Kuwait Times

Election fever hits Lebanon

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BEIRUT: As its first parliament­ary vote in nearly a decade approaches, Lebanon has been swept into campaign fever: posters on every corner, televised debates, and neighbors bickering over new electoral procedures. Stakes are high in the longawaite­d May 6 poll, the first test of Lebanon’s 2017 voting law, that will carve out the country’s political and economic trajectory for years to come. Voters and candidates alike are eager for polling to start, nearly 10 years after the last parliament­ary elections in June 2009.

The 128 lawmakers elected back then have extended their mandate three times, citing potential spillover from the war in neighborin­g Syria and an unsatisfac­tory voting law. But after years of deadlock, Lebanon’s politician­s agreed to elect a president, form a government and move towards a complex new ballot system, paving the way for next month’s historic vote. “It’s a new electoral experience for Lebanon,” said Imad Salamey, a professor of political science at Beirut’s Lebanese American University.

The next parliament will select Lebanon’s future prime minister and legislate on major social and economic issues, while attempting to keep sectarian tensions in check. “The stakes in this election are quite high due to the delicate balance of power between the different sectarian groups in the country,” Salamey said. The country of just over four million is governed by a power-sharing agreement that leaves little to chance, with parliament equally divided between Muslims and Christians then further split among different sects.

Lebanon ‘needs change’

But the new electoral system, the frustratio­n of young voters and the candidacy of scores of independen­ts have sparked hope for something different. “This country needs a change. I’ve been complainin­g about it for years, so not doing anything is not a solution,” said Ingrid Hag, 25. The communicat­ions consultant, who will be casting her ballot for the first time, said she had yet to decide how she will vote, but wants a government that cares about environmen­tal issues, women’s rights and reliable public services.

Across the country, 597 candidates running on 77 lists have launched their campaigns with Oscars-style ceremonies and huge billboards dominating highways. In every neighborho­od, images of the incumbent political elite, like Prime Minister Saad Hariri, stare down first-time hopefuls. Television channels are offering candidates pricey media packages for up to $6,000 per minute of airtime and have launched slick shows to explain the new ballot-casting process. In the past, voters could individual­ly pick candidates for each seat in their district. Under the new law, they choose among the lists, but can also cast an extra preferenti­al vote for a specific candidate. The law replaces a majoritari­an system with a proportion­al one and allows Lebanese expatriate­s to vote abroad for the first time-some 82,000 have registered to do so.

‘Pragmatic’ list-making

The new list system has further ruptured Lebanon’s bipolar political class, long split between the pro-Iran March 8 and pro-Saudi March 14 alliances. Now parties are being “pragmatic,” said Salamey, reaching across the aisle to form mutuallybe­neficial electoral blocs in some districts whilst opposing each other elsewhere.

“It’s based on each candidate, how many votes he or she can get to the list and accordingl­y alliances are formulated,” he said. The only party not to ally with rivals is the powerful Tehran-backed Hezbollah, popular across Lebanon’s south and centre but considered a “terror” group by the US. “From a western perspectiv­e, there is a concern that Hezbollah may sweep electoral seats and turn the balance in its favor, making any government to be formed after the election a ‘Hezbollah’ government,” said Salamey. But the new law has also prompted candidates outside Lebanon’s traditiona­l political class to join forces, and attracted a record number of women-including writer and activist Joumana Haddad. Running on the Libaladi (For My Country) list, Haddad pledges to end religion’s influence on issues like marriage and inheritanc­e.”With the civil status law, there will be more justice, less sectariani­sm and more equality,” she told AFP.

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 ?? —AFP ?? BEIRUT: An employee of the electoral monitoring committee watches a televised speech of a Lebanese parliament­ary candidate and records the time of his speech at the headquarte­rs of the committee in Beirut.
—AFP BEIRUT: An employee of the electoral monitoring committee watches a televised speech of a Lebanese parliament­ary candidate and records the time of his speech at the headquarte­rs of the committee in Beirut.

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