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Kazakhstan abandons 'super-presidential' form of governance: President

Kazakh President Tokayev announced Kazakhstan is transitioning from a "super-presidential" system to a presidential republic with an influential parliament, aiming for a new state governance with stronger checks and balances and a focus on citizens.

Anadolu Agency ASIA
Published February 10,2026
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Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev announced on Tuesday that his country is abandoning its "super-presidential" form of governance.

Speaking at an extended government meeting in the capital Astana, Tokayev declared that Kazakhstan is transitioning into a presidential republic with an influential parliament.

"A panoramic look at the political reforms of recent years makes it clear that Kazakhstan is finally abandoning the super-presidential form of government, moving toward a presidential republic with an influential, authoritative parliament," he said.

He explained that the proposed constitutional amendments continue the trajectory of political transformation set in motion in recent years, including the 2022 constitutional reform.

According to the president, the provisions of the new draft constitution affirm the coherence and logic of the political system's evolution under the principle of "a strong president, an influential parliament, and an accountable government."

Tokayev stated that, in essence, this constitutes the creation of a "new system of state governance."

He added that the proposed changes would strengthen the system of checks and balances, redistribute powers, and most importantly, enhance the stability and effectiveness of "all political institutions."

In the draft constitution, Tokayev concluded, the principle of "not the individual for the state, but the state for the individual" has taken a more concrete form, noting that this is what they have been "consistently moving toward since 2019."