Kuwaiti royal to contest election
KUWAIT CITY: A member of Kuwait´s ruling family announced on Wednesday his candidacy for next month´s parliamentary election, a rare move in the oil-rich Gulf state where royals normally stay away from polls.
Sheikh Malek Humoud Al-Sabah was among 71 hopefuls who filed to stand for election on the first day of registration which saw some opposition members return after a four-year boycott.
"The previous assembly let down the Kuwaiti people and I am contesting the polls to defend the rights of the people," said Sheikh Malek Humoud Al-Sabah.
Speaking to reporters in Kuwait City, he said he had given up his special passport "to become an ordinary citizen" and that he does not mind losing other benefits. Under the Kuwaiti constitution, royals are eligible to run for public office.
Only a few have registered as candidates in the emirate´s 54 years of democracy, but all have dropped out before election day.
The last royal to register their candidacy was Sheikh Fahad Salem al-Ali Al-Sabah, who withdrew before the 2006 election.
Members of the Al-Sabah family, which has been in power for 250 years, still occupy the main posts in the OPEC member.
The emir, crown prince and prime ministers are senior members of the family, and royals always occupy the key posts of foreign, defence and interior minister.
The November 26 polls were called after Emir Sheikh Sabah al-Ahmad Al-Sabah dissolved parliament on Sunday, following a dispute over petrol price hikes.
Many candidates have criticised the outgoing parliament for failing to defend the interests of citizens.
Political parties are banned under Kuwaiti law but many Islamist, nationalist and liberal groups operate freely as de facto parties.
Under Kuwait´s unique system of democracy, a senior ruling family member will be mandated to form a government regardless of poll outcome.
Many opposition groups have decided to take part after boycotting the previous two elections in protest against changes to the voting system. Only two former opposition lawmakers registered on Wednesday but as independents.
-
18-month Old On Life-saving Medication Returned To ICE Detention -
Cardi B Says THIS About Bad Bunny's Grammy Statement -
Major Hollywood Stars Descend On 2026 Super Bowl's Exclusive Party -
Sarah Ferguson's Silence A 'weakness Or Strategy' -
Garrett Morris Raves About His '2 Broke Girls' Co-star Jennifer Coolidge -
Winter Olympics 2026: When & Where To Watch The Iconic Ice Dance ? -
Melissa Joan Hart Reflects On Social Challenges As A Child Actor -
'Gossip Girl' Star Reveals Why She'll Never Return To Acting -
Chicago Child, 8, Dead After 'months Of Abuse, Starvation', Two Arrested -
Travis Kelce's True Feelings About Taylor Swift's Pal Ryan Reynolds Revealed -
Michael Keaton Recalls Working With Catherine O'Hara In 'Beetlejuice' -
King Charles, Princess Anne, Prince Edward Still Shield Andrew From Police -
Anthropic Targets OpenAI Ads With New Claude Homepage Messaging -
US Set To Block Chinese Software From Smart And Connected Cars -
Carmen Electra Says THIS Taught Her Romance -
Leonardo DiCaprio's Co-star Reflects On His Viral Moment At Golden Globes