Any Kuwaiti-born citizen who is 30 years of age on election day, who is able to read and write in Arabic and has not been convicted of a felony or a crime involving breach of honor or trust is eligible to run for office. On 22 June 2016 parliament passed a law banning any citizen who had insulted the emir from running, resulting in several major opposition figures including
Musallam Al-Barrak becoming ineligible candidates. All registered candidates need to pay a registration fee of fifty
Kuwaiti dinars (about US$162.50). Registration of candidates took place between 4 and 13 March 2024. A total of 255 candidates registered to contest the elections.
Female candidates Fourteen women registered to run in the 2023 election, the lowest since the
2016 election. The only female MP during the 17th session,
Jenan Boushehri, re-ran for office. Eight female candidates ran in the
Third Constituency, two candidates ran in the
Second and
Fourth constituencies, and only one ran in the
First and
Fifth.
Secularist blocs Two
Kuwait Democratic Forum-affiliated members are running in the current election. Mohammed Jawhar Hayat in the first constituency and Saud Al-Babtain in the second constituency.
Populist blocs The
Popular Action Bloc led by former MP Musallam Al-Barrak announced three candidates for this election. Basel Al-Bahrani in the first constituency, Mutib Al-Rathaan of the fourth constituency and Mohammad Al-Dossari in the fourth constituency.
Sunni Islamist blocs Hadas, an offshoot of the Muslim Brotherhood, decided to field four candidates in four different constituencies. Mohammad Al-Matar replacing Osama Al-Shaheen in the first constituency.
Hamad Almatar and Abdulaziz Al-Saqabi will rerun in the second and third constituencies respectively. Muaath Al-Duwaila, son of former MP Mubarak Al-Duwaila, will run in the fourth constituency. The
Islamic Salafi Alliance have four candidates in this election. Three of these candidates were in the last session, Fahad Al-Masoud of the second constituency, Hamad Al-Obaid of the third, and Mubarak Al-Tasha of the fourth. Abdullah Al-Kandari will run in the fifth constituency for the Salafi Alliance. The salafist group, Thawabit Al-Umma, will have two candidates running in the elections. Current MP
Mohammed Hayef al-Mutairi and the recently exonerated
Bader Al-Dahoum.
Shia Islamist blocs The
Justice and Peace Alliance, affiliated with the
Shirazi Shiite school, registered two candidates
Saleh Ashour in the first constituency and Khalil Al-Saleh in the second constituency. Taalof, a group that broke off from the
National Islamic Alliance, have registered three candidates including two who were in the last session. Their three candidates are
Ahmed Lari of the first constituency, Abdullah Ghandfar of the third constituency and Hani Shams of the fifth constituency. ==Conduct==