Iraq’s Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) will be holding
its parliamentary and presidential elections in September 2013. The vote is
surrounded in controversy, as current Kurdish President Massoud Barzani wants
to run for a third term even though the law says he can only hold the office
two times. Barzani is pushing a referendum on a new constitution for Kurdistan,
which would allow him to run for two more terms. The problem is the Iraqi
Election Commission said that can’t happen until after September’s balloting. That
means Barzani will likely use some other loophole to run again, then pass the
draft constitution afterward, so that he can serve an additional two more terms
for a total of twelve more years in office, solidifying his hold on power.
KRG Pres. Barzani is attempting to find a loophole that would allow him to run for a third term (KDP) |
The biggest issue in Kurdistan’s next regional elections is
whether President Barzani will be able to run for a third term. In April, it
was announced that the next round of parliamentary and presidential balloting
would occur on September 21, 2013. Barzani has been pushing on all fronts
to ensure that he can run again. Current Kurdish law states that he can
only serve two terms. His Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) pointed out a
loophole that since he was appointed to office in 2005 without an election, he
can serve another term. The KDP and Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) also
issued a statement claiming that the opposition was open to suggestions about the presidency. That was immediately contradicted by the Change List, Kurdistan
Islamic Union (KIU), and the Kurdistan Islamic Group (KIG) all coming out against extending Barzani’s term. Those three have talked about running
their own candidate, but there appears to be no consensus. There have been
reports that Change List leader Nishurwan Mustafa might run, but then the KIU
and KIG want their own candidates as well. To top things off a PUK member
from the Kurdish parliament said that a third term would be illegal. The
problem is that the PUK is leaderless right now with Iraqi President Jalal
Talabani in Germany for medical treatment, meaning that it too is weak at this
moment. That’s probably why a lawmaker expressed a dissenting opinion. With the
opposition weak, and his partner the PUK rudderless, there’s nothing really to
stop Barzani finding some means to throw in his hat for another four years as
Kurdistan’s president. It’s only a matter of how he will achieve it given the
region’s laws. What he’s put pushing now is to hold a referendum on the KRG’s draft constitution, but that’s probably a longer term strategy to maintain
his position within the region’s politics.
Kurdistan’s draft constitution has been as controversial as
Barzani’s current run for office. The document was passed by the Kurdish parliament on June 24, 2009. The public was supposed to vote on it the next
month when the KRG held its last parliamentary and presidential balloting, but
the Election Commission said that it didn’t have the time and resources to
carry that out. The new constitution allows the president to run for two terms,
with the first being after it is passed. It also gives the chief executive more power such as being able to dissolve parliament, command over the
peshmerga, the ability to pass and veto laws, and to remove ministers. Like Barzani’s third term, the opposition has come out against the new
constitution. Immediately after it was passed, the Change List said that it was
illegal, because parliament’s session had expired on June 4, yet they remained
in office until the July elections. In response the president pointed out that
no one had the two-thirds necessary in the Kurdish parliament to re-do the
document, and that therefore it was a fait accompli. By the end of 2009,
the KDP and PUK agreed to hold the referendum, and then make any changes
afterward. That never happened until Barzani brought it up four years
later to help him hold onto power. If the constitution passed it would obviously
provide another means for Barzani to maintain the presidency for up to another
eight years.
Now that the draft is back on the political agenda, it is
receiving all the opposition that it did back in 2009. In October 2012, Change
List leader Mustafa met with PUK head Talabani, and they agreed to amend the
constitution. Mustafa wanted to limit the power of the presidency, and make
Kurdistan a parliamentary system. (1) The KDP responded that it would not allow the document to be changed by the Kurdish parliament, and that it should
simply be sent for a referendum. That was repeated in May 2013 by the head of
the president’s office who told the press that since the constitution had gone
through all the necessary steps there was no reason to send it to the parliament to be amended, and it didn’t have the legal right to change it
anyway. Barzani’s plan has hit a major roadblock. Like in 2009, the Election
Commission said that it would take months to prepare for a referendum on the
constitution, and that means it can’t happen at the same time as the September
2013 presidential and parliamentary elections in the KRG. Barzani must have
known this before he put forward the idea of putting the draft up for a vote.
He must therefore have a larger plan in mind, which is to run this year, and
win, then get the constitution passed later on to allow him to run two more
times.
President Barzani is in a very advantageous position in
Kurdish politics right now. He can use the loophole that he was not elected by
the people in 2005 to run for a third time in September. With the PUK, Change
List, KIU, and KIG all divided that means there will be no unified opposition
to this maneuver. The PUK doesn’t even know whether it wants Barzani to still
be president or not, and without Talabani they’re not likely to decide before
the vote. Change and the Islamic parties are to small to stop Barzani, and if
they want to run against him they may not be able to field a unified candidate,
which would split their votes. That will mean that Barzani will walk away with
the election. He can then push through the referendum on the constitution
probably in 2014, which would then give him the opportunity to be president two
more times. That would give him twelve more years to rule. By the time that’s
over he’ll be in his late 80s, and will be ready to retire anyway. Barzani like
Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki, rules through family, tribes, patronage, and
political connections. As long as these are still working for him he feels
there’s no reason why he should not be president. All he needs to do is
manipulate the system as he’s currently doing, and he believes that he can stay
in power as long as he wants.
FOOTNOTES
1. Ahmed, Hevidar, “PUK on Board with Opposition Push for
Parliamentary System,” Rudaw, 10/3/12
SOURCES
Agence France Presse, “Iraq panel rejects Kirkuk vote on
same day as Kurd polls,” 7/6/09
Ahmed, Hevidar, “PUK on Board with Opposition Push for
Parliamentary System,” Rudaw, 10/3/12
AIN, “Mustafa: Nominating Barzani
for 3rd term to end democracy in KR,” 5/25/13
Barznjy, Hiwa, “iraqi kurdistan a
dictatorship? current president will break law, run for election again,”
Niqash, 4/25/13
Coles, Isabel, “Kurd political equation unbalanced by Iraq
president’s absence,” Reuters, 3/3/13
Dagher, Sam, “New Kurdish Leader Asserts Agenda,” New York
Times, 7/29/09
Khalid, Shorish, “Kurdish Leaders Defiant Over Constitution
Vote,” Institute for War & Peace Reporting, 10/7/09
Kurdistan Tribune, “Gorran says ‘no’ to extension for
President Barzani,” 4/9/13
- “Three opposition parties say ‘no’ to Barzani,” 4/10/13
Mahmoud, Amer, “controversy over Kurdish constitution,”
Niqash, 7/6/09
Mohammed, Shwan, “Kurdish
president’s re-election plans spark criticism,” Agence France Presse, 4/14/13
National Iraqi News Agency,
“BREAKING NEWS Barazani affirms he will not seek another term,” 5/4/13
- “Democratic Kurdistan Party refuses to re-draft the
constitution to Kurdistan Regional Parliament,” 10/4/12
PUK Media, “IHEC Source: Ready to hold referendum on
Kurdistan Region Constitution,” 9/23/09
Rudaw, “Opposition Parties in
Iraq’s Kurdistan Region Eye Regional Presidency,” 4/24/13
- “Parties Seek Consensus on Draft Constitution Issue,”
10/24/12
- “Party Official: Constitutional
Ambiguities Allow Another Term for Barzani,” 5/2/13
Shafaq News, “Breaking News …
Barzani declares Kurdistan’s next elections’ date,” 4/18/13
Zebari, Abdel Hamid, “Barzani
Presses for Referendum On Iraqi Kurdistan Constitution,” Al-Monitor, 5/23/13
- “Differences Deepen Between Iraqi Kurdish Parties,”
Al-Monitor, 3/22/13
- “Iraqi Kurdistan Faces A Hot
Political Summer,” Al-Monitor, 4/26/13
- “Iraqi Kurds Endure Seven-Year Wait for New Constitution,”
Al-Monitor, 1/22/13
- “Upcoming Iraqi Kurdistan Elections Stir Up Controversy,”
Al-Monitor, 4/11/13
Zulal, Shwan, “Kurdish Democracy’s
biggest test yet,” Kurdistan Tribune, 4/19/13
1 comment:
Excellent piece.
Two relevant details:
1.During the anti-government protests in March 2011, the regional parliament voted in favour of amending the constitution, which was one of the demands of the protestors and the opposition parties. The decision (referred to as Decision No 2, 2011) was never implemented.
2. According to current laws, it is in the power of the parliament & govt to put the constitution into a referendum. So Masoud Barzani can't do much directly although his nephew and PM Nechirvan can, but that would need PUK's blessing
Some of these issues are well reported on insightkurdistan.com
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