List of presidents of Tunisia

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This page lists the holders of the office of President of Tunisia and those who have acted in that capacity in the absence of a sworn President.

Background

Tunisia has had five Presidents since the proclamation of the republic on July 25, 1957:

  • President Habib Bourguiba was appointed first and interim President on July 25, 1957, until the election of a permanent president. After the Constitution was enacted on June 1, 1959, a presidential election was held on November 8, 1959. Being the only one running for office, he gained 91% of the votes to serve a 5-year term. Bourguiba will serve 3 more terms, proclaiming himself President for Life during the fourth before being overthrown in the coup d'état of November 7, 1987, organized by his Prime Minister Ben Ali.
  • President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali was Prime Minister and Minister of Interior under President Bourguiba. Ben Ali impeached Bourguiba for medical purposes on November 7, 1987, thus assuming the office of second and interim President of Tunisia, until the election of a permanent president. Ben Ali was elected on April 2, 1989, to serve a 5-year term followed by 3 other terms. On January 14, 2011, his regime fell in the Tunisian Revolution that started on December 17, 2010. Mohamed Ghannouchi, his Prime Minister, claimed the presidency, serving as acting President.
  • President Fouad Mebazaa was, at first, designated by the Constitutional Council to serve as an acting President, on January 15, 2011. Under Article 57 of the Constitution, an election should have taken place between 45 and 60 days following Mebazaa's appointment. But on March 3, 2011, he announced the repeal of the 1959 Constitution and the election of a constituent assembly which had to draft a new one. Therefore, he became Interim President and the 3rd one of Tunisian history until the election of a new President.
  • President Moncef Marzouki was elected interim and 4th President of Tunisia by the Tunisian Constituent Assembly, on December 12, 2011. The next day, he was inaugurated, making him the first president not to be member of the ruling party. During the 2014 presidential election, he was defeated by former Prime Minister Caid Essebsi and left office on December 31, 2014.
  • President Beji Caid Essebsi became the first democratically elected president by universal suffrage after the Revolution, on December 21, 2014. He is the current President of Tunisia since December 31, 2014.

List

  Neo Destour/SDP/DCR (2)   Congress for the Republic (1)   Nidaa Tounes (1)

No. Portrait President Time in office Party Term
1 rowspan="5" style="background: Template:Democratic Constitutional Rally/meta/color;" | Habib Bourguiba
August 3, 1903 – April 6, 2000
(aged 96)

July 25, 1957

November 7, 1987
Neo-Destour I
[1]
July 25, 1957 – November 8, 1959
1
(1959)
November 8, 1959 – November 8, 1964
SDP 2
(1964)
November 8, 1964 – November 2, 1969
3
(1969)
November 2, 1969 – November 3, 1974
4
(1974)
[2]
November 3, 1974 – November 7, 1987
2 rowspan="6" style="background: Template:Democratic Constitutional Rally/meta/color;" | Zine El Abidine Ben Ali
Born: (1936-09-03) September 3, 1936 (age 87)
November 7, 1987

January 14, 2011
SDP I
[3]
November 7, 1987 – April 2, 1989
DCR 1
(1989)
April 2, 1989 – March 20, 1994
2
(1994)
March 20, 1994 – October 24, 1999
3
(1999)
October 24, 1999 – October 24, 2004
4
(2004)
October 24, 2004 – October 25, 2009
5
(2009)[4]
October 25, 2009 – January 14, 2011
Mohamed Ghannouchi, acting President from January 14 to January 15, 2011.[5]
3 style="background: Template:Democratic Constitutional Rally/meta/color;" | Fouad Mebazaa
Born: (1933-06-15) June 15, 1933 (age 90)
January 15, 2011

December 13, 2011
DCR
[6]
A
[7]
January 15, 2011 – March 3, 2011
Non-partisan I
[8]
March 3, 2011 – December 13, 2011
4 style="background: Template:Congress for the Republic/meta/color;" | Moncef Marzouki
Born: (1945-07-07) July 7, 1945 (age 78)
December 13, 2011

December 31, 2014
Congress for the Republic I
[9]
December 13, 2011 – December 31, 2014
5 style="background: Template:Nidaa Tounes/meta/color;" | Beji Caid Essebsi
Born: (1926-11-29) November 29, 1926 (age 97)
December 31, 2014

Incumbent
Nidaa Tounes 1
(2014)
December 31, 2014 – Incumbent
(Term expires on December 31, 2019)

Rank by time in office

Rank President Time in office
1 Habib Bourguiba 30 years, 105 days
2 Zine El Abidine Ben Ali 23 years, 68 days
3 Fouad Mebazaa 332 days
4 Moncef Marzouki 3 years, 18 days
5 Beji Caid Essebsi (Incumbent) 9 years, 128 days

Living former Presidents

There are three living former Tunisian Presidents:

Timeline

Footnotes

  1. ^ On July 25, the National Constituent assembly proclaimed the republic. Prime Minister Bourguiba thus was designated by the parliament as interim President of the Republic until the election of a permanent president, after drafting the constitution.
  2. ^ During this term, Bourguiba proclaimed himself President for Life and served in that capacity until he was deposed in the 1987 coup d'état.
  3. ^ Following the 1987 coup d'état, Prime Minister Ben Ali took office as interim President of Tunisia until the election of a permanent president.
  4. ^ During this term, Ben Ali was deposed in the Tunisian Revolution.
  5. ^ Mohamed Ghannouchi claimed the Presidency on January 14, 2011. Therefore, he was acting president until the Constitutional Council spoke out and declared Ben Ali deposed. Under Article 57, Ghannouchi was replaced by Fouad Mebazaa.
  6. ^ Mebazaa left the party leadership on January 18 while the DCR was dissolved on March 9, 2011.
  7. ^ Acting President
  8. ^ Fouad Mebazaa was first appointed acting President on January 15, 2011. Under Article 57 of the Constitution, an election should have taken place between 45 and 60 days following Mebazaa's appointment. But on March 3, 2011, he announced the repeal of the 1959 Constitution and the election of a constituent assembly which had to draft a new one. Therefore, he became interim President and the 3rd one of Tunisian history until the election of a permanent President. Thus, instead of taking office for 45 to 60 days, he was President for nearly a year.
  9. ^ Marzouki was elected by the National Constituent Assembly as interim President of Tunisia until the drafting of a new constitution and the election of a permanent president.

See also

External links