Unity Alliance of Iraq
Unity Alliance of Iraq | |
---|---|
Leader | Nauaf Saud Zaid |
Founded | 2010 |
Seats in the Council of Representatives of Iraq: |
4 / 325 |
Politics of Iraq Political parties Elections |
The Unity Alliance of Iraq (Arabic: ائتلاف وحدة العراق I’itilaf Wehdat al-Iraq) commonly known as Iraq's Unity, Iraqi Unity or Wassat is an Iraqi political coalition formed to contest the Iraqi parliamentary election, 2010. The coalition was formed by Sheikh Ahmed Abu Risha, the head of the Awakening movement, a Sunni tribal militia which was successful in significantly reducing the insurgency in al-Anbar Governorate and was then reformed into a political party, the Iraq Awakening and Independents National Alliance, which won the most seats in the Al Anbar governorate election, 2009.[1][2] The Awakening Alliance joined forces with Iraq's Shi'a interior minister Jawad al-Bolani and his secular Iraqi Constitutional Party and Ahmed Abdul Ghafour al-Samarrai's Sunni Endowment. The list is led by Jawad al-Bolani.[3]
2010 elections
During the 2010 elections the Iraq Unity List consisted of the following parties:[4]
- Iraqi Constitution Party - led by Jawad al-Bolani
- Iraq Awakening and Independents National Alliance - led by Abu Risha
- Charter Gathering - led by al-Samarrai
- Republican Gathering - led by Saad al-Janabi
- Independent candidates, including Kurdish politician Nehru Kasnazani, former minister of defence Saadoun al-Dulaimi and Anbar tribal leader Abu Azzam al-Tamimi.
Results
Governorate | Percentage | Seats Won | Total Seats |
---|---|---|---|
Anbar | 14 | ||
Babil | 16 | ||
Baghdad | 68 | ||
Basra | 24 | ||
Dhi Qar | 18 | ||
Diyala | 13 | ||
Duhok | 10 | ||
Erbil | 14 | ||
Karbala | 10 | ||
Kirkuk | 12 | ||
Maysan | 10 | ||
Muthanna | 7 | ||
Najaf | 12 | ||
Ninawa | 31 | ||
Qādisiyyah | 11 | ||
Salah ad-Din | 12 | ||
Sulaymaniyah | 17 | ||
Wassit | 11 | ||
Compensatory seats | 7 | ||
Minorities | 8 | ||
Total: | 325 | ||
References
- ↑ Anti-Qaeda sheikhs vie for west Iraq in poll, International Herald Tribune, 23 January 2009
- ↑ final election results, Niqash, 25 February 2009
- ↑ http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSLF559498
- ↑ http://www.carnegieendowment.org/publications/special/misc/iraqielections2010/index.cfm?fa=uai
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