Senegal’s Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko has said he would remain head of the government rather than preside over the parliament, after his party’s landslide election win sparked questions over his political role.
The Ruling Pastef party of President Bassirou Diomaye Faye and Sonko won 130 seats in the 165-seat national assembly in snap parliamentary elections on November 17.
The victory was one of the largest majorities ever won by a single party in the West African nation and triggered speculation over whether Sonko should step down as prime minister to lead the national assembly in the interests of institutional balance.
Some had argued that Sonko should preside over the parliament to avoid any possible conflicts that could arise in an executive where the president owed his position to the prime minister.
Pastef’s sweeping legislative victory hands Senegal’s new leaders the means to implement their ambitious reform agenda, as the country grapples with high inflation and widespread unemployment.