Kuwait names new Cabinet amid political, financial troubles

Kuwait names new Cabinet amid political, financial troubles
An aerial view shows Kuwait City after the country entered virtual lockdown, following the outbreak of coronavirus, in Kuwait City, Kuwait March 2020. (Reuters)
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Updated 29 December 2021
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Kuwait names new Cabinet amid political, financial troubles

Kuwait names new Cabinet amid political, financial troubles
  • New finance minister Abduwahab Al-Rushaid is an outspoken, young figure
  • New appointments shakes up Cabinet typically filled with older bureaucrats

DUBAI: Kuwait’s ruling emir announced the formation of a new Cabinet on Tuesday, breaking a weekslong deadlock with the nomination of 15 new government ministers who will have to address a series of political and financial difficulties.
The new Cabinet of Prime Minister Sheikh Sabah Al-Khaled Al Hamad Al Sabah represents the Gulf Arab state’s fourth government over the last year and a half alone.

Kuwait has struggled to defuse a standoff between members of the Gulf’s only elected parliament and a government appointed by the emir. The dispute has delayed an overhaul of Kuwait’s welfare system and prevented the sheikhdom from taking on debt — leaving it with little in its coffers to pay bloated public sector salaries.
In recent weeks, however, 84-year-old Emir Sheikh Nawaf Al Ahmad Al Sabah has ramped up efforts to resolve the political paralysis, granting amnesty to members of the self-exiled opposition.
A few new, young faces from civil society stood out among the appointees. Three members from the parliament’s so-called opposition bloc landed government positions, including the young and popular lawmaker Hamad Rouhaddeen, who took over the Information Ministry from a supporter of the royal family.
The new finance minister Abduwahab Al-Rushaid is an outspoken, young figure with substantial support from merchant families — shaking up a Cabinet typically filled with older bureaucrats.
Kuwaiti analysts on social media suggested that the appointments could weaken the sway of opposition lawmakers in parliament who have blocked government reforms. More parliamentarians now have tribal representation in the new Cabinet and may be persuaded to support the government.
Sheikh Nawaf wished the prime minister luck from his palace and expressed “hope that the executive and legislative branches would cooperate for the sake of Kuwait’s development and welfare,” the state-run KUNA news agency reported.