• A girl watches as her mother votes at a polling station in Amman January 23, 2013. Reuters
    A girl watches as her mother votes at a polling station in Amman January 23, 2013. Reuters
  • David Martin, the chief observer of European Union Election Observing Mission to Jordan, opens a polling station in Amman. Reuters
    David Martin, the chief observer of European Union Election Observing Mission to Jordan, opens a polling station in Amman. Reuters
  • Election officials show an empty ballot box before it is sealed prior to voting. Reuters
    Election officials show an empty ballot box before it is sealed prior to voting. Reuters
  • A woman is helped to cast her ballot at a polling station in Amman. Reuters
    A woman is helped to cast her ballot at a polling station in Amman. Reuters
  • A woman helps her grandmother cast her vote to elected members of the kingdom's parliament. Reuters
    A woman helps her grandmother cast her vote to elected members of the kingdom's parliament. Reuters
  • A woman has her identity documents checked by an observer as she arrives at a polling station in Al Salt.
    A woman has her identity documents checked by an observer as she arrives at a polling station in Al Salt.
  • Jordan's prime minister Abdullah Ensour, second right, gestures after refusing to skip the voting line, at a polling station in Al-Salt.
    Jordan's prime minister Abdullah Ensour, second right, gestures after refusing to skip the voting line, at a polling station in Al-Salt.
  • Jordanians queue outside a polling station in the Palestinian refugee camp of Baqaa, north of Amman. Reuters
    Jordanians queue outside a polling station in the Palestinian refugee camp of Baqaa, north of Amman. Reuters
  • Jordanians carry an elderly man out of a car as he arrives to vote at a polling station in the Palestinian refugee camp of Baqaa, north of Amman. AFP
    Jordanians carry an elderly man out of a car as he arrives to vote at a polling station in the Palestinian refugee camp of Baqaa, north of Amman. AFP
  • A Jordanian observer cuts the voter ID card of a woman after she casts her vote. AFP
    A Jordanian observer cuts the voter ID card of a woman after she casts her vote. AFP

Jordan plans to modernise political system


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Authorities in Jordan are planning to “modernise” the country's political system.

The initiative aims to offer Jordanians “a political life that suits them”, said Samir Al Rifai, a former prime minister appointed this month by King Abdullah II to oversee the changes.

Jordan was rocked by an alleged plot to “destabilise” the kingdom in April that implicated Prince Hamzah, King Abdullah's half-brother and a former crown prince.

The kingdom has witnessed bouts of unrest in recent months, including scattered protests against a curfew and economic hardship triggered by the coronavirus pandemic.

As part of the process announced on Tuesday, Mr Rifai will head a committee reflecting the diversity of the country.

The panel is made up of 91 members representing Islamists, secularists, nationalists, communists and independents from politics, academia and civil society.


The body will present “recommendations to the government before October”, which will then submit them to the lower and upper houses of parliament, Mr Rifai told a news conference in Amman.

“Our goal is to have more Jordanians represented [in parliament], to motivate them to take part in elections and to make them feel their voice has an impact,” he said.

To achieve this, he said, the committee will propose “a new draft electoral law” and another on “political parties for a transition to a modern Jordan".

“We are moving towards real party political life,” he said, insisting the initiative was not subject to “any influence or interference” from the government.

Amman passed an electoral law in August 2016 that was supposed to allow for greater plurality.

But only a third of Jordan's nearly 4.5 million voters cast ballots in the last parliamentary election in November 2020.

While there are about 50 political parties in the country, their total membership is estimated to be less than 10,000.


Updated: June 30, 2021, 3:18 PM