Senegal’s Legislative Agenda Heats Up as Constitutional Reform Takes Center Stage
The National Assembly of Senegal has just wrapped up a pivotal Conference of Presidents session, setting an ambitious legislative agenda for the coming days. Key labor and social security bills are slated for committee review this Saturday, June 20, with full parliamentary debates scheduled for Monday, June 22. Yet all eyes remain fixed on the constitutional reform proposal, which has become the most contentious issue on the legislative docket.
Ousmane Sonko, President of the National Assembly, addressed the Bureau of the Assembly in no uncertain terms regarding the constitutional amendment. He revealed that the mandatory presidential feedback on the proposal—submitted weeks ago—remains conspicuously absent. The clock is ticking, and Sonko has made it clear: if no response is received from President Bassirou Diomaye Faye by Monday, June 22, the Assembly’s Bureau will convene immediately to advance the legislative process regardless of the presidency’s position.
The Speaker of Parliament underscored his determination to ensure the constitutional reform is debated and voted on before the current ordinary session concludes. His remarks came as he also pressed the Executive branch for long-overdue financial documents—namely the Revised Finance Bill and the Budget Orientation Debate—both of which were already approved in the Council of Ministers weeks prior.
The legislative-executive standoff is intensifying, with both branches locked in a high-stakes game of procedural brinkmanship. The Assembly’s leadership has drawn a line in the sand, signaling that constitutional reform will not be sidelined. Meanwhile, the absence of critical financial texts further strains relations, leaving little room for delay.
As the June 22 deadline looms, the nation watches closely to see whether the presidency will engage or whether the Assembly will take decisive action to move the reform forward.
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