119-sres310

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A resolution recognizing Tunisia's leadership in the Arab Spring and expressing support for upholding its democratic principles and norms.

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Introduced:
Jun 26, 2025
Policy Area:
International Affairs

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2
Actions
4
Cosponsors
0
Summaries
1
Subjects
1
Text Versions
Yes
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Latest Action

Jun 26, 2025
Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. (text: CR S3566-3567)

Actions (2)

Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. (text: CR S3566-3567)
Type: IntroReferral | Source: Senate
Jun 26, 2025
Introduced in Senate
Type: IntroReferral | Source: Library of Congress | Code: 10000
Jun 26, 2025

Subjects (1)

International Affairs (Policy Area)

Cosponsors (4)

Text Versions (1)

Introduced in Senate

Jun 26, 2025

Full Bill Text

Length: 9,170 characters Version: Introduced in Senate Version Date: Jun 26, 2025 Last Updated: Nov 14, 2025 6:18 AM
[Congressional Bills 119th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[S. Res. 310 Introduced in Senate

(IS) ]

<DOC>

119th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. RES. 310

Recognizing Tunisia's leadership in the Arab Spring and expressing
support for upholding its democratic principles and norms.

_______________________________________________________________________

IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

June 26 (legislative day, June 24), 2025

Mr. Durbin (for himself, Mr. Murphy, Mr. Coons, Mr. Welch, and Mr.
Schiff) submitted the following resolution; which was referred to the
Committee on Foreign Relations

_______________________________________________________________________

RESOLUTION

Recognizing Tunisia's leadership in the Arab Spring and expressing
support for upholding its democratic principles and norms.

Whereas Tunisia gained its independence from France on March 20, 1956, with
Habib Bourguiba serving as Prime Minister, before becoming Tunisia's
first President in 1957;
Whereas President Bourguiba led Tunisia through independence and the ensuing 30
years, a period that included vast social reforms and restrictions on
civil society and democratic participation;
Whereas, in 1987, Prime Minister Zine El Abdine Ben Ali deposed President
Bourguiba and named himself President of Tunisia, citing Bourguiba's
incompetence and failing health to justify his undemocratic actions;
Whereas President Ben Ali was subsequently elected in 1989 and 1994 without
genuine opposition, and was re-elected in 1999, 2004, and 2009 by
implausibly high vote margins in election processes that were widely
deemed as neither free nor fair;
Whereas President Ben Ali's rule was marred by gross human rights violations and
a lack of democratic freedoms;
Whereas the 2003 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, released by the
Department of State on February 25, 2004, stated, referring to Tunisia--

(1) ``Elections are regularly characterized by notable irregularities,
including voter intimidation, and there is no secret ballot.'';

(2) ``Security forces physically abused, intimidated, and harassed
citizens who voiced public criticism of the Government.'';

(3) ``The Government continued to impose significant restrictions on
freedom of speech and the press.''; and

(4) ``The Government remained intolerant of public criticism and used
physical abuse, criminal investigations, the court system, arbitrary
arrests, residential restrictions, and travel controls (including denial of
passports) to discourage criticism by human rights and opposition
activists.'';

Whereas, on December 17, 2010, 26-year-old fruit and vegetable street vendor
Mohamed Bouazizi lit himself on fire in desperate protest in Sidi
Bouzid, Tunisia, an act that was largely seen as the beginning of the
Arab Spring movement that spread throughout the region;
Whereas ensuing popular protests in Tunisia in response to corruption,
repression, and economic failure--

(1) forced the resignation of President Ben Ali from the office of
President;

(2) ended his 23-year rule; and

(3) further inspired similar pent up democratic demands throughout the
Arab world;

Whereas Tunisia emerged from the Arab Spring as one of the most hopeful and
promising reformed democracies in the region, including with an interim
government and a Constituent Assembly responsible for drafting a new
constitution and fostering political compromise for a future democratic
government;
Whereas, in February 2011, Senator John McCain urged United States support for
Tunisia's democratic transition, noting ``The revolution in Tunisia has
been very successful and it has become a model for the region.'';
Whereas, in March 2011, United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon pledged
full support for Tunisia's transition to democracy, hailing the
country's revolution as the spark that lit ``the profound and dramatic
changes'' sweeping the Arab world;
Whereas, on January 26, 2014, the Constituent Assembly of Tunisia adopted a new
constitution demonstrating consensus for building a democracy founded on
freedom and equality;
Whereas the new constitution of Tunisia includes Articles that--

(1) give equal rights to men and women;

(2) protection freedoms of assembly, peaceful demonstration,
expression, and publication; and

(3) outline an electoral system and representation for the Tunisian
people with checks and balances;

Whereas, in November 2014, Tunisia held its first genuinely free and fair
presidential election since its independence in 1956, with 27 candidates
freely competing for the office of president;
Whereas longtime politician Beji Caid Essebsi won the election in a runoff with
55 percent of the vote, becoming Tunisia's first legitimately elected
president since independence;
Whereas President Essebsi faced many difficult challenges, including economic
turmoil, terrorist attacks, and public expectations for change;
Whereas public disillusionment with the country's political elites increased
amid continued corruption and devastating acts of terrorism that
severely hurt the tourism industry and larger economy;
Whereas political outsider and constitutional law professor Kais Saied won the
presidential election held on October 13, 2019, and was sworn into
office 10 days later in a peaceful transfer of power;
Whereas, by 2021, protests in response to worsening economic conditions, further
exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, occurred across cities in Tunisia,
to which the police responded violently;
Whereas, in July 2021, President Saied capitalized on unrest to unilaterally
seize power by--

(1) dismissing Prime Minister Hichem Mechichi;

(2) suspending Parliament for 30 days; and

(3) assuming full executive authority without first consulting the
government;

Whereas, in late 2021, President Saied indefinitely suspended Parliament and
transferred all legislative powers to himself;
Whereas, in early 2022, President Saied continued to undermine Tunisia's
democratic institutions, including by taking control of the Independent
High Authority for Elections and dissolving the High Judicial Council;
Whereas, in July 2022, President Saied unilaterally put to a referendum a new
draft constitution, which--

(1) consolidated power to the presidency;

(2) limited parliamentary authority; and

(3) diminished judicial independence;

Whereas the new draft constitution was approved despite remarkably low voter
turnout and heavy domestic and international criticism surrounding the
lack of genuine debate throughout the drafting process;
Whereas, between 2021 and 2024, Tunisia experienced--

(1) a dramatic drop in voter participation and public confidence in the
political process; and

(2) an escalation in politically motivated arrests of political
opponents, judges, lawyers, journalists, and business leaders in an effort
to stifle dissent;

Whereas prior to Tunisia's presidential elections in October 2024, President
Saied relied on legal texts he introduced or drafted to disqualify or
jail nearly all of his political opponents;
Whereas President Saied won a second term on October 6, 2024, winning 90.7
percent of the vote with a 28.8 percent voter turnout, which was the
lowest turnout since the 2011 revolution;
Whereas, in April 2025, Tunisian authorities handed down mass convictions to 40
individuals, including a United States citizen, who were primarily human
rights defenders, lawyers, and prominent political opposition figures,
following a politically motivated trial marred with a lack of due
process and procedural flaws; and
Whereas President Saied's authoritarian actions continue to dramatically
undermined and threaten what remains of Tunisia's nascent democratic
institutions: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the Senate--

(1) recognizes Tunisia as the symbolic birthplace of the
historic Arab Spring movement and the country's notable
democratic reforms that emerged during the Arab Spring period;

(2) commends the Tunisian people for their courage and
democratic achievements made in the immediate years following
the Arab Spring;

(3) expresses deep concern for dramatic reversals of such
democratic gains, including--
(A) the erosion of judicial independence;
(B) political repression and arrests; and
(C) the undemocratic consolidation of power;

(4) urges the Government of Tunisia--
(A) to release all political prisoners;
(B) to respect the rights of the people to free
exercise of peaceful assembly, expression, and the
press; and
(C) to restore and respect the independence of
electoral, judicial, and anti-corruption institutions;

(5) supports the Tunisian people in their constitutionally
protected right to peacefully demonstrate; and

(6) urges the Trump Administration to sanction those
Tunisian officials who have been primarily involved in
repression of peaceful democratic activities.
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