The call came in a "national political reform programme," launched by the Opposition Coalition in the Gulf state where political parties are banned.
The coalition groups almost all opposition political groups, including Islamists, liberals and nationalists as well as trade and student unions, youth activists and civil society groups.
The programme proposes fundamental political, constitutional and legislative reforms to achieve a multi-party system and prevent members of the Al-Sabah family, in power for over 250 years, from leading the government.
The reforms call for amending 36 provisions of the 183-article constitution to restrict the wide powers held by the emir through a unique combination of presidential and parliamentary systems.
"We want to end the faulty confusion between the presidential and parliamentary systems," said the reform document released by Opposition Coalition coordinator and former MP Mussallam al-Barrak at a press conference.
The programme requires the emir to invite the winning party leader of an election to form the cabinet, limiting his prerogatives under the current system and rationaling his right to dissolve parliament.
"This is a national salvation programme to salvage whatever remains of Kuwait ... The ruling family can no longer lead the government," said Saad al-Ajmi, an official of the nationalist Popular Action Movement.
