Hand clash during the voting session on the new Iraqi government

Hand clash during the voting session on the new Iraqi government

The Al-Arabiya/Al-Hadath correspondent reported that there was a hand-to-hand struggle during the voting session on the new Iraqi government after the Iraqi parliament convened a session in anticipation of a vote on the government of Prime Minister-designate Muhammad Shi’a Al-Sudani and gave it confidence.

The House of Representatives held, Thursday evening, a session of granting confidence to the new government headed by the Speaker of the Council, Muhammad Al -Halbousi, and the presence of 253 deputies after its postponement for hours due to the continued consultation with the Sudanese on some of the names.
According to the Iraqi constitution, the administration and its policies must be supported by the voices of the absolute majority of the country’s deputies, or one in every two.

The government is confident “upon consenting to the ministers individually and the ministerial curriculum by an absolute majority,” as stated in Article 76 of the Constitution.


However, it is anticipated that this government will operate smoothly, particularly given that it backed the “State Administration Coalition” and that the coordination framework forces, which include a number of masses, such as the rule of law led by the former prime minister Nuri al-Maliki and the conquest bloc Actress of the factions of the popular crowd loyal to Iran, which nominated the Sudanese for the position with its allies in the parliament, are in control of the legislature.

Along with the Sunni “sovereignty” alliance led by Muhammad Al-Halbousi and the two major Kurdish parties, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and the Kurdistan Democratic Party, there is also the “State Administration” coalition, which controls 138 of the 329 MPs.
The Sudanese, a governor and a former minister from the established Shiite political class, is 52 years old.

Immediately upon his election as President of the Republic, Abdul Latif Rashid entrusted the government on October 13 with forming the government.
Since his assignment, he continued his negotiations to resolve the distribution of positions between the political forces and distribute them between blocs, sects and components, i. e.

Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds, according to quotas as is common in Iraq, provided that the Shiites hold the majority of the ministries and the Sunnis and Kurds share the remaining positions.
While Muqtada al-Sadr, the leader of the Shiite movement and the coordination framework’s major foe, confirmed his retirement from politics and announced his resignation, his lieutenants did the same.

During the voting for the new Iraqi administration, there are hand scuffles.

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