Algeria’s lower house of parliament elected on Wednesday Mouad Bouchareb as its new speaker to replace Said Bouhadja, whom it accused of mismanagement.
Deputies of the ruling National Liberation Front (FLN) and its coalition partner, the Democratic National Rally, accused Bouhadja, who is around 80, of mismanagement in the job of speaker.
But opposition lawmakers boycotted the parliamentary session in solidarity with Bouhadja, who described his ouster as illegal.
In remarks to Asharq Al-Awsat, he said that parliamentarian chosen by its fellow majority deputies “will continue to be labeled illegitimate even when the legislative term of the National People's Assembly ends in 2022.”
He also ruled out that the presidency would be behind his ousting, and said: “I am one of the strongest defenders of the policies of President (Abdulaziz) Bouteflika.”
During a plenary session on Wednesday, a total of 320 out of 462 lawmakers elected Bouchareb, of the FLN, as the new speaker.
The vote was boycotted by MPs from the Socialist Forces Front (FFS), the oldest opposition party (14 deputies), the leftist Workers' Party (11), the Islamic Peace Movement (34) and the Front for the Future (opposition), the secular Rally for Culture and Democracy (9), and the National Republican Alliance (6 deputies), who belong to the pro-president group, in addition to the Islamic National Reform Movement (one deputy) and the Alliance of Justice - Renaissance - Construction, which brings together three Islamic parties (15 deputies).