Tidjane Thiam, ex-CEO of Credit Suisse, faces setback as Ivory Coast court removes him from electoral roll, citing nationality issues ahead of October presidential election.

"Itâs me or no one. We wonât put forward another candidate."
A political earthquake has struck the campaign of former Credit Suisse CEO Tidjane Thiam. In a decisive move on Tuesday, a court in Abidjan stripped Thiam from the electoral roll, effectively decapitating his bid for the Ivory Coast presidency just months before the vote. The court cited a controversial "loss of Ivorian nationality" as the basis for the exclusionâa legal maneuver that critics argue is politically motivated.
This ruling is not merely a procedural hurdle; it is a direct blockade. Under current Ivorian law, this specific decision cannot be appealed domestically, leaving Thiam with zero legal recourse within the country's own borders. The timing is brutal. Thiam was officially nominated as the presidential candidate for the Parti dĂŠmocratique de CĂ´te dâIvoire (PDCI) only last Thursday. Now, less than a week later, the machinery of the state has ground his momentum to a halt, throwing the opposition's strategy into total disarray ahead of the critical October 25 election.
"Itâs me or no one." With these five words, Tidjane Thiam has drawn a line in the sand. Speaking to AFP on Wednesday, the embattled banking titan turned politician made it crystal clear that his party, the PDCI, will not scramble to find a "Plan B." This is a high-stakes game of chicken with the Ivorian electoral commission.
Thiamâs refusal to step aside or anoint a successor signals a strategy of absolute defiance. "We wonât put forward another candidate," he declared, rejecting the option to pivot to a safe alternative. This bold stance places immense pressure on the political system, framing his exclusion not just as a legal issue, but as a crisis of legitimacy for the entire election. Thiam is not alone in the political wilderness; former President Laurent Gbagbo has also been purged from the list due to a court conviction, painting a picture of an election where the most potent challengers are being systematically sidelined.
With domestic doors slammed shut, Thiam is escalating the conflict to the regional stage. The opposition leader announced immediate plans to drag the case before the Court of Justice of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). This move transforms a national dispute into a test of international law and regional democratic standards.
The clock is ticking relentlessly toward the October 25 deadline. The appeal to ECOWAS is a desperate, yet necessary, gamble to force the Ivorian government's hand. By internationalizing the dispute, Thiam hopes to expose the nationality argument as a pretext for political exclusion. However, the efficacy of regional courts in overturning national election procedures remains a complex and often slow battlefield. Thiam is betting his entire political future on the hope that external pressure can crack the internal blockade before ballots are cast.
For Swiss observers, the saga of Tidjane Thiam is a dramatic second act. Once the titan of Paradeplatz, steering Credit Suisse through turbulent financial waters, Thiam has traded the boardroom battles of Zurich for the visceral political arena of West Africa. The contrast could not be more stark. In Switzerland, he grappled with shareholder revolts and corporate espionage scandals; in Ivory Coast, he confronts the raw power of the state apparatus.
This latest development resonates in Switzerland, where Thiam remains a figure of significant interest. His transition from global finance CEO to opposition leader was viewed by many as a bold reinvention. However, the "nationality" card played against him underscores the volatility of his new path. While he once commanded billions in assets, he now fights for the basic right to be recognized as a citizen eligible to lead his country. The outcome of this legal war will determine if the former Zurich banker can ever truly return home.