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2009 Basra governorate election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2009 Basra Governorate election

← 200531 January 2009 (2009-01-31)2013 →

All 35 seats for the Baghdad Governorate council
 First partySecond partyThird party
 Nouri al-MalikiAbdul Aziz al-Hakim
LeaderNouri al-MalikiAbdul Aziz al-Hakimal-Faiz
PartyState of LawAl-Mehraab Martyr ListGathering of Justice and Unity
Last election3200
Seats before3200
Seats won2052
Seat changeIncrease17Decrease15Increase2
Popular vote239,00774,87934,862
Percentage37%11.6%5.4%
SwingIncreaseDecreaseIncrease5.4%

 Fourth party
 
LeaderMuqtada al-Sadr
PartySadrist Movement
Last election2
Seats before2
Seats won2
Seat changeNo change
Popular vote32,020
Percentage5.96%
SwingIncrease

Governor of Baghdad before election

Muhammad al-Waili
Fadhila

Subsequent Governor

Shitagh Abbud
State of Law

TheBasra governorate election of 2009 was held on 31 January 2009 alongside elections for all othergovernorates outsideIraqi Kurdistan andKirkuk.

Background

[edit]

One seat in the election is reserved forAssyrian Christians[1]

Basra is the main oil-producing and transit centre in Iraq, which has led to intense competition over control of its Governorate.[2] It has been the centre of competition between the al-Maliki Federal government, which controls the police and army, the Islamic Virtue Party Governor of Basra which controls the Oil Protection Corps and local militias from theSadrist Movement andTharallah. Following theBattle of Basra in 2008, the central government seized control of the city's streets from the Sadrist Movement and the security situation improved.

In April 2007,SIIC successfully brought a no-confidence motion against Governor Waili. This dismissal was ratified by Prime MinisterNouri al-Maliki in July, but eventually overturned by the Supreme Court.[2]

The central government has organized "Local Support Committee" militias, has spent$100 million in reconstruction projects and has started paying unemployment benefits in the province. This was expected to lead to an increased support for Prime MinisterNouri al-Maliki'sIslamic Dawa Party.[2]

Meanwhile, the Islamic Virtue Party dropped Waeli from its candidate list, reportedly due to his "polarizing" effect.[2]

In a move away from their traditional apolitical stance, a list with a core support from theShaykhiya religious community stood for the first time.[3]

Basra Region

[edit]
See also:Basra Federal Region

In November 2008Wael Abdul Latif, an Independent Islamist MP backed by tribal Sheikhs, submitted a petition to the Electoral Commission of Iraq signed by 34,800 people calling for a vote on aRegion of Iraq covering only the governorate of Basrah.[4] The Sadrist movement opposed the move, saying it was "playing with fire" as did theIslamic Dawa Party of Prime MinisterNouri al-Maliki.SCIRI remained neutral, as it supports a nine-province Region covered the whole of southern Iraq. As the petition was signed by more than 2% of the population, the commission published an official request for signatures; if more than 10% of the population had signed it before 15 January 2009, a referendum would have been held within 15 days.[5][6] In the event, the initiative failed to reach 10% and was struck down by the Electoral Commission. Backers accused the al-Maliki federal government of blocking their media campaign and appealed the decision to the Federal Court.[7]

Results

[edit]
Summary of the 31 January 2009Basra governorate election results
Coalition 2005/2009Allied national partiesLeaderSeats (2005)Seats (2009)ChangeVotes
State of Law CoalitionIslamic Dawa PartyNouri Al-Maliki320+17239,007
Al Mihrab Martyr ListISCIAbdul Aziz al-Hakim205-1574,879
Gathering of Justice and Unity-2+234,862
Independent Free Movement ListSadrist MovementMuqtada al-Sadr22-32,020
Iraqi Islamic PartyIraqi Islamic PartyTariq al-Hashimi-2+224,817
Iraqi National ListIraqi National AccordIyad Allawi42-221,091
Islamic Virtue PartyIslamic Virtue PartyAbdelrahim Al-Husseini121-1120,932
Chaldean Democratic Union Party
(Assyrian reserved seat)
CDUPAblahad Afraim Sawa-1+1227
Other Parties198,274
Total4135-6646,109
Sources:this article -Al Sumaria -New York Times -[8]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Iraqi parliament approves amendment for provincial election law,Xinhua, 2008-11-03
  2. ^abcdIn Basra, political skirmishing heats up as elections near,Los Angeles Times, 2008-12-28
  3. ^The Candidate Lists Are Out: Basra More Fragmented, Sadrists Pursuing Several Strategies?,Historiae, 2008-12-12
  4. ^Basra heading towards independent regionArchived 2011-10-01 at theWayback Machine,Al Sumaria, 2008-11-17, accessed on 2009-01-05
  5. ^A New Twist in Iraq's Shi'ite Power Struggle,Time magazine, 2008-11-16, accessed on 2009-01-05
  6. ^The Basra Federalism Initiative Enters Stage Two,Historiae, 2008-12-15
  7. ^Autonomy Referendum For Iraq's South Struck Down,Radio Liberty, 2009-01-20
  8. ^final election resultsArchived 2011-10-12 at theWayback Machine,Niqash, 2009-02-25
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