DAKAR, Senegal
Senegal's ruling party won over three-quarters of parliamentary seats in weekend elections, according to national provisional results announced Thursday, potentially handing them the means to deliver their ambitious reform agenda.
President Bassirou Diomaye
Faye's Pastef party secured 130 seats in the west African country's 165-seat
national assembly, according to tally of figures given by the national
vote-counting commission, confirmed by a Pastef official.
The results from Sunday's vote
remain provisional, pending confirmation by the Constitutional Council within a
five-day period.
Highly influential and
charismatic Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko, who was the lead candidate for
Pastef, is considered the mastermind behind the legislative landslide.
The new government must
address the expectations of the hard-up Senegalese population, after promising
profound change in the form of leftist Pan-Africanism.
Faye and Sonko swept to
victory in March pledging economic transformation, social justice and a fight
against corruption –- raising hopes among a largely youthful population facing
high inflation and widespread unemployment.
But an opposition-led
parliament hampered the government's first months in power, leading Faye to
dissolve the chamber in September and call snap elections as soon as the
constitution allowed him to do so.
The pair have vowed to
diversify political and economic partnerships, review hydrocarbon and fishing
contracts and re-establish Senegal's sovereignty, which they claimed had been
sold abroad.
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