Algeria election campaign enters last week
Some political parties in Algeria are fueling the electoral competition by asserting that they will decisively win the electoral race.
The electoral campaign in Algeria enters its last week, where the weekend makes for an opportunity to increase electoral activities such as interviews and debates.
Demanding issues, improving the standard of living, and confronting the severe economic crisis that Algeria is experiencing have been a mainstay for the majority of the candidates in the last two days.
On the other hand, some parties in Algeria have fueled the electoral competition by asserting that the electoral race is in their favor, as did National Liberation Front Party in Algeria Secretary-General Abou El Fadhel Baadji from Setif.
The leaders of political parties continue their electoral gatherings in the various Algerian governorates, while the majority of independent list candidates are continuing their direct dialogue activities.
The majority of campaign participants stressed Wednesday in their gatherings the importance of participating in the elections, considering that the boycott option opens the door to some agendas that promote scenarios for transitional stages and foreign interference in Algeria's affairs.
The campaign for the legislative elections scheduled for June 12 in Algeria continues, in a competition between about 1,500 lists, more than half of which presented themselves as “independent.”
The capital, Algiers, is the largest electoral district in the country, with 34 out of 407 parliamentary seats. These elections take on political importance as they are the first parliamentary elections to take place after the popular movement and the first to be supervised by an independent electoral commission in the history of the electoral elections in Algeria.