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Lebanon 2022 parliamentary elections begin
Lebanon begins its 2022 parliamentary elections today.
Candidates from 15 districts will compete to fill 128 seats in parliament. Former Prime Minister Saad Hariri has been barred from the election, causing outrage among his Sunni supporters who will likely abstain from voting.
Expect little substantive change to follow the elections. The ruling Hezbollah and Amal parties are likely to continue exercising violence and intimidation against their political opponents. Reports of political suppression have been recorded in the northern Beqaa and southern Sarafand regions.
By undermining opponents, the ruling parties are likely to dominate the results in the Shia stronghold south. However, a national change in the majority is possible as the opposition only needs seven additional seats to oust Hezbollah. This scenario would shift regional balance as Iran would lose an allied government in Hezbollah and potentially the rights to station its weapons in Lebanon.
In the long term, citizens will continue to blame the current political class for bankrupting the government and spurring Lebanon’s economic decline for the past two years. This trend will likely persist after the Lebanese Association for Democratic Elections uncovered funds used by several different parties to pay bribes and other donations to boost performance in today’s elections.
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Ali is a Copy-Editor and Analyst on Daily Brief team, contributing regularly to the Daily Brief. He also leads the Foreign Brief Week in Review multimedia team. He focuses on political and development issues in the Middle East and North Africa.