Elections in Iraq

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Iraq

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Elections in Iraq gives information on election and election results in Iraq.

Under the Iraqi constitution of 1925, Iraq was a constitutional monarchy, with a bicameral legislature consisting of an elected House of Representatives and an appointed Senate. The lower house was elected every four years by manhood suffrage (that is, women did not vote). The first Parliament met in 1925. Ten general elections were held before the overthrow of the monarchy in 1958. The electoral system, however, was manipulated by the King and his advisors, who were Sunni Muslims, to ensure that the Shi'a majority were prevented from taking power.

Between 1958 and 2003 Iraq was ruled by a series of military regimes, all dominated by members of the Sunni Arab minority. Both the Shi'a and the Kurds were excluded from power, and under the regime of Saddam Hussein, who came to power in 1979, they were persecuted. Saddam's regime was largely run by Sunni Arabs from Tikrit, his home region. On October 16, 2002, after a well-publicized show election, Iraqi officials declared that Saddam had been re-elected to another seven-year term as President by a 100% unanimous vote of all 11,445,638 eligible Iraqis, eclipsing the 99.96% received in 1995. The United States and others outside Iraq said the vote lacked any credibility. Stories later surfaced stating that voting was compulsory and that the "yes" box had already been checked for voters in advance.

The multinational force's invasion of Iraq in 2003 overthrew Saddam's regime and installed an interim government in which all Iraq's ethnic and religious communities were represented. This government held elections on January 30, 2005 to begin the process of writing a constitution. Pro-U.S. groups and the formerly excluded Shi'a and Kurd factions claimed that the January 2005 elections were the first genuinely free elections in Iraq's history, with a fair representation of all ethnic groups. This is in stark contrast to previous elections, including those under the Constitutional Monarchy decades earlier. Opponents of the occupation, such as the insurgents and the Sunni faction, claim that the elections were not genuinely free and fair, pointing to several flaws in the process. The UN adviser to Iraq's election commission, Craig Jenness, said the complaints were not significant; "I don't see anything that would necessitate a rerun...There were nearly 7,000 candidates standing in this election and only 275 seats, so you're always going to have winners and losers and it's normal that the losers won't always be happy about it."[1][2]

Contents

[discuss] – [edit]
Summary of the 15 December 2005 Iraqi Council of Representatives election results
Alliances and parties Votes % Seats Gain/ loss
United Iraqi Alliance 5,021,137 41.2 128 -12
Democratic Patriotic Alliance of Kurdistan 2,642,172 21.7 53 -22
Iraqi Accord Front 1,840,216 15.1 44 +44
Iraqi National List 977,325 8.0 25 -15
Iraqi National Dialogue Front 499,963 4.1 11 +11
Kurdistan Islamic Union 157,688 1.3 5 +5
The Upholders of the Message (Al-Risaliyun) 145,028 1.2 2 +2
Reconciliation and Liberation Bloc 129,847 1.1 3 +2
Turkmen Front 87,993 0.7 1 -2
Rafidain List 47,263 0.4 1 0
Mithal al-Alusi List 32,245 0.3 1 +1
Yazidi Movement for Reform and Progress 21,908 0.2 1 +1
National Independent Cadres and Elites   0 -3
Islamic Action Organization In Iraq - Central Command   0 -2
National Democratic Alliance   0 -1
Total (turnout 79.6 %) 12,396,631   275  

Iraqi parliamentary elections Flag of Iraq
v  d  e
1924 | 1953 | 1954 | 1958 | 1980 | 1989 | 1996 | 2000 | 2005 (Jan) | 2005 (Dec)
Iraqi presidential elections Flag of Iraq
1995 | 2002
Iraqi referenda Flag of Iraq
1921 | 2005

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