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Senegal

Sunulife · Tue, May 26, 2026 · 2min read

National Assembly: After El Malick Ndiaye, Who Will Preside?

National Assembly: After El Malick Ndiaye, Who Will Preside?
In Short

Senegal's parliament is set to elect a new president this Tuesday, following the surprise resignation of El Malick Ndiaye. A game of chairs that reveals much about the shifting political balance.

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Senegal's political landscape continues to reshape at a steady pace. This Sunday, El Malick Ndiaye resigned from the presidency of the National Assembly, leaving the speaker's seat vacant ahead of Tuesday's election. This transition follows a no less significant government reshuffle: Ahmadou Al Amine Lo has been appointed Prime Minister, succeeding Ousmane Sonko. Beyond the names, what unfolds is the political mechanics of a Senegal in full recomposition. Ndiaye's departure, a figure close to the ruling camp, opens a sequence where the balance of power within the majority will be tested. The next president of the National Assembly will not merely organize debates; they will embody the fragile equilibrium between the executive and legislative branches, in a context where every move is scrutinized by a demanding public. For Senegalese, this dance of positions is far from trivial. It reflects the vitality—and sometimes the tensions—of a democracy that refuses routine. As parliament prepares to choose its new guide, it also sends a signal: that of a political life that never sleeps, even between major electoral deadlines. On Tuesday, deputies will hold the power to name the one who will preside over their debates. A choice that, beyond the backrooms, will interest an entire nation.