Lebanese general election, 2005
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All 128 seats to the Parliament of Lebanon | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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This article is part of a series on the politics and government of Lebanon |
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The 2005 Lebanese General Elections were the second elections in thirty years without a Syrian military or intelligence presence in Lebanon. These elections were the first in Lebanese history to be won outright by a single electoral block and were also the first to be monitored by the United Nations.[1]
Results
First round
The first round was held on May 29, 2005 in Beirut. The Rafik Hariri Martyr List, a coalition of Saad Hariri's Current for the Future, the Progressive Socialist Party and other anti-Syrian parties, won all 19 seats. Saad Hariri is the son of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri who was assassinated in February 2005, in a car bombing in Beirut. The coalition left one seat free for a Shiite candidate from Hezbollah.
Second round
The second round was held on June 5 in South Lebanon and Nabatyeh Governorate. The Resistance and Development Bloc, a joint ticket by the two main Shiite parties Amal and Hezbollah, in addition to Bahiya Al-Hariri, the sister of the assassinated late Prime Minister Rafic Al-Hariri and Oussama Saad from Sidon, won all 23 seats. Official tallies showed the Resistance and Development Bloc receiving more than 80% of the vote.
Third round
The third round was held on June 12 in Beqaa and Mount Lebanon. In Mount Lebanon the Hariri List won 17 seats, as did the Aoun Alliance, made up of Michel Aoun's Free Patriotic Movement and two smaller parties; Hezbollah won one. In Beqaa, the Resistance and Development Bloc won 11 seats, the Hariri List eight, and the Aoun Alliance four. Aoun re-stamped his authority as a major Christian leader on the political scene.
Fourth round
The fourth and final round was held on June 20 in North Governorate. The Hariri List won all 28 seats, giving them a total of 72 of the National Assembly's 128 seats.
Total
Alliances | Seats | Parties | Votes | % | Seats |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
March 14 Alliance | 69 | Future Movement (Tayyar Al Mustaqbal) | 36 | ||
Progressive Socialist Party (Hizb al-Taqadummi al-Ishtiraki) | 16 | ||||
Lebanese Forces (al-Quwāt al-Lubnāniyya) | 6 | ||||
Qornet Shehwan Gathering
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6 | ||||
Independents (Tripoli Bloc) | 3 | ||||
Democratic Renewal (Tripoli Bloc) | 1 | ||||
Democratic Left (Tripoli Bloc) | 1 | ||||
March 8 Alliance | 57 | Hope Movement (Harakat Amal) | 14 | ||
Hezbollah | 14 | ||||
Syrian Social Nationalist Party (al-Hizb al-Qawmi al-souri al ijtima'i) | 2 | ||||
Others | 5 | ||||
Free Patriotic Movement (Tayyar Al-Watani Al-Horr) | 15 | ||||
Skaff Bloc | 5 | ||||
Murr Bloc | 2 | ||||
Independents | 2 | Independents | 2 | ||
Total | 128 |
Turnout
In the first round of the elections, the turnout was only 28%. In the second round of the elections, the turnout was between 43 and 55%.
Notes
- ↑ United Nations, October 26, 2005 S/2005/673 Letter dated 26 October 2005 from the Secretary-General addressed to the President of the Security Council Accessed August 5, 2006
See also
List of Lebanese Members of Parliament
Lebanese general election, 2009
External links
- Angus Reid Consultants - Election Tracker
- Documentary photography project on Lebanon during the time leading up to the 2005 elections by Austrian Photojournalist Stephan Rauch