The event caters to diverse interests, including medicine and emerging career paths
The high-profile television journalist landed a seat in the capital Beirut after running on a list of outsiders known as Kulluna Watani.
Lawyer Roula Tabsh is also a first-time victor in the capital, but she ran on Hariri's Future Movement list which was otherwise dealt a blow at the polls.
At 65, she has served as a member of parliament four times and as education minister, and was awarded a Legion d'Honneur by former French president Jacques Chirac in 2003.
She is a member of the prime minister's inner circle.
Her life was turned upside down by her brother's assassination in 2005. She stopped wearing skirt-suits and make-up and began covering her hair with a traditional white headscarf.
The 50-year-old politician from Lebanon's northern district of Bcharreh will return for another term in parliament.
She is married to Lebanese Forces chief Samir Geagea, and is credited with steering the party for 11 years while he was detained during Syria's military occupation of Lebanon, until his release in 2005.
The tall, slender woman is seen as a hardliner within the movement and is often accused of being anti-Muslim.
A pathologist by training, 57-year-old Ezzedine has served as minister for administrative reform - but her rise to parliament is unprecedented.
It will be her first term as a legislator, but also the first time Lebanon's port city of Tyre has a female representative. Ezzedine hails from the Amal Movement, a strong Shiite Muslim party that is allied to Hezbollah and has never put forward a female candidate.
Ezzedine is divorced and is a mother of two daughters.
Jamali is a professor of business management and freshman parliamentarian, who will serve in Lebanon's second city Tripoli after running on the Future Movement's list.
Her father was the mayor of the coastal metropolis in the north, but it has never before been represented by a woman.
"We have a historic opportunity to bring new faces to Tripoli," she said in a campaign video before the vote.
Among those that did not win seats are Joumana Haddad, a writer and activist who ran in Beirut, and an all-women's list from the conservative northern area of Akkar.
But Lebanese women flooded the polling stations on Sunday, both as voters and party delegates. Females made up 50.8 per cent of registered voters in 2018, according to the United Nations.
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