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Vol. I · No. 164
Saturday, 13 June 2026
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Africa

Senegal Parliament Speaker Quits as Sonko Power Struggle Deepens

Senegal's National Assembly president El Malick Ndiaye resigned on May 24, 2026, a move that could clear the way for sacked Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko to seek the parliamentary speakership, deepening a constitutional standoff that has rattled the West African nation.
Senegal's National Assembly president El Malick Ndiaye resigned on May 24, 2026, a move that could clear the way for sacked Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko to seek the parliamentary speakership, deepening a constitutional standoff that has rat…
Senegal's National Assembly president El Malick Ndiaye resigned on May 24, 2026, a move that could clear the way for sacked Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko to seek the parliamentary speakership, deepening a constitutional standoff that has rat… / @thecradlemedia · Telegram

Senegal's National Assembly president El Malick Ndiaye stepped down from his post on May 24, 2026, according to statements carried by French-language wire services. The resignation clears a procedural path for former Prime Minister Ousmane Sonko, whom the government dismissed last year, to stand as a candidate for the speakership himself—a prospect that threatens to formalise a rupture between the executive and legislative branches that observers say has no recent precedent in Dakar.

The political geometry is unusually stark. Ndiaye's departure, effective immediately, leaves the 165-seat chamber without a presiding officer at a moment when Sonko's allies hold a majority bloc. Whether President Bassirou Diomaye Faye can form a government that commands that chamber—or whether Sonko's parliamentarians will backfill the speakership with one of their own—will determine whether Senegal's transitional institutions hold or fracture further. The sources do not indicate when a vote to replace Ndiaye is expected to take place.

The Sonko Gambit

Sonko's supporters have argued for months that the former prime minister's removal was unconstitutional, part of a broader campaign by the presidency to neutralise a rival who commands genuine street-level loyalty. The sacked premier was detained in 2023 on charges including insurrection and conspiracy, prompting waves of protests that left dozens dead. Sonko denies the charges and has cast himself as a victim of judicial harassment deployed by Senegal's old guard.

His ability to now run for parliament speaker represents a reversal of fortunes that would have seemed improbable twelve months ago. Under Senegalese law, a sitting prime minister cannot simultaneously hold the speakership; Sonko was neither when he was dismissed. Whether his current legal standing—still facing outstanding court proceedings—presents an obstacle to taking the chair is a question the sources do not resolve. What is clear is that his movement, Pastef, controls enough votes to determine the outcome.

The Executive's Dilemma

For President Faye, the resignation is a double-edged development. Ndiaye was not his appointee; the speaker had aligned with Sonko's parliamentary bloc and was arguably an obstacle to executive agenda-setting. His departure removes a potential veto point. But it also hands Sonko a platform from which to challenge or undercut the president directly. The two men were once allies—they rode a joint wave of anti-establishment sentiment to win elections in March 2024—but that coalition has unravelled over policy priorities and the pace of institutional reforms.

Dakar-based political analysts writing in regional outlets have noted that the rift between Faye and Sonko now resembles the pattern familiar from other West African democracies where electoral alliances collapse once power is actually won. The presidency has not issued a formal statement on Ndiaye's resignation as of this filing. The absence of comment is itself a signal: Faye is calculating whether to accept a Sonko-aligned speaker or attempt to block the appointment through procedural means that could themselves trigger a constitutional challenge.

Structural Tensions in a Transitional System

Senegal's 2021 political crisis, which saw President Macky Sall attempt to delay elections before relenting under pressure, left the country's constitutional architecture weakened and contested. The elections that followed brought Faye and Sonko to power on a promise to clean house. What neither man fully anticipated was how quickly the incentives created by that same system would drive them into conflict. The executive needs parliamentary cooperation to govern; the parliamentary bloc needs the speakership to check the executive. Both understand that whoever controls the chamber's agenda controls the timeline for constitutional reforms, anti-corruption investigations, and the appointment of judges who will adjudicate Sonko's own pending cases.

The deeper pattern here is institutional: Senegal is stress-testing a democratic transition in real time, with real stakes for judicial independence, press freedom, and the norms that allow power to change hands without violence. It is doing so in a region where coups have become episodic—Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, Guinea all experienced military takeovers within the last decade—and where the durability of civilian constitutional order is not assumed.

What Comes Next

The immediate question is procedural: how quickly can Sonko's allies convene a session and elect a replacement? Senegalese parliamentary rules require a quorum and a vote; the timeline depends on whether Faye's camp attempts to delay through legal challenges or chooses to accept the result and negotiate committee assignments. If the presidency chooses confrontation, Senegal's constitutional council would be asked to rule on the legality of the speakership bid—an outcome that could take weeks and leave the parliament in limbo.

What the sources do not yet establish is how the wider Sonko-Faye relationship evolves once the speakership is filled. Whether this becomes a managed coexistence, a cold war, or an outright rupture will define Senegalese politics for the next several years. The resignation is a move in that game, not its conclusion.

This publication's wire inputs focused on the resignation statement and its immediate procedural implications. Western wire services had not filed detailed context on Sonko's pending legal cases at the time of this filing; regional francophone outlets provided the deeper parliamentary arithmetic.

Wire provenance

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

  • https://t.me/france24_fr/124581
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire