreign Affairs to the foreign bank accounts of Prime Minister Nasser Al-Mohammed. This accusation prompted the resignation of the Foreign Minister, Dr. Mohammed Al-Sabah, the last representative of the Al-Salem branch within the Sabah family, as a form of protest. Nasser Al-Mohammed refuted these claims, asserting that "all transfers were conducted in the interests of Kuwait without any personal gain." He was later cleared of these allegations by a special judicial tribunal in Kuwait. [12] [9]
Large-scale political demonstrations in November 2011 prompted Emir Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah to accept the resignation of Nasser Al-Mohammed on November 28, 2011. [13] Following this, he appointed the then-outgoing Defense Minister, Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak, as Prime Minister. [14]
In December 2013, supporters of Ahmad Al-Fahad asserted they had tapes allegedly showing Nasser Al-Mohammed and former Parliament Speaker Jassem Al-Kharafi planning to overthrow the Kuwaiti government. This incident came to be known as the Kuwait Complaint ( Arabic: بلاغ الكويت). Ahmad Al-Fahad discussed these allegations on Al-Watan TV. [15] [16] [17]
In response to these allegations, the Kuwaiti public prosecutor initiated an investigation in April 2014, enforcing a comprehensive media blackout to prevent any discussion or reporting on the matter. [18] To persuade the public prosecutor of the tapes' authenticity, Ahmad Al-Fahad and his associates orchestrated a fake legal confrontation in Switzerland. This involved backdating documents and using a Delaware-based shell company they controlled. This sham arbitration, later exposed as fraudulent in Swiss courts, was submitted to the High Court in London to assist in validating the tapes. [19]
By March 2015, the Kuwaiti public prosecutor had ceased all inquiries into the alleged coup attempt, and Ahmad Al-Fahad publicly withdrew his accusations on Kuwait state television. [20] Simultaneously, Athbi Al-Fahad, Ahmad's brother and former head of state security, along with associates known as the " Fintas Group," embarked on a campaign of misinformation. They produced and circulated a low-quality video falsely showing the head of the constitutional court accepting a bribe, suggesting this influenced the public prosecutor's decision to halt the investigation. Subsequently, Athbi Al-Fahad and the Fintas Group members were legally prosecuted and found guilty for their involvement in these acts. [21] [22] [23]
In November 2018, Ahmed and four co-defendants were charged in Switzerland with forgery connected to their involvement in fabricating an arbitration in Switzerland to validate their spurious video alleging a coup plot. [24] This action followed a criminal complaint filed by the legal representatives of Nasser Al-Mohammad and Jassem Al-Kharafi. [25] [26]
Sheikh Ahmed was convicted of forgery on September 10, 2021, alongside the four other individuals involved, receiving a sentence of 30 months in prison, with half of the sentence suspended. [27] [28] [29] [30]
In November 2019, Sheikh Khaled Al Jarrah Al Sabah, the former Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior of Kuwait, was removed from his position following allegations by Nasser Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Sabah, the Minister of Defense. The allegations were presented to the Kuwaiti Attorney General, accusing the Prime Minister Sheikh Jaber Al-Mubarak and the Defense Minister Sheikh Khaled of embezzling 240 million Kuwaiti dinars (approximately $794.5 million) from government funds during his tenure as Minister of Defense. [31] Sheikh Jaber Al Mubarak resigned as Prime Minister, but upon reappointment by the emir, he declined the position, stating his desire to first clear his name in court. [32] [33] [34] [35] Following this, Emir Sabah appointed the then-outgoing Foreign Minister, Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled, as Prime Minister. [36]
On 21 June 2012, the Constitutional Court annulled the opposition-majority parliamentary session elected in February 2012. [37] Sunsequently, Emir Sabah Al-Ahmad issued a decree modifying the voting system for Kuwaiti citizens from four non-transferable votes to a single non-transferable vote. This adjustment led to the opposition boycotting the December 2012 and 2013 parliamentary elections. [38]
Under the speakership of Marzouq Al-Ghanim, the 14th and 15th sessions passed some unpopular laws. In June 2016, parliament passed a lèse-majesté law that banned citizens who defamed the dignity of the emir from running in elections. [39] This law disqualified multiple opposition members like Musallam Al-Barrak and Bader Al-Dahoum from running for office. In August 2016, as part of economic reforms aimed at countering falling oil revenues, parliament approved a bill that increased heavily subsidised gasoline prices, some of the lowest globally, by 40-80%. This marked the first time gas prices were raised in 50 years. [40]
In the December 2020 parliamentary election, two-thirds of the incumbents lost their seats. On December 11, 40 MPs jointly announced their intention to vote for Bader Al-Humaidi to replace Marzouq Al-Ghanim as speaker of parliament. [41]
On December 15, the opening session of 2020, Marzouq Al-Ghanim was elected as speaker of parliament with 33 votes including 16 government members against Al-Humaidi’s 28. [42] Al-Ghanim’s election led to discontent between the elected MPs leading to a request to interpolate Al-Khalid as head of government. The was interpolation requested by MPs Al-Dahoum, Al-Suwait, and Al-Otaibi. Al-Suwait stated that Sabah Al-Khalid put forward his interests instead of the interests of the people. [43] After the interrogation, a no-confidence motion was passed with support from 31 MPs. [44] On 18 January 2021, Sabah Al-Khalid’s government resigned after staying in office for one month and four days. [45]
On 2 March, Al-Khalid appointed his new cabinet. [46] On 31 March, Al-Khalid’s government took oath in session which saw the boycott of opposition members leading to an attendance of 33 members, 16 of whom were Al-Khalid and his ministers, out of 65 members. Al-Khalid requested that all of his current and future interrogations should be delayed till after the end of the second parliamentary session. Which was agreed by the attending MPs. The session also saw the announcement of the vacancy of Bader Al-Dahoum’s seat in parliament, the announcement being the main reason for the opposition’s boycott. [47]
On 13 April, opposition members pushed a motion calling for the cancellation of the postponement of Al-Khalid’s interrogations. The motion was rejected by 33 members of the attending 60. During voting, chaos occurred after opposition members went to the podium to protest the rejection. Mohammed Al-Mutair brought a megaphone with him and started shouting “This request shouldn’t pass!” while Saleh Al-Shallahi tried to take polling paper from the secretary-general. [48] On 28 April, opposition members sat on the government ministers’ designated seats in parliament demanding that Al-Khalid should go to the “interpolation podium”. This action led the government to boycott the session and therefore abandon it. [49] On 25 May, opposition members continued to sit on the government seats continuing the government’s boycott. [50]
On 8 June 2014, Bader Al-Dahoum was sentenced to one year and eight months in jail after insulting the emir Sabah Al-Ahmad. [51] After Al-Dahoum was voted into office, the validity of candidacy was questioned by the Constitutional Court. [52] On the 15th of May, the constitutional court annulled Al-Dahoum's candidacy after he violated the candidacy laws passed two years after his speech. [53]
On 23 April, Obaid Al-Wasmi announced that he was going to run a by-election for Al-Dahoum’s vacated seat. [54] Multiple opposition MPs welcomed Al-Wasmi’s announcement including Abdulkarim Al-Kanderi, Marzouq Al-Khalifa, and Bader Al-Dahoum himself. [55] In the by-election held on May 21, Obaid Al-Wasmi got a historic 93% of the total votes amounting to 43,810 votes. [56] Obaid’s number of votes broke Musallam Al-Barrak’s number in the February 2012 election of 31,263 votes.
Thirteen days before the opening of the second session on October 26, Emir Nawaf Al-Ahmad invited opposition members and the government into a national dialogue in hopes that both branches would cooperate in the next session. [57] On 8 October, the emir pardoned multiple opposition members who resided in Türkiye. Musllam Al-Barrak, Salem Al-Namlan, Jamaan Al-Harbash, Faisal Al-Muslim, and others were all part of the emir’s pardon list. [58] Controversially, the pardon also included twenty Kuwaiti citizens who were part of the Abdali Terrorist Cell case. A “cell” that was affiliated with Hezbollah which stored weapons in the town of Abdali. [59] On 24 October, Marzouq Al-Ghanim and Sabah Al-Khalid were appointed to a committee for future Amiri Pardons. [60]
On 28 December, as part of the National Dialogue, Sabah Al-Khalid announced multiple MPs as part of his new cabinet. MPs that were part of the 39th cabinet are Essa Al-Kandari, Mohammed Al-Rajhi, Hamad Rouheddine, and Mubarak Al-Arou. The dialogue formed a permanent scar between opposition members who rejected cooperation between them and Al-Ghanim like Mohammed Al-Mutair and other members who cooperated with the dialogue efforts like Obaid Al-Wasmi.
As part of the National Dialogue, the motion that all of Al-Khalid’s interrogations should be postponed was scrapped. On the 29th of March, 2022, Muhannad Al-Sayer, Muhalhal Al-Mudhaf, and Hassan Jawhar brought on a request to interpolate Sabah Al-Khalid. [61] The interpolation turned into a no-confidence vote supported by 26 MPs leading to Al-Khalid’s resignation on April 5. After his government that lasted 99 days, Nawaf Al-Ahmad accepted his resignation on 10 May. [62]
As a protest against Al-Khalid’s delaying his government’s formation. On 15 June, 17 MPs organized a sit-in called “The House of the Nation Sit-in”. The members called for the return of political life in Kuwait which they claimed had been interrupted by Sabah Al-Khalid’s premiership. [63]
On 22 June, Crown Prince Mishal Al-Ahmad announced his intention to dissolve parliament after rising tensions between both sides. [64] This ended the sit-in on the same day. [65]
{{
cite web}}
: |first=
has generic name (
help)
:2
was invoked but never defined (see the
help page).This article needs additional or more specific
categories. (April 2024) |