List of presidents of Tunisia

{{Short description|none}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2023}}

{{Politics of Tunisia}}

The president of Tunisia is the head of state of Tunisia, directly elected to a five-year term by the people. The officeholder leads the executive branch of the Tunisian government along with the prime minister and is the commander-in-chief of the Tunisian Armed Forces.

Since the office was established in 1957, Five men have served as president. The seventh and current president is Kais Saied since 23 October 2019. There are currently three living former presidents. The most recent former president to die was Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, on 19 September 2019.

The presidency of Mohamed Ennaceur, who assumed the office as acting president following the death of incumbent president Beji Caid Essebsi, was the shortest in Tunisian history (90 days). Habib Bourguiba, the inaugural holder, served the longest, over thirty years (1957–1987), before he was removed from office by his prime minister Ben Ali, on 7 November 1987. Since the ratification of the Tunisian Constitution in 2014, no person may be elected president more than twice.

Of those who have served as the nation's president, only one died in office of natural causes (Beji Caid Essebsi), two were removed from office (Habib Bourguiba and Zine El Abidine Ben Ali) and two assumed the office as acting presidents (Fouad Mebazaa and Mohamed Ennaceur).

Background

Tunisia has had seven presidents since the proclamation of the republic on 25 July 1957:

  • Habib Bourguiba was appointed president by the parliament on 25 July 1957, until the election of a permanent president. After the Constitution was enacted on 1 June 1959, a presidential election was held on 8 November 1959. Being the only one running for office, he gained 91% of the votes to serve a five-year term. He was elected unopposed three more times. Shortly after winning his fourth full term, he was proclaimed president for life. He remained in office until being deposed in the coup d'état of 7 November 1987, organized by his prime minister, Ben Ali.
  • Zine El Abidine Ben Ali was prime minister and interior minister under Bourguiba. Ben Ali had Bourguiba declared medically unfit to serve 7 November 1987. Per the constitution, he became acting president pending new elections. Ben Ali was elected unopposed for a full five-year term on 2 April 1989, and was reelected three more times (the first time unopposed). On 14 January 2011, his regime fell in the Tunisian Revolution that started on 17 December 2010. Mohamed Ghannouchi, his prime minister, claimed the presidency, serving as acting president.
  • Fouad Mebazaa was designated by the Constitutional Council to serve as acting president on 15 January 2011. Under Article 57 of the constitution, an election should have taken place between 45 and 60 days following Mebazaa's appointment. But on 3 March 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 remained acting president pending new elections.
  • Moncef Marzouki was elected president by the Tunisian Constituent Assembly on 12 December 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 31 December 2014.
  • Beji Caid Essebsi became the first president to be elected by universal suffrage after the revolution, on 21 December 2014. On 31 December 2014, he took office as the fifth president of Tunisia, and the first to be freely elected. He died on 25 July 2019, and was succeeded by Mohamed Ennaceur as acting president.
  • Mohamed Ennaceur became acting president in accordance with Articles 84 and 85 of the constitution on 25 July 2019, following the death in office of President Essebsi. Per the constitution, Ennaceur was to serve as acting president for no more than 90 days, during which an early presidential election was to be held. An election had already been scheduled for November 2019, but was brought forward to September to ensure that a new president would be sworn in before the 90-day limit.
  • Kais Saied was elected in September 2019. He took office on 23 October as the second president (Marzouki being the first) who was not an heir to Bourguiba's legacy.

Presidents

class="wikitable" width="100%" style="text-align: center;"
{{abbr|No.|Number}}

! Portrait

! Name
{{small|(Birth–Death)}}

! Term of office

! colspan="2" | Party

! Election

! Notes

rowspan="5" | {{color|#000|1}}

| rowspan="5" | 120px

| rowspan="5" | Habib Bourguiba
{{small|(1903–2000)}}

| rowspan="5" | 25 July 1957

7 November 1987

| rowspan="5" style="background: {{party color|Democratic Constitutional Rally}};" |

| rowspan="2" | Neo-Destour

| Interim

| {{small|Parliament abolished the monarchy and designated Prime Minister Bourguiba as interim president.}}

1959

| {{small|Bourguiba won the first presidential election in Tunisia's history.}}

rowspan="3" | SDP

| 1964

| {{small|Bourguiba won his second presidential term.}}

1969

| {{small|Bourguiba won his third and last presidential term according to the constitution.}}

1974

| {{small|After this election, Bourguiba proclaimed himself president for life.}}

rowspan="6" | {{color|#000|2}}

| rowspan="6" | 160x160px

| rowspan="6" | Zine El Abidine Ben Ali
{{small|(1936–2019)}}

| rowspan="6" | 7 November 1987

14 January 2011

| rowspan="6" style="background: {{party color|Democratic Constitutional Rally}};" |

| SDP

| Interim

| {{small|Following the 1987 coup d'état, Prime Minister Ben Ali took office as interim president.}}

rowspan="5" | DCR

| 1989

| {{small|Ben Ali won the first presidential election in 15 years.}}

1994

| {{small|Ben Ali won his second presidential term.}}

1999

| {{small|Ben Ali won his third presidential term and Tunisia's first pluralist presidential election.}}

2004

| {{small|Ben Ali won his fourth presidential term after being allowed according to the 2002 constitutional referendum.}}

2009

| {{small|Ben Ali won his fifth and last presidential term before being deposed.{{cite web|url=http://www.businessnews.com.tn/tunisie--ben-ali-prate-serment-et-annonce-des-mesures-historiques,519,19322,1 |website=Business News |title=Ben Ali sworn in, announces historical measures |date=13 November 2009 |access-date=27 January 2021}}}}

rowspan="2" | {{color|#000|3}}

| rowspan="2" | 120px

| rowspan="2" | Fouad Mebazaa
{{Small|(1933–2025)}}

| rowspan="2" | 15 January 2011

13 December 2011

| style="background: {{party color|Democratic Constitutional Rally}};" |

| DCR{{efn|Mebazaa left the party leadership on January 18 and the DCR was dissolved on 9 March 2011.}}

| rowspan="2" | Interim

| {{small|Mebazaa, as speaker of Parliament, became interim president following the removal of Ben Ali by the Constitutional Council.}}

style="background: {{party color|Independent politician}};" |

| Independent

| {{small|Mebazaa's term was extended until the election of a Constituent Assembly after the constitution was repealed.}}

{{color|#000|4}}

| 168x168px

| Moncef Marzouki
{{Small|({{abbr|b.|born}} 1945)}}

| 13 December 2011

31 December 2014

| style="background: {{party color|Congress for the Republic}};" |

| CFR

| 2011

| {{small|Marzouki was not elected directly, but was elected temporarily by the Constituent Assembly until the next election.}}

{{color|#000|5}}

| 120px

| Beji Caid Essebsi
{{small|(1926–2019)}}

| 31 December 2014

25 July 2019 †

| style="background: {{party color|Nidaa Tounes}};" |

| Nidaa Tounes

| 2014

| {{small|Essebsi won the first two-round presidential election, and was the first president to die in office.}}

{{color|#000|6}}

| 120px

| Mohamed Ennaceur
{{Small|({{abbr|b.|born}} 1934)}}

| 25 July 2019

23 October 2019

|style="background: {{party color|Nidaa Tounes}};" |

| Nidaa Tounes

| Interim

| {{small|Ennaceur, as speaker of Parliament, became interim president following the death of President Beji Caid Essebsi.}}

rowspan="2" | {{color|#000|7}}{{efn|The official website of the president of Tunisia considers Saied to be the seventh to hold the office, as no distinctions are made between elected and interim presidents.{{cite web |title=President of the republic Kais Saied |url=https://www.carthage.tn/?q=ar/%D8%B1%D8%A6%D9%8A%D8%B3_%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AC%D9%85%D9%87%D9%88%D8%B1%D9%8A%D8%A9 |website=Carthage.tn |access-date=29 April 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201125225352/https://www.carthage.tn/?q=ar/%D8%B1%D8%A6%D9%8A%D8%B3_%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AC%D9%85%D9%87%D9%88%D8%B1%D9%8A%D8%A9 |archive-date=25 November 2020 |url-status=live}}}}

| rowspan="2" | 120px

| rowspan="2" | Kais Saied
{{Small|({{abbr|b.|born}} 1958)}}

| rowspan="2" | 23 October 2019

Incumbent

| style="background: {{party color|Independent politician}};" |

| rowspan="2" | Independent

| 2019

| {{small|Saied won the first presidential election in which a presidential debate was held.}}

style="background: {{party color|Independent politician}};" |

| 2024

| {{small|Saied won his second presidential term.
The first president to be reelected in 15 years.}}

{{notelist}}

Rank by time in office

style="float: right; margin-left:2em" class="wikitable"
{{center|150px
Habib Bourguiba
Longest presidency:
{{ayd|1957|7|25|1987|11|7|df=y}}
1957–1987}}

| {{center|140px
Mohamed Ennaceur
Shortest presidency:
{{ayd|2019|7|25|2019|10|23|df=y}}
2019}}

class="wikitable sortable"
Rank

! President

! Time in office

1

| Habib Bourguiba

| {{ayd|1957|7|25|1987|11|7|df=y}}

2

| Zine El Abidine Ben Ali

| {{ayd|1987|11|7|2011|1|14|df=y}}

3

| Kais Saied

| {{ayd|2019|10|23|df=y}}

4

| Beji Caid Essebsi

| {{ayd|2014|12|31|2019|7|25|df=y}}

5

| Moncef Marzouki

| {{ayd|2011|12|13|2014|12|31|df=y}}

6

| Fouad Mebazaa
{{small|(Acting President)}}

| {{ayd|2011|1|15|2011|12|13|df=y}}

7

| Mohamed Ennaceur
{{small|(Acting President)}}

| {{ayd|2019|7|25|2019|10|23|2019|df=y}}

Timeline

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from: 07/11/1987 till: 27/02/1988 color:psd

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from: 14/01/2011 till: 17/01/2011 color:rcd

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}}

See also

References

{{Reflist}}