Opposition lawmakers maintained a majority in Kuwait’s parliament, results showed Friday.
Opposition candidates won 29 seats in the 50-member assembly, according to results carried by KUNA news agency, matching the outcome of last year’s election.
The make-up of the new parliament is very similar to the outgoing one, with all but 11 lawmakers retaining their seats.
Turnout was around 62 percent after polling stations closed at midnight, the information ministry said.
Sheikh Mishal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, formerly the world’s oldest crown prince, came to power aged 83 in December after the death of his half-brother and predecessor, Sheikh Nawaf.
Thursday’s election — the third since 2022 and the fourth in five years — was different in that the new parliament will be tasked with approving Sheikh Mishal’s choice of crown prince, Kuwait’s future emir.
Kuwait held national elections on Thursday for the fourth time in as many years as the oil-rich country seeks to break out of its longstanding political gridlock.
The Persian Gulf country’s elected assembly has more power than most in the Arab world, but has long been at loggerheads with the government, which is appointed by the royal family.
These are the first elections since Sheikh Meshal Al Ahmad Al Jaber, 83, assumed power after the death of his half brother in December. The new emir dissolved parliament in February after a lawmaker reportedly insulted him.
Voters will chose among 200 candidates to fill 50 seats in the assembly. There are no political parties.
Domestic political disputes have been gripping Kuwait for years — including over changes to the welfare system — which prevented the sheikhdom from taking on debt. That has left it with little in its coffers to pay bloated public sector salaries, despite generating immense wealth from its oil reserves.
Parliament has been repeatedly dissolved after failing to move forward.
Last year, Kuwait’s Constitutional Court annulled a 2022 decree overturning another such annulment. The country’s late emir then annulled that parliament again and held an election for a new parliament last summer, which was annulled with the February decision.
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Kuwait dissolves its parliament again amid years of political gridlock in oil-rich nation
Kuwait, a nation with some 4.2 million people that’s slightly smaller than the U.S. state of New Jersey, has the world’s sixth-largest known oil reserves.
It has been a staunch U.S. ally since the 1991 Gulf War expelled the occupying Iraqi forces of Saddam Hussein. Kuwait hosts some 13,500 American troops, as well as the forward headquarters of the U.S. Army in the Middle East.
Kuwait is alone among Gulf Arab countries in having a democratically elected parliament that exerts some checks on the ruling family — which nevertheless appoints the government and can dissolve the assembly at will.