(Reuters) -
Leading Tunisian secular party Nidaa Tounes has won more than 80 seats
in an election for the new 217-member parliament against 67 seats for
Islamist party Ennahda, a party source, citing a preliminary ballot
count, said on Monday. Election authorities
are expected to announce official results later in the day, but if
confirmed the result would be a setback for Ennahda, which led a
government after winning the most seats in 2011 in the first free
election after the fall of Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali. Tunisians
voted for their new parliament on Sunday in a ballot that brings full
democracy within their reach almost four years after an uprising that
cast out autocrat Ben Ali and inspired the "Arab Spring" revolts. Moderate
Islamist party Ennahda and rival secular alliance Nidaa Tounes had been
favoured to win most seats in only the second free election in Tunisia
since Ben Ali fled into exile in Saudi Arabia after protests against
corruption and repression. With
no party expected to win outright, some coalition is likely during
weeks of deal-making to form a new government. Presidential elections
next month may also delay the immediate formation of a new
government.Ennahda party officials on Sunday urged supporters to wait
for the official results, while Nidaa Tounes leader Beji Caid Essebsi
had said "indications" showed his party had taken in the lead in the
poll. Electoral
authorities were due to give preliminary results later on Monday, but
larger parties had observers at each polling station to oversee the
initial counting. Since
its revolt, Tunisia has fared better than its neighbours which also
ousted long-ruling leaders during 2011, avoiding the turmoil suffered by
Egypt and the outright civil war of Syria and chaos of Libya. While
the role of Islam in politics overshadowed the first election in 2011,
jobs, economic opportunities and Tunisia's low-intensity conflict with
Islamist militants were the main concerns of a country heavily reliant
on foreign tourism. Critics
had blamed Ennahda's government with two smaller secular partners for
mismanaging the economy, for inexperience and for laxity with hardline
Islamists. Its government was forced to step down after a crisis over
the murder of two opposition leaders last year.After overcoming the
deadlock that threatened to sink its new democracy, Tunisia approved a
new constitution at the start of the year and won praise as a model for a
region struggling with chaos and violence.
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