Geagea Urges Small Electoral Districts Based on Bkirki Agreement: New Law Favors March 8 Camp

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Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea noted on Wednesday that the new electoral law is better than the 1960 law, although it does not ensure proper representation during the parliamentary elections.

He said during a press conference: “The new law favors the March 8 camp to ensure that they are better represented.”

He said that the law adopted during the last elections, held in 2009, was the product of the Doha accord, which in turn was held as a result of the events of May 7, 2008.

Ever since the approval of the Taef accord, developments in Lebanon were aimed at favoring Syria’s hegemony in Lebanon, especially the electoral law, he added.

That was demonstrated when the Akkar and Bsharreh regions were combined in one electoral district, continued Geagea.

“The Taef accord is the only agreement that can protect Lebanon,” he declared.

“We should therefore work on safeguarding it in order to achieve political stability,” the LF leader stressed.

He wondered why the new electoral law divided each of Beirut and the South into two districts when they carry almost the same weight as other districts.

“They did so to grant the March 8 camp an upper hand in the elections,” Geagea said.

“How can combining the Ashrafiyeh and Bashoura districts ensure fair representation?” he wondered.

He revealed that parliament will discuss adopting small districts for the elections, as had been agreed upon by the gatherers at the Bkirki meeting.

Moreover, he criticized the mechanism allowing expatriates to vote, pointing out that the government had placed all the expatriate voters in one district “in a manner that does not allow them to participate in national life.”

He added that surveys have revealed that voters are most likely leaning towards voting for the March 14 camp “in light of the practices of the current ruling powers.”

“The new electoral law was therefore aimed at saving them,” stated Geagea.

“As part of the Bkirki committee, we reached an agreement that small districts offer the best representation, which would divide Lebanon into 61 electoral districts,” he explained.

“Small districts offer better representation than the current law,” he noted.

“We will remain committed to the Bkirki committee agreement,” stressed the LF leader.

“The 1960 electoral law is completely unsuitable and the government new law is a step in the right direction, but it is still far from what is required,” Geagea added.

“I understand former PM Saad Hariri’s position, but we can take the bad they presented and improve it,” he said.

Direct coordination is ongoing between the LF and Mustaqbal movement and “any electoral law we propose would be in agreement with our allies,” he stressed.

In addition, he said that the LF, Phalange Party, and Free Patriotic Movement were in agreement over adopting small districts.

The Progressive Socialist Party and the Mustaqbal movement can be persuaded to adopt our position, he continued.

The cabinet approved on Tuesday an electoral law based on proportional representation and which divides Lebanon into 13 electoral districts.

Hariri slammed the law on Tuesday, saying that it only caters to the interests of Hizbullah and its allies.

The Bkirki committee, comprised of representatives of four major Christian parties, is expected to meet in the coming days to announce its stance from a new electoral draft-law.

The first proposal made by Christian parties at the seat of the Maronite church was based on dividing Lebanon to small districts that do not surpass three seats each and the other called for proportionality based on 15 districts

Timeline
  • 08 August 2012, 17:08

    Geagea: No one can tamper with the constitutional date of when the parliamentary elections will be held.

  • 08 August 2012, 17:04

    Geagea: Any electoral law we propose will be agreement with our allies.

  • 08 August 2012, 17:01

    Geagea: I understand former PM Saad Hariri’s position in that the new electoral law is tailored to the March 8 camp, but we will not completely reject it as he said.

  • 08 August 2012, 17:00

    Geagea: From now on, we will remain committed to what was agreed to by the Bkirki committee, meaning smaller districts, because it ensures better representation. We should therefore head to parliament with that agreement in mind.

  • 08 August 2012, 16:58

    Geagea: We have said that if we fail to reach an agreement over small districts then we would adopt proportional representation based on 15 districts. We question why the FPM altered its position on this matter.

  • 08 August 2012, 16:56

    Geagea: The Bkirki committee reached an agreement that better representation can be achieved through smaller electoral districts.

  • 08 August 2012, 16:55

    Geagea: We cannot return to the 1960 electoral law. The government came up with a law that would make up for the support its members lost during their time in power. All statistics indicate that the March 14 camp has the advantage in the elections.

  • 08 August 2012, 16:53

    Geagea: It is as if the government has committed a great sin because keeping expatriates connected to political life in Lebanon is the point of allowing them to vote and possibly ensuring their return to their homeland.

  • 08 August 2012, 16:51

    Geagea: The government has placed all the expatriates in one electoral district as if it is forcing them to elect the same MPs.

  • 08 August 2012, 16:49

    Geagea: Allowing expatriates to vote will enable them to become better connected to political life in Lebanon.

  • 08 August 2012, 16:48

    Geagea: This law will not grant fair representation. It was devised in order to grant the March 8 camp better representation, not rectify representation throughout Lebanon.

  • 08 August 2012, 16:46

    Geagea: On the surface, the new law allows better representation, but in reality it doesn’t.

  • 08 August 2012, 16:45

    Geagea: Some political powers pledged to devise a new electoral law because the 1960 law was not fair.

  • 08 August 2012, 16:43

    Geagea: The Taef accord has only been implemented through Syrian influence.

  • 08 August 2012, 16:42

    LF leader Samir Geagea during press conference: The Taef accord is very clear in stipulating real and fair representation at parliament.

SourceNaharnet
Comments 26
Missing allouchi 08 August 2012, 16:44

Hakim is our next president...inshallah...

Thumb geha 08 August 2012, 18:24

whoever is elected president is better than aoun and any of his traiotrs fpm members.

Thumb Bandoul 08 August 2012, 22:19

@allouchi, while my wish is for him to be the next president, I know that my wish is not a practical one because the goal is to try to unify the Christian street and not divide it permanently. Unfortunately whether justly or not, there are Christians (me excluded) who will not ever support him as our unified leader.

Missing allouchi 09 August 2012, 15:43

bandoul and I respect that.

Thumb thepatriot 09 August 2012, 06:46

Well... I wouldn't want him as president for his past is too heavy, nevertheless, I think he represents me... not like the other dellusional fool, who is a traitor to his country and should be interned in a mental institution!

Missing libanenren 09 August 2012, 12:16

We all know who portrats the "lebanonian banana rebublic" image, thinking, and actions. so chill on the sarcasim!

Missing libanenren 09 August 2012, 12:17

*sarcasm

Missing gcb1 08 August 2012, 18:49

It doesn't matter what the electoral law is. As long as it is sectarian and the Lebanese vote with a sectarian mentality Lebanon will not progress, no matter what the electoral law is or who is president.

Thumb chrisrushlau 08 August 2012, 21:25

The Taef Accord took away the automatic Christian majority in Parliament (despite their being only about 20% of the population) and made in its place what Patriarch al Rahi calls "equality": equal shares for the 20% Christians and 80% Muslims.

Thumb Marwan34 09 August 2012, 00:00

haha xD stop with your percentages we are all lebanese !!!!

Default-user-icon lebanese (Guest) 09 August 2012, 03:41

he's not

Thumb thepatriot 09 August 2012, 06:43

20% huh?? Hahahaha...

Thumb chrisrushlau 08 August 2012, 21:29

And, gosh, I wonder what percentage of Lebanese are Shiites. Fifty percent! Why, what a surprise!
Maybe we should do a census and find out for sure.
Well, that might require a civil war and mass extermination. Maybe it would be better to adopt a civil rights regime: one person, one vote.
If only Israel would allow it. Lebanon: The Existential Threat Israel Doesn't Want You To Know About.

Missing gcb1 08 August 2012, 21:56

If only we did not vote by sects, in other words.

No electoral law will satisfy everybody, because there will always be a sect that feels like it has something to lose. Such is the result of having sects compete against one another.

To anyone that believes that Lebanon can advance with our sectarian mentality and sectarian political system, where your sect matters more to voters than merit, I tell you that you are wrong, and that every prosperous country was able to advance because it set aside its differences and focused on unity.

Today, no parties are doing that in both M8 and M14.

Default-user-icon gosh darn (Guest) 08 August 2012, 22:16

Yeah we Lebanese are illiterate idiots and we need the enlightened brain damaged American to set us starlight. He knows all about the real demographic make up of Lebanon. Tell me how much of your brain did they remove after the injury? And, gosh, I know there wasn't much to begin with.

Default-user-icon tibneeneh (Guest) 09 August 2012, 00:37

chrisrushlau, fact is non of our religious communities want a census. They would rather leave it this way were anyone can claim anything like you do, no matter how ridiculous.

Missing mansour 08 August 2012, 22:40

chrisrushlau were you ever dropped on your head or is your mum and dad brother and sister? Christains are not 20% we make up roughly 40% inside lebanon and outside of lebanon now thats a number that will make you and and the rest of your Kiziballah scared.....Long Live The Syrian Civil War!

Missing gcb1 08 August 2012, 22:52

Who cares how many Christians are in Lebanon, same for Sunnis and Druze and Shiites.

I only care how many Lebanese people are in Lebanon, those that work for their country only and not for their own sect or foreign powers.

Default-user-icon gcb2 (Guest) 08 August 2012, 23:37

gcb1 I guess you don;t like hezballah then, a sectarian iranian party

Default-user-icon Luxembourg Bob (Guest) 09 August 2012, 00:20

"Ever since the approval of the Taef accord, developments in Lebanon were aimed at favoring Syria’s hegemony in Lebanon, especially the electoral law, he added."

Ya geagea, werent you the one who was bombing Baabda the presidential palace in coordination with Syrian jets in 1990 and your buddies abdel hallim khaddam and ghazi kanaan so that the taef accord was forced on Lebanon?

Default-user-icon Henry VI (Guest) 09 August 2012, 00:59

William Shakespeare?

Missing roberto46 09 August 2012, 11:51

Geagea is the man ..

Thumb kesrweneh 09 August 2012, 11:55

as usual Judas incarnation aka Geagea strikes again! this is a law that gives christians about 15 additional MP's but since almost all of them are in Harriris and Jumblatt hands he refuses it! guess he is used to beging for MP's now and can't change his ways. anyway isn't he the one who sold the wahabis 4 MP's in Ashrafieh, 2 in Koura and 2 in Zahleh? so basialy nothing new

Missing roberto46 09 August 2012, 13:41

I think Nassrallah would make a good president and Berri is his deputy.

Missing allouchi 09 August 2012, 15:46

Funny :)

Thumb thepatriot 09 August 2012, 16:50

Start living in this century ya FT...