RT Book, Section T1 Reaching the end of the Tunisian consensus: disaffection and pending challenges” en IEMED Mediterranean Yearbook 2019 A1 Govantes, Bosco A1 Hernando de Larramendi, Miguel K1 Political dissafection K1 Tunisia K1 Maghreb K1 Democracy AB Throughout 2018, Tunisia has been witness to a process of disaffection towards its institutions and political class, revealing the limits of the consensus the country’s political life has revolved around in recent years.Although the Constitution provides for a semi-presidentialist political system, the consensual dynamic generated between Nidaa Tounes and Ennahda after the 2014 legislative elections has allowed Beji Caid Essebsi to strengthen the role of the President of the Republic (Gobe, 2017). Elected by universal suffrage, and therefore with the personal legitimacy that the ballot box provides, he pushed for the formation of coalition governments of national unity, but without strong political leadership. The efforts of successive heads of government to achieve a more autonomous role have been a source of friction throughout his mandate. Thus, the dismissal of Habib Essid, a technocrat that led the government between 2015 and 2016, did nothing to stop these tensions continuing with his successor at the head of the National Unity Government, Youssef Chahed (Gobe, 2018). These strains, together with the worsening economic situation and the absence of responses to the regional imbalances and inequalities at the heart of the 2011 revolution, have contributed to widening the rift between the population and the political elite, a situation reflected in the survey conducted by Afrobarometer in 2018, according to which 81% of Tunisians did not identify with any political party (Afrobarometer, 2018) PB European Institute of the Mediterranean SN 1698-3068 YR 2019 FD 2019 LK https://hdl.handle.net/10433/19700 UL https://hdl.handle.net/10433/19700 LA en NO “Reaching the end of the Tunisian consensus: disaffection and pending challenges” en IEMED: Mediterranean Yearbook 2019, Barcelona: Instituto Europeo del Mediterráneo (IEMED) NO En el marco del proyecto I+D+I "Crisis y procesos de cambio regional en el norte de África. sus implicaciones para España" (CSO2017-849-49-C3-3-P), concedido por el Ministerio Economía, Industria y Competitividad (2018-2020).FECYT -- CRISIS Y PROCESOS DE CAMBIO REGIONAL EN EL NORTE DE AFRICA. SUS... NO Departamento de Derecho Público. Área de Ciencia Política y de la Administración DS RIO RD Jun 11, 2026