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Kuwait Cabinet steps down after parliament polls
By AFP - Nov 28,2016 - Last updated at Nov 28,2016
A Kuwaiti judge (centre) and his aides count the ballots at a polling station at the end of the vote in the Sabah Al Salem district on the outskirts of Kuwait city on Saturday (AFP photo)
KUWAIT CITY — The Kuwaiti Cabinet on Monday submitted its resignation to the emir of the oil-rich Gulf state following snap parliamentary polls, an official statement said.
The move falls in line with the emirate's constitution which requires the cabinet to step down after polls.
After accepting the resignation, Emir Sheikh Sabah Al Ahmad Al Sabah will either reappoint the outgoing premier, Sheikh Jaber Mubarak Al Sabah, or name another senior member of the ruling family to form a Cabinet.
The new Cabinet must be formed before parliament holds its first session within the next two weeks.
The elections on Saturday saw the Islamist-dominated opposition win nearly half of the 50-seat parliament after it ended a four-year boycott and took part in the polls.
Analysts predict the return of political disputes in parliament unless the ruling family-led government succeeds in cooperating with the opposition.
Around half of the opposition candidates who won seats are Islamists from a Muslim Brotherhood-linked group and Salafists.
The emir dissolved the previous parliament due to a dispute over hiking petrol prices.
But a majority of the elected MPs have openly said they would oppose any austerity measures by the government to boost non-oil income.
Voters dealt a heavy blow to candidates from the outgoing parliament, with more than half of them failing to win seats in the new assembly.
Only one woman was elected and Kuwait's Shiite Muslim minority was reduced to six seats from nine in the previous house.
Unlike other Arab states in the Gulf, Kuwait has an elected parliament with powers to hold ministers to account, even though senior members of the ruling family hold all the top Cabinet posts.
The elections came as Kuwait faces its most acute budget crisis in years. Oil income, which accounts for 95 per cent of government revenues, has nosedived by 60 per cent in the past two years.
The OPEC member which pumps 3 million barrels per day of oil posted its first budget deficit of $15 billion last year following 16 years of surpluses.
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