Nationalist cleric Moqtada Sadr wins Iraq election

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Nationalist cleric Moqtada Sadr wins Iraq election

The possibilities for alliances to form a coalition government remain wide open.

By AFP

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Published: Mon 21 May 2018, 7:01 AM

Last updated: Mon 21 May 2018, 9:08 AM

The final results of Iraq's elections confirmed on Saturday a breakthrough for nationalist cleric Moqtada Sadr, who was in the lead, ahead of internationally favoured prime minister Haider Al Abadi.
But the possibilities for alliances to form a coalition government remain wide open.
None of the three leading groups won more than 55 of the 329 seats up for grabs in parliament at the May 12 vote, which saw record high abstentions with just 44.52 per cent turnout - the lowest since the first multiparty elections in 2005.
In a system calibrated to divide parliament after the fall of dictator Saddam Hussein following the American-led invasion of 2003, Moqtada Sadr's Marching Towards Reform alliance is far from assured of governing Iraq for the next four years.
Sadr, who has ruled himself out of becoming prime minister, is looking to be the kingmaker and to cobble together a technocrat government from a dozen parties.
But despite leading the tally, his alliance falls short of a majority and it will take lengthy wrangling to forge a coalition.
Negotiations to form a coalition government began as soon as the vote ended a week ago, with the involvement of the US and Iran.
Tricky negotiations
"Last week was the agreement of principles, and now we enter the phase of forming coalitions," properly speaking, Iraqi political commentator Hicham Al Hachemi told AFP.
The alliance between the populist preacher and Iraq's communists won 54 seats.
In second place is the Conquest Alliance, made up of ex-fighters from paramilitary units that battled Daesh, which won 47 seats, ahead of the Victory Alliance, headed by Abadi, which had 42.
The vote was a slap in the face to the widely reviled elite that has dominated Iraq since the 2003 US-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein.
Sadr rose to prominence in the wake of the US invasion, when his militia fought a  insurgency against American troops.
After years on the sidelines, he has reinvented himself as a champion of the poor and linked up with secularists to battle corruption.
Sadr declared on Twitter that the results showed "reform has won and corruption is weakened," but he faces a tricky regional context as he begins coalition negotiations.


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