The head of the Tunisian Workers' Party, Hamma Hammami, affirmed that President Kais Saied does not have a project for Tunisia, but rather an authoritarian project, and that the real solution to the crisis lies in the overthrow of the current regime in its entirety.

He added - in a telephone interview via Al Jazeera Mubasher - that overthrowing this system - parliament, presidency and government - and then activating a popular democratic system that achieves the goals of the Tunisian revolution is the best solution, continuing, "The Tunisian people are tired of replacing one tyrant with another, and a reactionary ruler with another."

Regarding the welcoming of some Tunisians to the decisions of Kais Saied and their going to celebrate in the streets, Hammami said that this happened before 1987 when Zine El Abidine Ben Ali turned against Habib Bourguiba and the number of Tunisians who went out to celebrate Ben Ali exceeded hundreds of times the number of those who went out last Sunday, continuing. Everyone knows what Ben Ali's rule was."

The head of the Tunisian Workers' Party # Hama Hammami to Al Jazeera Mubasher: We warn Tunisians that # Qais_Said does not have a project for Tunisia, but rather has a project of authoritarian rule pic.twitter.com/8AO7PhGIuT

- Al Jazeera Mubasher (@ajmubasher) July 27, 2021

He added, "People also cheered in 2011 when the Ennahda movement ruled and said that it fears God and will fear for the Tunisian people, and now the Tunisian men and women are resenting it."

He continued, "We, as a political party, do not have a role to go along with public opinion in everything, and our role is to say to the Tunisians: You are right in your desire to remove the Ennahda movement from power, but our role is also to warn Tunisians that Qais Said has no project for Tunisia, but a project of authoritarian rule."

Regarding the Ennahda movement’s call for national dialogue, he said that these calls began since last November, and the Tunisian General Labor Union was the first to call for it, but these conflicting parties refused, including President Kais Saied himself, and each party continued to seek to remove the other party while Tunisia continued It collapses financially, socially and healthily.

He added, "These calls today are calls within the system to rearrange matters within it according to new balances of forces in which Qais Saeed may have a greater role, and the Ennahda movement may concede to him, and there are calls from within the movement for that indeed."

He continued, "The Workers' Party is not interested in these conflicts and concessions between the parties to the regime. Rather, we are interested in Tunisia's catastrophic situation today, economically, socially, culturally, health and security, and we have already presented a project and a tangible practical program to get Tunisia out of this crisis."

The Tunisian Judges Association had called for an expedited termination of the exceptional procedures and called for respect for the principle of separation of powers, stressing that the crisis is resolved by appealing to constitutional legitimacy and respecting the requirements of the democratic system.

The Tunisian Ennahda movement called for a national dialogue that brings together political and civil forces to get the country out of the crisis and preserve democratic gains.

The movement called on President Saeed to retract his recent decisions to freeze parliament, dismiss the prime minister, and address challenges within the constitutional framework.