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Senegal National Assembly Speaker Sonko re-elected leader of majority party PASTEF
The speaker of Senegal's parliament, Ousmane Sonko, won re-election on Saturday as head of the majority party, PASTEF.
Senegal National Assembly Speaker Sonko re-elected leader of majority party PASTEF
Ousmane Sonko served as Senegal's prime minister for two years before his sacking in May 2026. / Reuters

The speaker of Senegal's parliament, Ousmane Sonko, won re-election on Saturday as head of the majority party, PASTEF.

Sonko, who was sacked as Faye's prime minister last month, effortlessly won a leadership vote at a congress of their Pan-Africanist Pastef party in Diamniadio, outside the capital Dakar, according to a text read out at the gathering.

PASTEF said Sonko had unanimously won a vote of 583 party delegates.

President Bassirou Diomaye Faye won the presidency after Sonko was barred from standing in Senegal's 2024 election.

Sacking as prime minister

Sonko endorsed Faye to run in his place, then served as his premier.

But after months of mounting tension between them, Faye dismissed Sonko as prime minister on May 22.

Four days later, Sonko won election to his current post as speaker of the National Assembly.

The rift has triggered uncertainty for their PASTEF party, the biggest in parliament.

'No quarrel is worth tearing apart' Senegal: President Faye

Sonko told Saturday's gathering: "Our voice is that of a democratic revolution, popular and sovereign."

He vowed: "No attempt at sabotage will succeed, because the people will provide the guarantees needed to free our country."

Faye urged against further dividing the nation in a speech on Thursday.

"No quarrel, however bitter, is worth tearing apart the country we share," he said.

Cause of rift

Tensions emerged in July 2025, when the then-prime minister alleged a "problem of authority" in the country.

In May, the president took a shot at Sonko, saying the party needed to be "depersonalised" from any leader dominating it.

The two had disagreed on how to tackle Senegal's debt: Faye is open to discussions with the International Monetary Fund on a new loan programme, while Sonko advocated a sovereign approach.

Local elections are scheduled for 2027, ahead of a presidential election in 2029.

 

SOURCE:AFP