Live Wire
15:10ZPRESSTVIsraeli airstrike hits Sarafand in southern Lebanon15:09ZALLAFRICAEbola Outbreak Spreads in DR Congo as Misinformation Hampers Response15:08ZWFWITNESSJD Vance pushes back against reports of potential Iran agreement15:08ZTASNIMNEWSPutin advises enemies not to fight Russia, calls for negotiations15:08ZTASNIMNEWSAraghchi says Iran, Pakistan closer than ever to finalizing agreement15:07ZGEOPWATCHU.S. Vice President Vance denies reports of deal on Strait, Iran nuclear program15:06ZCLASHREPOREU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas compared Israel's treatment of Palestinians to apartheid South Africa15:05ZSTANDARDKEEight students arrested over arson attack at Kilifi school in Kenya15:10ZPRESSTVIsraeli airstrike hits Sarafand in southern Lebanon15:09ZALLAFRICAEbola Outbreak Spreads in DR Congo as Misinformation Hampers Response15:08ZWFWITNESSJD Vance pushes back against reports of potential Iran agreement15:08ZTASNIMNEWSPutin advises enemies not to fight Russia, calls for negotiations15:08ZTASNIMNEWSAraghchi says Iran, Pakistan closer than ever to finalizing agreement15:07ZGEOPWATCHU.S. Vice President Vance denies reports of deal on Strait, Iran nuclear program15:06ZCLASHREPOREU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas compared Israel's treatment of Palestinians to apartheid South Africa15:05ZSTANDARDKEEight students arrested over arson attack at Kilifi school in Kenya
Markets
S&P 500742.52 0.65%Nasdaq25,907 0.38%Nasdaq 10029,630 0.62%Dow514.54 1.02%Nikkei92.82 0.69%China 5035.28 1.06%Europe89.56 0.11%DAX42.22 0.13%BTC$64,156 2.32%ETH$1,685 2.49%BNB$610.37 1.97%XRP$1.15 3.61%SOL$68.48 4.66%TRX$0.3138 2.27%DOGE$0.09 6.18%HYPE$60.43 6.69%LEO$9.54 0.59%RAIN$0.0131 0.01%QQQ$721.44 0.60%VOO$682.63 0.65%VTI$367.08 0.76%IWM$295.17 1.64%ARKK$75.95 0.65%HYG$79.95 0.01%Gold$386.38 0.02%Silver$60.68 0.23%WTI Crude$126.04 2.17%Brent$48.12 2.06%Nat Gas$11.29 1.16%Copper$39.2 0.67%EUR/USD1.1567 0.00%GBP/USD1.3402 0.00%USD/JPY160.20 0.00%USD/CNY6.7623 0.00%S&P 500742.52 0.65%Nasdaq25,907 0.38%Nasdaq 10029,630 0.62%Dow514.54 1.02%Nikkei92.82 0.69%China 5035.28 1.06%Europe89.56 0.11%DAX42.22 0.13%BTC$64,156 2.32%ETH$1,685 2.49%BNB$610.37 1.97%XRP$1.15 3.61%SOL$68.48 4.66%TRX$0.3138 2.27%DOGE$0.09 6.18%HYPE$60.43 6.69%LEO$9.54 0.59%RAIN$0.0131 0.01%QQQ$721.44 0.60%VOO$682.63 0.65%VTI$367.08 0.76%IWM$295.17 1.64%ARKK$75.95 0.65%HYG$79.95 0.01%Gold$386.38 0.02%Silver$60.68 0.23%WTI Crude$126.04 2.17%Brent$48.12 2.06%Nat Gas$11.29 1.16%Copper$39.2 0.67%EUR/USD1.1567 0.00%GBP/USD1.3402 0.00%USD/JPY160.20 0.00%USD/CNY6.7623 0.00%
OPENNYSEcloses in 4h 46m
themonexus.
Vol. I · No. 163
Friday, 12 June 2026
15:13 UTC
  • UTC15:13
  • EDT11:13
  • GMT16:13
  • CET17:13
  • JST00:13
  • HKT23:13
← back to Saturday edition◉ LIVE ON THE WIREfollow this thread in real time
Africa

El Malick Ndiaye resigns as Senegal parliament speaker amid coalition tensions

Senegal's National Assembly president El Malick Ndiaye submitted his resignation on 24 May 2026, the latest sign of strain within the Bassirou Diomaye Faye administration eight months after a landmark government reshuffle.

El Malick Ndiaye, president of Senegal's National Assembly, announced his resignation before the chamber on 24 May 2026, according to reports carried via France24's French-language wire service. His departure marks the most senior institutional casualty since President Bassirou Diomaye Faye dissolved the government in February, a move that fractured the ruling coalition's public facade less than two years into an administration that swept to power on a promise to dismantle the old guard.

The resignation arrives at a delicate moment for a government that won its mandate partly on the strength of a coalition — Principal, a bloc of parties and movements centred on Faye and his prime minister, Ousmane Sonko — that was always broader than it was cohesive. That coalition captured the presidency in March 2024 and a parliamentary majority in elections held later that year, delivering Faye an unusual combination of executive and legislative control. The early euphoria obscured a structural tension: the coalition held together largely by opposition to what it replaced, not by agreement on what to build next.

When Faye dismissed Sonko and the cabinet in February 2026, the move was read by analysts as an attempt to reassert presidential authority over a government that had grown unwieldy and internally disputatious. The sacking produced a new administration but did not resolve the underlying disagreements. Ndiaye's resignation — executed publicly, before the assembled chamber rather than through a written statement — suggests those disagreements have now reached the parliamentary layer of the governing arrangement.

The proximate causes of Ndiaye's decision remain partially opaque. Sources covering the National Assembly have not published the full text of his remarks, and no formal successor has been announced. What is clear is that the post carries substantial institutional weight: the speaker presides over the legislative calendar, manages committee assignments, and is the face of parliament in negotiations with the executive. A vacancy in that role, in a legislature still dominated by Faye's coalition, creates a procedural bottleneck just as the government faces pressure to demonstrate governance capacity.

The broader significance of the resignation is geopolitical as well as domestic. Senegal has long been counted among West Africa's more stable democracies, a reputation that carried real value in a subregion where coups and constitutional disruptions have become recurrent. The Faye administration represents the most significant political rupture in that country's recent history — an electoral revolution that transferred power from the regime that governed under Macky Sall to one running on an explicit anti-establishment platform. Each internal fracture, whether the February dismissal or this month's parliamentary resignation, tests whether that revolution can institutionalise without the repressive mechanisms that characterised its predecessor. Western partners, including France and the European Union, have been watching closely; so have regional bodies and, increasingly, alternative partners with long-term strategic interests in the Sahel and Atlantic corridor.

For now, the Faye administration faces a two-track problem. The executive branch must find enough parliamentary cooperation to govern, while the legislative branch must function without a recognised speaker. How the coalition manages that vacancy — whether it fills it quickly with a loyalist or attempts a broader consensus arrangement — will signal how much latitude the governing alliance still has for internal disagreement before it becomes an operational liability.

This publication's wire feed carried the France24 Telegram item at 20:04 UTC on 24 May 2026. The desk prioritised reporting the resignation as a structural development within the Faye coalition rather than as a personality story, consistent with coverage of Senegal since the 2024 transition.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/france24_fr/18668
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire