A decisive station .. The Iraq Parliament votes on the new government

A decisive station .. The Iraq Parliament votes on the new government

News from Al-Madinah: A year after the October 10, 2021, legislative elections and the ensuing political impasse, the Iraqi parliament votes today, Thursday, to support the new administration and its agenda.
After giving Muhammad Shi’a Al-Sudani the job of organising the incoming government, the country experienced a serious political crisis that lasted for more than a year.

The official Iraqi News Agency yesterday, Wednesday, published a formal document issued by the Parliament.
a total majority
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. According to Article 76 of the Constitution, the government is confident, “when approves the ministers individually and the ministerial curriculum by an absolute majority.

However, given that it backed the “State Administration Coalition,” it is anticipated that this government will enjoy smooth confidence (includes the cabinet parties in the country except for the Sadrist movement). The Sudanese candidate was recommended for the position by the Al-Fateh bloc, which included former prime minister Nuri al-Maliki and its partners in the coalition for the state administration.

Along with the coordination framework, which controls 138 of the 329 deputies, the “State Administration” coalition also consists of the two major Kurdish parties, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and the Kurdistan Democratic Party, as well as the Sunni “sovereignty” coalition led by Muhammad Al-Halbousi.

It is interesting to note that on October 13, the Sudanese (52 years old), a governor and former minister who is rising through the ranks of the traditional Shiite political class, was charged with the government by the newly elected President of the Republic, Abdul Latif Rashid, shortly after his election.
The chest places the blame on Shiite forces.
Since receiving his assignment, he has persisted in his efforts to settle the allocation of political forces’ places among blocs, sects, and components, i.

e. Sunnis, Shiites and Kurds, on the basis of quotas as it is customary in Iraq, provided that the largest number of ministries is in the hands of the Shiites, while the remaining ministries are distributed between the Sunnis and the Kurds.
Shiite leader Muqtada al-Sadr, who was the coordinating framework’s biggest foe, declared he would not serve in the next administration.

He also held a tweet late yesterday night, the Shiite political forces, the responsibility of the warp in the country, from Fesa, quota and other crises that require the foundations of the state’s establishment.
Arabic.

A pivotal location. The Iraq Parliament votes on the new government

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