2022 Speaker of the Lebanese Parliament election explained

Election Name:2022 Speaker of the Lebanese Parliament election
Country:Lebanon
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2018 Speaker of the Lebanese Parliament election
Previous Year:2018
Next Election:Next Lebanese speakership election
Next Year:Next
Nominee1:Nabih Berri
Electoral Vote1:65
Percentage1:50.78%
Speaker
Before Election:Nabih Berri
After Election:Nabih Berri
Before Party:Amal Movement
After Party:Amal Movement
Seats For Election:Needed to Win: Majority of votes cast
128 deputies, 65 needed for a majority
Majority Seats:Needed to Win: Majority of votes cast
128 deputies, 65 needed for a majority
Party1:Amal Movement
Party Colour:yes

The 2022 Speaker of the Lebanese Parliament election was an election to elect the speaker of the 24th Lebanese Parliament.[1] It was 7th legislative speaker election since the implementation of the Taif Agreement in 1989.

Nabih Berri won with 65 votes out of 128, the minimum needed for a majority and the lowest outcome in his 30-year tenure as the speaker of parliament.[2]

Background

2022 general election

See main article: 2022 Lebanese general election.

The 2022 general election was held in the wake of the revolution of 17 October 2019, a series of large-scale anti-government demonstrations against the stagnation of the economy, unemployment, Lebanon's sectarian and hereditary political system, corruption, and the government's inability to provide essential services such as water, electricity and sanitation.[3] Despite the ensuing resignation of Prime Minister Saad Hariri[4] and his replacement by Hassan Diab[5], the country's economic situation continued to deteriorate.

Compounding the crisis, on 4 August 2020, several thousand tons of ammonium nitrate stored in a hangar in the Port of Beirut exploded, killing 218, injuring over 7,000[6], leaving 300,000 homeless[7], and resulting in damages estimated at nearly four billion euros.

In the elections held on 15 May 2022, Hezbollah and its allies lost their parliamentary majority. Among the Christian community, anti-Hezbollah Lebanese Forces supplanted the Free Patriotic Movement as the largest party. The main Sunni party, the Future Movement, had withdrawn from the election, resulting in more fragmented representation for the community. Pro-reform groups that had emerged from the 2019 protests secured 13 seats.

Election process

National Pact

See main article: National Pact.

Access to the parliamentary speakership is subject to an informal agreement known as the National Pact. Agreed in 1943, the latter limits this office only to members of the Shia Islam faith.[8]

The National Pact is based on an unwritten agreement concluded in 1943 between the Maronite Christian president Bechara El Khoury and his Sunni prime minister Riad Al Solh when Lebanon gained independence from France. The pact stipulates that the president of the Republic must be a Maronite Christian, the prime minister a Sunni Muslim and the Speaker of parliament a Shiite Muslim.[9]

Round

First round
CandidateVotes%
Nabih Berri (Amal)6550.78
Invalid/blank votes6349.22
Total128100
Eligible voters128100

Deputy speaker of the Lebanese Parliament election

Election Name:2022 Deputy speaker of the Lebanese Parliament election
Country:Lebanon
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2018 Speaker of the Lebanese Parliament election
Previous Year:2018
Next Election:Next Lebanese speakership election
Next Year:Next
Nominee1:Elias Bou Saab
Electoral Vote1:65
Percentage1:50.78%
Nominee2:Ghassan Skaff
Electoral Vote2:60
Percentage2:46.87%
Deputy speaker
Before Election:Elie Ferzli
After Election:Elias Bou Saab
Before Party:Independent
After Party:FPM
Seats For Election:Needed to Win: Majority of votes cast
128 deputies, 65 needed for a majority
Majority Seats:Needed to Win: Majority of votes cast
128 deputies, 65 needed for a majority
Party1:Free Patriotic Movement
Party Colour:yes
Party2:Progressive Socialist Party

The Deputy speaker of the parliament was elected immediately after the speaker.[10]

Access to the deputy speakership is subject to an informal agreement known as the National Pact. Agreed in 1943, the latter limits this office only to members of the Greek Orthodoxy faith.

Potential candidates

Rounds

In the first round, the legislators failed to elect a candidate with over 65 votes for a majority.[13]

The second round, parliament managed to elect former defense minister, Elias Bou Saab of the Free Patriotic Movement, with 65 votes.

First roundSecond Round
CandidateVotes%CandidateVotes%
Elias Bou Saab (FPM)6450Elias Bou Saab (FPM)6550.78
Ghassan Skaff (PSP)4938.3Ghassan Skaff (PSP)6046.87
Invalid/blank votes1511.7Invalid/blank votes32.34
Total128100Total128100
Eligible voters128100Eligible voters128100

Secretaries of the Parliament election

Election Name:2022 Secretaries of the Lebanese Parliament election
Country:Lebanon
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2018 Speaker of the Lebanese Parliament election
Previous Year:2018
Next Election:Next Lebanese speakership election
Next Year:Next
Nominee1:Alain Aoun
Electoral Vote1:65
Percentage1:50.78%
Nominee2:Ziad Hawat
Electoral Vote2:38
Percentage2:29.69%
Secretaries
After Election:Alain Aoun, Hadi Abou Hassan
After Party:FPM, PSP
Seats For Election:Needed to Win: Majority of votes cast
128 deputies, 65 needed for a majority
Majority Seats:Needed to Win: Majority of votes cast
128 deputies, 65 needed for a majority
Party1:Free Patriotic Movement
Party Colour:yes
Party2:Lebanese Forces

The 2 secretaries of parliament were elected immediately after the Deputy Speaker. Although not constitutionally required, it was decided that the secretaries would be attributed to one Maronite Christian and one Druze.

The election process of the 2 deputies had large debate particularly by opposition MPs. It was suggested that each MP votes for both preferences in the same ballot. However, it was decided that voting would take place on the basis of one name per ballot.[14] As a result of this Firas Hamdan, an opposition MP, who was one of few candidates for the Druze secretary, withdrew his candidacy in protest of the sectarian electoral procedure.

Rounds

First round
CandidateSectVotes%
Alain Aoun (FPM)Maronite6550.78
Ziad Hawat (LF)Maronite3829.69
Michel Douaihy (Osos)Maronite43.12
Firas HamdanDruze00.00
Hadi Abou Hoson (PSP)Druze00.00
Invalid/blank votesN/A1914.84
Total128100
Eligible voters128100

See also

References

  1. Web site: 2022-05-19 . The ‘untouchable’ parliamentary speaker at the heart of Lebanon’s next political storm . 2022-05-30 . France 24 . en.
  2. News: Reuters . 2022-05-31 . Lebanese parliament re-elects Nabih Berri as speaker - Reuters count . en . Reuters . 2022-05-31.
  3. Web site: 2019-12-12 . L'insurrection au Liban : révolution, unité et crise économique . 2022-02-16 . lvsl.fr - Tout reconstruire, tout réinventer . fr.
  4. Web site: 2019-10-29 . Lebanon's PM Saad Hariri resigns as protesters come under attack . 2022-02-16 . the Guardian . en.
  5. News: Hubbard . Ben . Saad . Hwaida . Hwaida Saad . 2019-12-19 . Lebanon, Mired in Crises, Turns to a Professor as Prime Minister . 2022-04-27 . The New York Times . en-US . 0362-4331.
  6. Web site: Wilkins, Charlotte . 2021-07-31 . ‘They have to pay for what they did’: Families of Beirut blast victims fight for justice . 2022-02-16 . France 24 . en.
  7. News: 2020-08-10 . Beirut explosion: Lebanon's government 'to resign' as death toll rises . 2022-02-16 . BBC News . en-GB.
  8. Web site: Lebanon (01/94) . 2022-04-09 . U.S. Department of State.
  9. Web site: Lebanese National Pact History, Significance, & Facts Britannica . 2022-04-09 . www.britannica.com . en.
  10. Web site: May 26, 2022 . Berri sets Tuesday session for election of speaker and deputy . 2022-05-30 . Naharnet.
  11. Web site: MP Ghassan Skaff announces his candidacy for the position of Deputy Parliament Speaker . 2022-05-30 . MTV Lebanon . en.
  12. Web site: May 30, 2022 . Bou Saab meets with Khazen, Franjieh and Tawk . 2022-05-30 . Naharnet.
  13. Web site: 2022-05-31 . New Parliament votes for deputy speaker: Follow our live coverage here . 2022-05-31 . L'Orient Today.
  14. Web site: 2022-05-31 . Follow our live coverage of the new Parliament's first session . 2022-06-13 . L'Orient Today.