Listen "Business as Usual?"
Episode Synopsis
On September 7, 2024, Algeria’s incumbent president, Abdelmadjid Tebboune, was re-elected for a second five-year presidential term with 94.65 percent of the vote. Tebboune came into power in 2019, replacing Abdelaziz Bouteflika, who ruled the country for 20 years and planned on running for a fifth term until widespread protests for radical change ended his rule.Data from Algeria’s National Independent Authority for Elections (ANIE) suggest that just 23 percent of the population voted for a candidate. Only three regime-approved candidates contested, with Tebboune's main challengers being conservative Abdelaali Hassani Cherif and socialist Youcef Aouchiche, who received 3 percent and 2.1 percent of the vote, respectively.The widespread disaffection reflects the legacy of 2019’s Hirak movement—whose complaint was not just against Bouteflika but the entire Algerian political system—and many activists from this generation have been forced into exile or detained while numerous associations and media outlets have shuttered. Tebboune has managed discontent through social spending to improve quality of life, while his foreign policy has focused on key geopolitical questions around Palestine, Western Sahara, the Sahel, and Libya. Algiers-based AIAC contributing editor Maher Mezahi joins the podcast to discuss what the elections mean for Algeria’s future and its role in the region.
More episodes of the podcast The AIAC Podcast
We must learn to sit in the dark together
21/10/2025
Nepal's Gen Z reckoning
26/09/2025
After the uprising
18/09/2025
De-dollarization from below
23/06/2025
What's left of Nigeria's feminist left?
30/04/2025
Between Nkrumah and neoliberalism
17/03/2025
Africa's sibling rivalry
11/12/2024
What is free and fair?
21/10/2024
Fuel's errand
10/10/2024
France? Nothing good comes of it
05/07/2024
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.