Former Benin president Thomas Boni Yayi has stepped down as leader of the opposition Les Démocrates party, citing health reasons, in a move that comes at a difficult moment for the country’s main opposition force ahead of next month’s presidential election. Africanews reported that the 72-year-old said he wanted to “fully dedicate this new phase of his life to rest” and would hand interim leadership to the party’s vice presidents and governing bodies.
His departure follows a major electoral setback for Les Démocrates. In Benin’s January 11, 2026 parliamentary election, the party failed to win a single seat after falling short of the 20% threshold required for representation. Reuters reported that the two ruling parties aligned with President Patrice Talon captured all 109 seats in the National Assembly, leaving the opposition shut out of parliament entirely.
The party has also been weakened in the presidential race. Africanews reported in October 2025 that Les Démocrates was barred from the 2026 presidential election after the constitutional court upheld the rejection of its candidacy over sponsorship and registration requirements. That decision effectively removed the main opposition party from direct contention in the vote due in April 2026. With Talon due to leave office at the end of his second term, attention has shifted to the ruling coalition’s candidate, Finance Minister Romuald Wadagni, who was formally chosen in September 2025. Reuters reported at the time that Wadagni had Talon’s backing and was seen as the continuity candidate for the governing bloc.
Boni Yayi’s resignation also comes after heightened political tension in Benin following a failed coup attempt in December 2025. Reuters reported that soldiers briefly claimed to have seized power, but loyalist forces restored order and the government said the coup had been foiled. That is an important distinction: despite some later summaries suggesting otherwise, there was no successful junta takeover of the state.
The opposition’s internal strains have deepened further after the arrest of figures linked to the alleged coup plot, including individuals politically connected to Boni Yayi’s circle. Against that backdrop, his exit leaves Les Démocrates facing the presidential election weakened, excluded from parliament and under pressure to redefine its strategy in one of the most consequential political moments in recent Beninese politics.




















