Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Iraqi lawmakers fail to elect leader

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BAGHDAD — Iraqi lawmakers failed for a second time on Saturday to select a head of state, further deepening a political crisis spurred by infighting after federal elections five months ago.

Only 202 lawmakers arrived at Iraq’s parliament, falling short of the two-thirds quorum required for the 329-member legislatur­e to conduct an electoral session to select the country’s president. Saturday’s vote could not be held as many lawmakers allied with Iran-backed parties did not attend. Another electoral session is scheduled for Wednesday.

Iraqi politician­s have so far failed to agree on a compromise candidate for the presidency, exacerbati­ng a political vacuum that also prevents the appointmen­t of a prime minister. Political groups now have two options, lawmakers said: Continue negotiatio­ns until consensus is reached or dissolve parliament and hold federal elections again.

“Now the political process is in trouble,” said Shiite lawmaker Muhammad Saadoun Al-Sayhoud.

Only 58 lawmakers showed up to the first presidenti­al vote in early February. That time, influentia­l Iraqi Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr boycotted the session after Iraq’s Supreme Court suspended the nomination of front-runner Hoshyar Zebari, his bloc’s endorsed candidate. This time, their lawmakers arrived at parliament, draped in white shrouds that Muslims use to wrap their dead, in a sign of their willingnes­s to die for the cleric.

Saturday’s failure to achieve quorum reflects ongoing disagreeme­nts between al-Sadr, who won the largest number of seats in the 2021 October federal election, and a coalition of Iran-backed Shiite parties that form the Coordinati­on Framework over the nomination of candidates.

Al-Sadr’s win, with 73 seats, was a major upset to Iranbacked parties. But the powerful cleric’s intention to form a government with Kurdish and Sunni allies while excluding the Iran-backed parties has proven difficult. Rebar Khalid, interior minister in the semi-autonomous Kurdish region, has been the choice candidate of the Kurdistan Democratic Party, al-Sadr’s ally.

Lawmakers belonging to their Kurdish rivals, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, were conspicuou­s no-shows to the session.

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