Félix Tshisekedi


Félix Antoine Tshisekedi Tshilombo is a Congolese politician who has been the President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo since 25 January 2019. He is the leader of the Union for Democracy and Social Progress, the oldest and largest party of the Democratic Republic of Congo, succeeding his late father Étienne Tshisekedi in that role, a three-time Prime Minister of Zaire and opposition leader during the reign of Mobutu Sese Seko. Tshisekedi was the UDPS party's candidate for president in the December 2018 general election, which he won, despite accusations of irregularities from several election monitoring organisations and other opposition parties. His victory was upheld by the Constitutional Court of the DRC after another opposition politician, Martin Fayulu, challenged the result, but Tshisekedi has been accused of making a deal with his predecessor, Joseph Kabila. The election marked the first peaceful transition of power since the DRC became independent from Belgium in 1960.
Since the parliament and provincial governorships are still controlled by the Common Front for Congo coalition, which is aligned with Kabila, Tshisekedi's ability to govern or even appoint a new Prime Minister has been limited for the first six months of his term. He has named his coalition partner and political heavyweight, Vital Kamerhe, as his Chief of Cabinet, at first having designated him for the role of prime minister but not having the parliamentary support to get him appointed. In May 2019 he arrived at a deal with the parliament's Kabila-aligned majority to appoint Sylvestre Ilunga as the new Prime Minister. It was not until July 27, 2019, that negotiations finally ended between Tshisekedi and the parliament, agreeing on the formation of a new cabinet.

Early life and education

Tshisekedi was born in Léopoldville on 13 June 1963 to mother Marthe and father Étienne Tshisekedi, who served as Prime Minister of Zaire in the 1990s. Félix Tshisekedi had a comfortable life as a youth in the capital. However, when his father created the UDPS in the early 1980s, publicly opposing Mobutu, Félix was forced to accompany his dissident father into house arrest in his native village in central Kasaï. This led to him putting his studies on hold. In 1985, Mobutu authorised him, his mother, and his brothers to leave Kasaï. He went on to live in Brussels, Belgium, where he worked at odd jobs and became an active UDPS militant.

Political career

In late 2008, Tshisekedi was named as the UDPS National Secretary for external relations. In November 2011, he obtained a seat in the National Assembly, representing the city of Mbuji Mayi in Kasai-Oriental province. He did not take his seat citing a fraudulent election and his mandate was invalidated for "absenteeism".
In May 2013, he refused a position of rapporteur at the Independent National Electoral Commission, saying that he did not want to put his political career on hold as CENI's article 17 excludes membership for those who are members of a political formation.
In October 2016, Tshisekedi became vice secretary general of the UDPS. On 31 March 2018, he was elected to lead the UDPS, after his father's death on 1 February 2017. The very same day, he was chosen by his party to be the UDPS presidential candidate in the general election that took place on 30 December 2018.
On 10 January 2019, it was announced Tshisekedi had been elected President of the Democratic Republic of the Congo in the elections held on 30 December 2018. He defeated another opposition leader, Martin Fayulu, and Emmanuel Ramazani Shadary, who was supported by term-limited outgoing president Joseph Kabila who has been president for eighteen years. Fayulu, the runner-up, alleged rigging and challenged the election results. On 19 January, the challenge was dismissed by the Constitutional Court, officially making Tshisekedi president-elect. He was officially sworn in as President on 24 January 2019, taking office the next day. This marked the first time since the Congo gained independence in 1960 that an incumbent president peacefully transferred power to the opposition.
South Africa, on 20 January congratulated Felix Tshisekedi on becoming president of DR Congo despite the African Union and EU warning of doubts over the result announced by the Constitutional Court. After Tshisekedi was sworn in, it was reported that a member of Kabila's coalition would be picked to serve as his Prime Minister.
On 13 March 2019, Tshisekedi signed a decree to pardon approximately 700 prisoners, including imprisoned political opponents of Kabila.
, April 2019
In the early months of 2019 negotiations were underway between Tshisekedi and the FCC coalition that controls the National Assembly and Senate, which is controlled by former president Kabila. In late April, Jeune Afrique reported that Kabila proposed to the President the mining company executive Albert Yuma as a candidate for Prime Minister. Yuma supports the new Mining Code adopted in 2018, which put the DRC in dispute with international mining companies, and Tshisekedi has been under foreign pressure to not appoint him. The Civil Society of South Kivu recommended to the President the appointment of his chief of staff Vital Kamerhe as Prime Minister. For those months Tshisekedi continued working with ministers of the former President Kabila's government as he has been hamstrung by parliament. He has faced challenges in dealing with the Kivu conflict as well as the Ebola outbreak in the region. In early March, the President started a program to improve infrastructure, transport, education, housing, communication, health, water, and agriculture.
Most of the provincial governorships were also won by Kabila-affiliated candidates.
On 20 May 2019, he reached a deal with the FCC coalition and Joseph Kabila, appointing the career civil servant Sylvestre Ilunga as prime minister. Ilunga began his political career in the 1970s and had held a number of cabinet posts under the regime of former dictator Mobutu Sese Seko before his overthrow in 1997. Ilunga is also an ally of Kabila. In late July 2019, Tshisekedi reached a deal with the parliament on the formation of a new government. Ilunga's new cabinet will include 65 members, 48 ministers and 17 vice-ministers, which will be divided between the Kabila-aligned FCC and Tshisekedi's CACH alliance. The majority of the ministries went to the FCC, including three of the six most important ones, while the Foreign Affairs, Interior, and Budget portfolios will go to the President's allies.