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List of presidents of Lebanon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arab LeagueMember State of the Arab League


flagLebanon portal

This is a list ofpresidents ofLebanon since the creation of the office in 1926.

Constitutionally (de jure), the president's post carries significant responsibilities and influence. In practice, the president is largely a ceremonial and symbolic post due to external pressure or the formation of "consensus" cabinets, forcing the president to compromise. In theory, however, the president is responsible for appointing the entire government, therefore the ministers should work to his pleasure. Nevertheless, the president is still able to exercise influence on policy-making and has the role, in conjunction with the prime minister, of choosing ministers in the Government and safeguarding theConstitution of Lebanon.

National Pact

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Though it is not specifically stated in the constitution, an unwritten understanding known as theNational Pact, agreed in 1943, has resulted in the holder of the post being aMaronite Christian in every electoral cycle since that time.

List of officeholders

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State of Greater Lebanon, part of the French Mandate (1926–1943)

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No.PortraitName
(Birth–Death)
Term of officePolitical partyNotes
Took officeLeft officeTime in office
1Charles Debbas
شارل دباس
(1884–1935)
1 September 19262 January 19347 years, 123 daysIndependentDuring the period of theFrench mandate in Lebanon, he was appointed minister of justice, then president of the National Assembly, and finally first president of Lebanon. He was elected president in 1926, then re-elected in 1929 by 42 votes out of 44. He was kept at his post until January 1934 by the French mandate. Under his presidency, the disarmament of Greater Lebanon was decided, and he instituted the compulsory baccalaureate for the exercise of liberal professions. He was also minister of justice and president of the Chamber of Deputies in 1934.
1926, 1929
Privat-Antoine Aubouard
أنطوان أوبوار
(1874–1934)
2 January 193430 January 193428 daysIndependentHe was a member of the French High Commission.
2Habib Pacha Saad
حبيب باشا السعد
(1867–1942)
30 January 193420 January 19361 year, 355 daysIndependentHe was also speaker of the Representative Council of Greater Lebanon for 10 years prior to taking office.
3Émile Eddé
إميل أده
(1886–1949)
20 January 19364 April 19415 years, 74 daysNational BlocEddé served as thespeaker of the Parliament from October 1924 to January 1925 andprime minister of Lebanon from 11 October 1929 to 25 March 1930.[1]
1936
Pierre-Georges Arlabosse
بيار جورج أرلابوس
(1891–1950)
4 April 19419 April 19415 daysIndependentArlabosse was a French politician who became acting president of Lebanon for 5 days in the interim period in transfer of presidency fromÉmile Eddé.
4Alfred Georges Naccache
ألفرد جورج النقاش
(1887–1978)
9 April 194118 March 19431 year, 343 daysKataeb PartyServed as the prime minister of Lebanon (1941) and foreign minister of Lebanon (1953–1955).
Ayoub Tabet
أيوب تابت
(1884–1951)
19 March 194321 July 1943124 daysIndependentActing. Served as prime minister of Lebanon for the same period.
5Petro Trad
بيترو طراد
(1876–1947)
22 July 194321 September 194361 daysIndependentTrad was elected deputy from Beirut in 1925 serving in theLebanese Parliament for much of the 1920s and 1930s, either elected or appointed by the French authorities. He was a member of the parliamentary committee that worked on the French-Lebanese Treaty of 1936. The French supported him as the speaker of the Parliament from November 1934 to October 1935 and from October 1937 to September 1939.
6Bechara Khoury
بشارة الخوري
(1890–1964)
21 September 194311 November 194351 daysConstitutional BlocServed as prime minister from 1927 until 1928 and again in 1929 prior to his election as president on 21 September 1943. He was a strong nationalist who opposed the French mandate, and on 11 November 1943, he was arrested byFree French troops and imprisoned in theRashaya Citadel for eleven days along with other prominent politicians.
1943

Lebanese Republic (1943–present)

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No.PortraitName
(Birth–Death)
Term of officePolitical partyNotes
Took officeLeft officeTime in office
Émile Eddé
إميل أده
(1886–1949)
11 November 194322 November 194311 daysNational BlocThe high commissioner installed Eddé as president. Ten days later, however, under pressure from France's other allies in World War II, the French removed Eddé from office and restored the government ofBechara El Khoury on 21 November. He founded theNational Bloc.
1Bechara Khoury
بشارة الخوري
(1890–1964)
22 November 194318 September 19528 years, 301 daysConstitutional BlocHe was released 11 days after being arrested byFree French troops and imprisoned in theRashaya Tower replacingEmile Edde during World War II.
1943,1948
Fouad Chehab
فؤاد شهاب
(1902–1973)
18 September 195222 September 19524 daysMilitaryChehab refused to allow the army to interfere in the uprising that forced Lebanese PresidentBechara El Khoury to resign. Chehab became theprime minister of Lebanon in September 1952 and held the additional portfolio ofdefense minister while also forming amilitary cabinet. Chehab was then appointed acting president with the duty to ensure an emergency democratic presidential election.
2Camille Chamoun
كميل شمعون
(1900–1987)
23 September 195222 September 19586 yearsConstitutional BlocServed as minister of the interior, post, and telegraph (1943–1944) and minister of the interior, health, and public aid (1947–1948). Near the end of his term, Pan-Arabists and other groups backed byGamal Abdel Nasser, with considerable support in Lebanon's Muslim community attempted to overthrow Chamoun's government in June 1958 after Chamoun tried to seek another term as president against the constitution. Numerous clashes erupted, resulting in1958 Lebanon crisis.
National Liberal Party
1952
3Fouad Chehab
فؤاد شهاب
(1902–1973)
23 September 195822 September 19646 yearsIndependentChehab was theprime minister of Lebanon in September 1952, and held the additional portfolio ofdefense minister while also forming amilitary cabinet. Chehab was appointed acting president with the duty to ensure an emergency democratic presidential election. Following a path of moderation and co-operating closely with the variousreligious groups, and with both secular and religious forces, Chehab was able to cool tensions and bring stability back to the nation.His ideology inspired the presidencies of 2 other presidents.
1958
4Charles Helou
شارل حلو
(1913–2001)
23 September 196422 September 19706 yearsChehabistHelou served as ambassador to theVatican in 1947, minister of justice and health (1954–1955), and minister of education (1964). TheSix-Day War of 1967 strained sectarian relations in Lebanon. ManyMuslims wanted Lebanon to join the Arab war effort, while many Christians wished to eschew participation. Helou managed to keep Lebanon from entanglement, apart from a brief air strike, but found it impossible to put the lid on the tensions that had been raised. Parliamentary elections in 1968 revealed an increasing polarization in the country, with two majorcoalitions, one pro-Arab nationalism, led by Rashid Karami; and the other pro-Western, led jointly by former PresidentsCamille Chamoun,Pierre Gemayel, andRaymond Eddé, both made major gains and won 30 of the 99 seats each.
1964
5Suleiman Frangieh
سليمان فرنجية
(1910–1992)
23 September 197022 September 19766 yearsMarada MovementFrangieh formed and headed theMarada Movement. In the closest and possibly most controversial presidential election inLebanese history, theNational Assembly elected Frangieh to the Presidency of the Republic on 23 September 1970. He oversaw the beginning of theLebanese Civil War in the fifth year of his tenure.
1970
6Élias Sarkis
إلياس سركيس
(1924–1985)
23 September 197622 September 19826 yearsChehabistIt was hoped that Sarkis would be able to unite the warring factions and end the emerging civil war; by September 1976, however, the situation had grown past the government's control asSyria and other countries began interfering and complicating the situation. On 5 March 1980, Sarkis developed his policy as part of his attempts to create national accord: unity, independence, and parliamentary democracy, rejecting theCamp David Accords between Egypt and Israel.
1976
7Bachir Gemayel
بشير الجميل
(1947–1982)
23 August 198214 September 198222 daysKataeb PartyWas elected during the peak of the Lebanese Civil War. Soon after his election, fighters from theLebanese Forces were prohibited from wearing their uniforms and also from carrying their weapons in the streets. He notably had close relations with Israel, which led to hisassassination in an explosion that killed more than thirty people bySSNP memberHabib Shartouni. He was assassinated before officially taking office.
August 1982
8Amine Gemayel
أمين الجميل
(born 1942)
23 September 198222 September 19886 yearsKataeb PartyHe left his post in theKataeb Party after being elected president. Once elected, he refused to meet any Israeli official. With foreign armies occupying two-thirds of the country (Syria in the north and east, Israel in the south) and private armies independent of government control occupying most of the rest, Gemayel's government lacked any power. He re-organized the Lebanese Army, receiving support from theMultinational Force in Lebanon, and reached theMay 17 Agreement with Israel in 1983 despite fierce internal opposition, which stipulated the withdrawal of the Israeli forces and the end of the state of war between the two countries, but did not ratify it.
September 1982
Salim Al-Huss
سليم الحص
(1929–2024)
22 September 19885 November 19891 year, 44 daysIndependentGemayel decided to appoint Maronite army commander Michel Aoun to the office, notwithstanding the tradition of reserving it for a Sunni Muslim. Hoss refused to concede the prime minister's post to Aoun, so the two ended up heading rival administrations, with Aoun occupying the presidential palace atBaabda and Hoss establishing his own office in Muslim-dominatedWest Beirut.
Michel Aoun
ميشال عون
(born 1933)
22 September 198813 October 19902 years, 21 daysMilitaryThe outgoing presidentAmine Gemayel appointed Aoun as prime minister, heading a military government formed by six members of the Martial Court, three of which are Christian and three Muslim. He also dismissed the civilian administration of acting Prime MinisterSelim Hoss. The Muslims refused to serve and submitted their resignations on the next day. He controlled his own military faction, which was heavily based in East Beirut.
LebanonSecond Lebanese Republic
9René Moawad
رينيه معوض
(1925–1989)
5 November 198922 November 1989†17 daysIndependentMoawad served as the minister of posts and telecommunications (1961–1964), minister of public works (1969), and minister of national education and fine arts (1980–1982). His presidency was disputed by military generalMichel Aoun. Seventeen days after being elected, as he was returning from Lebanon's Independence Day celebrations, a 250 kgcar bomb was detonated next to Moawad's motorcade in West Beirut, killing him and 23 others.[2][3]
5 November 1989
Vacant (22 November 198924 November 1989)
10Elias Hrawi
إلياس الهراوي
(1926–2006)
24 November 198924 November 19989 yearsIndependentHrawi served as minister of public works and was a member of the independent Maronite Catholic bloc in the Parliament. Hrawi was elected at the Park Hotel inChtoura by 47 out of 53 members of two days after the murder of Lebanese PresidentRené Mouawad.[4][5] As president, Hrawi signed into law amendments to theconstitution that formalized theTaif Agreement reforms. He saw the end of the Lebanese Civil War. He signed the treaty of fraternity, co-ordination, and co-operation withSyria, in which Lebanon promised not to allow its territory to be used against Syria's interests.[6]
24 November 1989
11Émile Lahoud
إميل لحود
(born 1936)
24 November 199824 November 20079 yearsIndependent[a]Lahoud ran for the presidency in 1998 after having the constitution amended to allow the army commander-in-chief to run for office. This amendment is believed to have been backed by Syria.[7] When he became president in 1998, he aligned himself withHezbollah and picked his own man as prime minister,Selim Hoss.[8] This led to heightened tensions betweenRafiq Hariri and Lahoud.[9] During his term, he exerted more control over government decision-making than Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri or Parliament SpeakerNabih Berri.[10] In August 2001, he modified the limits on the executive authority of the presidency stipulated in the 1989Ta'if Accord and ordered security forces to launch a massive arrest sweep against nationalist dissidents without informing Hariri and other cabinet ministers.[10]
1998
Vacant (24 November 200725 May 2008)[11]
12Michel Suleiman
ميشال سليمان
(born 1948)
25 May 200825 May 20146 yearsIndependent[a]Suleiman was the commander of theLebanese Armed Forces (1998–2008). Lebanese political spectrum was deeply polarized, with virtually all parties being divided, either in the government loyalists or the opposition, which paved way for the non-partisan Michel Suleiman to be elected by parliament. Suleiman launched the table of national dialogue at the Presidential Palace in Baabda on 16 September 2008, in pursuance of theDoha Agreement's articles and in view of consolidating National Reconciliation and Entente.
2008
Vacant (25 May 201431 October 2016)[12]
13Michel Aoun
ميشال عون
(born 1933)
31 October 201631 October 20226 yearsFree Patriotic MovementAoun was the commander of the Lebanese Armed Forces (1984–1989), held a disputed military presidency and premiership (1988–1990) and leader of theFree Patriotic Movement. From the expiration of the term of PresidentMichel Suleiman on 25 May 2014 until 31 October 2016, the parliament was unable to obtain the majority required to elect a president, and the office was vacant for almost two and a half years, despite more than 30 votes being held. On 31 October 2016, the parliament finally electedMichel Aoun as president after an agreement was signed between the leader of the Free Patriotic MovementGebran Bassil, and the leader of the Lebanese ForcesSamir Geagea[13] at the latter's headquarters inMaarab, which required Samir Geagea, who had withdrawn from the presidential race, to endorseMichel Aoun's candidacy for the2016 presidential election, years after a long rivalry that went back to the Lebanese Civil War.
2014–2016
Vacant (31 October 20229 January 2025)[14]
14Joseph Aoun
جوزاف عون
(born 1964)
9 January 2025Incumbent1 year, 36 daysIndependent[a]Aoun is the fifth army commander turned president.[15] Aoun was previously a commander in theLebanese Commando Regiment, head of the9th Infantry Brigade, and commander of theLebanese Armed Forces. From the expiration of the term of PresidentMichel Aoun on 31 October 2022 until 9 January 2025, parliament were unable to obtain a majority required in electing a president, leaving the office vacant for two and a half years. Aoun was eventually elected after foreign mediation led by Saudi Arabia.
2022–2025

Timeline

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Birthplaces

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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^abcElected in a constitutional amendment while serving as theCommander of the Lebanese Armed Forces.

References

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  1. ^(in Arabic)Republic of Lebanon – House of Representatives History
  2. ^Jaber, Ali (23 November 1989)."Lebanon's president killed".The New York Times.Archived from the original on 15 November 2022. Retrieved29 March 2023.
  3. ^"New President of Lebanon killed".Los Angeles Times. 23 November 1989.Archived from the original on 15 November 2022. Retrieved29 March 2023.
  4. ^Seeberg, Peter (February 2007)."Fragmented loyalties. Nation and Democracy in Lebanon after the Cedar Revolution"(PDF). University of Southern Denmark. Archived fromthe original(Working Papers) on 4 January 2014. Retrieved23 October 2012.
  5. ^"Former President Hrawi loses fight against cancer".The Daily Star. 8 July 2006. Archived fromthe original on 5 August 2012. Retrieved15 July 2012.
  6. ^"Elias Hrawi, 80, Ex-Chief of Lebanon, is Dead".The New York Times. Agence France-Presse. 8 July 2006.Archived from the original on 6 June 2014. Retrieved15 July 2012.
  7. ^"Emile Lahoud".Lebanon Today.Archived from the original on 3 January 2014. Retrieved14 June 2012.
  8. ^Bosco, Robert M. (2009). "The Assassination of Rafik Hariri: Foreign Policy Perspectives".International Political Science Review.30 (4):349–363.doi:10.1177/0192512109342521.S2CID 144463265.
  9. ^Yun, Janice (2010)."Special Tribunal for Lebanon: A Tribunal of an International Character Devoid of International Law".Santa Clara Journal of International Law.7 (2).Archived from the original on 4 January 2014. Retrieved2 July 2012.
  10. ^abGambill, Gary C.; Ziad K. Abdelnour; Bassam Endrawos (November 2011)."Emile Lahoud President of Lebanon".Middle East Intelligence Bulletin.3 (11).Archived from the original on 12 May 2019. Retrieved29 March 2023.
  11. ^"Lebanon President Steps Down without Successor".Outside the Beltway. 24 November 2007.Archived from the original on 4 November 2022. Retrieved4 November 2022.
  12. ^Malas, Nour (25 May 2014)."Polarized Lebanon Left Without President as Sleiman's Term Expires".Wall Street Journal.Archived from the original on 25 May 2014. Retrieved4 November 2022.
  13. ^"Maarab agreement has not collapsed: Geagea".www.dailystar.com.lb. Archived fromthe original on 24 November 2021. Retrieved13 February 2021.
  14. ^Christou, William (9 January 2025)."Lebanon elects Joseph Aoun as president after two-year vacancy".The Guardian.ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved10 January 2025.
  15. ^Rammal, Mohamad (12 January 2025)."Joseph Aoun: Lebanon's fifth army general-turned-president".Al Majalla. Retrieved9 February 2025.
French Mandate
(1918–1943)
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(since 1943)
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