ARIANA: With punching bags for “beating corruption” and clowns to yellow-card the system, an independent Tunisian “anti-party” has launched an unusual campaign to win over voters fed up with political elites.
Its name is Aich Tounsi, which means “Live the Tunisian Way,” and this young civil society movement — which put on sports and cultural events before moving into politics — hopes to enter Parliament after Oct. 6 elections.
In a working class neighborhood in the capital Tunis, Aich Tounsi activists wear yellow T-shirts reading “Don’t be scared, we’re not a party” while distributing campaign flyers.
“We are different from classic political parties. We will give up immunity and all other parliamentary privileges,” Ghazi Mrabet, candidate for Ariana district, told AFP.
Faced with a skeptical grocer, the lawyer and human rights activist insisted: “We are new. None of us have participated in government. There are no representatives from political parties among us.”
Unconvinced, the trader replied that he would have liked Aich Tounsi to continue defending the rights of Tunisians as a social movement, rather than participating in elections and becoming “like the others.”
The national mood is currently against mainstream political parties. In the first round of presidential elections on Sept. 15, candidates from the ruling parties were beaten by two political outsiders.
Many observers expect this dynamic to continue into parliamentary elections, which could benefit independent lists — or parties that can establish reformist credentials.
For Mrabet, “Tunisians need a breath of fresh air and new faces.”
“For about a year, Aich Tounsi has been saying that political parties have failed, that politicians have stolen from and violated Tunisia through a system based on corruption, patronage and cronyism,” he added.
Aich Tounsi was founded in April 2018 by Olfa Terras, an entrepreneur known for her philanthropy. With her husband, she launched the Rambourg Foundation to fund film, sports tournaments and cultural spaces in Tunisia.
Her spouse Guillaume Rambourg is a former financier, known in French media for his financial support for the French President Emmanuel Macron’s election campaign.
Taking after the Rambourg Foundation, Aich Tounsi organized a campaign to promote civic engagement, and screenings in poor areas to show Tunisia’s football world cup matches in June 2018.
To draw up its “road map,” Aich Tounsi says it carried out a “national consultation” that involved contacting 415,000 Tunisians by telephone.
Its program promises to fight corruption, guarantee equal opportunities, and to improve socio-economic conditions for Tunisians.
This approach is winning support, one analyst said.
“Disillusioned by the entire political class, Tunisians want new faces, a renewal, and Aich Tounsi was able to attract attention after intensive field work and direct contact with the people, especially the middle class,” political scientist Slaheddine Jourchi told AFP.
Moreover, “they have important financial means that allowed them to organize cultural events that attracted a lot of young people, and the attention of the media, which helped present Aich Tounsi to a wider public.”
Other movements have also canvassed the country presenting themselves as alternatives to established parties, including media mogul Nabil Karoui’s Qalb Tounes.