Imperial Valley Press

Al-Abadi defeated IS. Why won’t he sweep Iraq’s elections?

-

BAGHDAD (AP) — During four years in office, Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi has racked up a list of achievemen­ts that would make most politician­s envious. He prevailed over an Islamic State insurgency that at its peak controlled one-third of the country. He steered Iraq’s economy through a collapse in global oil prices. And he foiled a Kurdish bid for independen­ce.

And yet, despite that record, a second term is far from assured when Iraqis go to the polls in national elections on Saturday.

With the convention­al war against IS concluded, Baghdad is experienci­ng a relative lull in insurgent-style attacks and many Iraqis are expressing cautious hope for the future.

But the country continues to struggle with an economic downturn sparked in part by a drop in global oil prices, and the country’s most powerful political block is deeply fractured.

The unified Shiite parliament­ary block that gave its votes to al-Abadi in 2014 elections is now in pieces, with five factions competing for the popular vote on Saturday.

Al-Abadi has named his list al-Nasr — Arabic for “Victory” — in a clear reference to his military achievemen­ts against IS. But another list, headed by the leader of the country’s most powerful Shiite paramilita­ry group, which fought alongside the Iraqi forces in the war on IS, is also trying to claim the mantle of victory, calling itself al-Fatah — Arabic for “Conquest.”

Still, the victory over IS is far from voters’ minds, while the country’s grim employment situation is at the forefront.

“If you have a job today, you might not have one tomorrow,” said Abdelhadi Mohammed, an upholstere­r who left a job last month because he wasn’t receiving his wages.

With two adult daughters still living at home, the 60-year-old Mohammed moved to another workshop an hour and a half away. Thin, soft-spoken, and losing his teeth, he said he would vote “for change.”

“The security is OK,” he said. “The economy needs to improve.”

Under al-Abadi, the government cut public wages as oil prices plunged in 2014; the prime minister avoided mass layoffs and kept the currency afloat by securing support from the World Bank and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

In an address to the nation on the eve of the election, al-Abadi sought to reassure a dispirited electorate that a better future was in store.

“We have passed our ordeals,” he said. “The economy is improving. Oil prices are rising. Investment is coming.”

But voters fault him for failing to reform the country’s vast patronage networks that have drained the private sector of its vitality. Iraq sits near the bottom of global governance indicators.

During his time in office al-Abadi faced waves of anti-government protests. In the summer of 2015, anti-corruption protests mobilized millions of Iraqis in Baghdad and the country’s southern Shiite heartland, parts of the country that would traditiona­lly be al-Abadi’s base. In the summer of 2016 another wave of protests, largely led by influentia­l Iraqi cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, stormed Baghdad’s heavily fortified Green Zone. In both instances al-Abadi appeased his followers by promising sweeping reforms. But al-Sadr — who also commanded fighters in the war against IS and headed a powerful militia that fought U.S. forces in Iraq before that — is now running against him in a campaign focused on eliminatin­g government corruption and other social issues.

 ?? Iraq Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, speaks during a campaign rally in Baghdad. AP Photo/hAdI MIzbAn, FIle ??
Iraq Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, speaks during a campaign rally in Baghdad. AP Photo/hAdI MIzbAn, FIle

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States