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Iraq's Shia ruling alliance wins more than 100 local council seats

1 year ago
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Supporters of Iraq's Coordination Framework on August 12, 2022 [ZAID AL-OBEIDI/AFP via Getty Images]

Parties that makeup Iraq’s Shia ruling alliance together took at least 101 seats of the 285 available in provincial council elections held this week, state media reported, giving them the single-biggest share of seats, Reuters reports.

Members of the Shia Coordination Framework (CF) that already form the biggest single grouping in Iraq’s parliament competed on three main lists but said they would govern together after the 18 December provincial council vote, the first such agreement in a decade.

An electoral list bringing together several Iran-aligned military-political groups including the Badr Organisation and Asaib Ahl al-Haq came first, with 43 seats, followed by former prime minister Nouri Al-Maliki’s list with 35 seats.

A list bringing together moderate Shia cleric Ammar Al-Hakim and former Prime Minister Haidar Al-Abadi got 23 seats. Together, wins by these three lists give the CF 101 seats.

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Observers say their win was enabled by an electoral boycott by the CF’s fiercest competitor, populist Shia cleric Moqtada Al-Sadr. Separately, ousted Sunni parliament Speaker Mohammed Halbousi, who took the most votes in Baghdad and Anbar province, won 22 seats, and Sunni business mogul Khamees Khanjar took 14.

A host of local lists and smaller groups took the remaining seats. The election is seen as an indicator of the balance of power in a country where groups close to neighbouring Iran have steadily gained influence, and comes ahead of 2025 parliamentary polls.

Iraq holds provincial council elections after 10-year hiatus

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