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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

Welcome to the Neno's Place!

Neno's Place Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality


Neno

I can be reached by phone or text 8am-7pm cst 972-768-9772 or, once joining the board I can be reached by a (PM) Private Message.

Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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Established in 2006 as a Community of Reality

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    Map of the expected alliances ... Al-Hakim, Al-Halbousi and Al-Abadi are in one coalition, and Al-Kh

    Rocky
    Rocky
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    Map of the expected alliances ... Al-Hakim, Al-Halbousi and Al-Abadi are in one coalition, and Al-Kh Empty Map of the expected alliances ... Al-Hakim, Al-Halbousi and Al-Abadi are in one coalition, and Al-Kh

    Post by Rocky Mon 12 Apr 2021, 2:04 pm

    [size=52]Map of the expected alliances ... Al-Hakim, Al-Halbousi and Al-Abadi are in one coalition, and Al-Khanjar heads Al-Azm with Salim Al-Jubouri[/size]

    [size=45]Baghdad / Tamim Al-Hassan[/size]
    [size=45]Political sources and party leaders revealed an expected shape of the map of alliances in the legislative elections, some of which carried "strange names" and led by controversial personalities.[/size]
    [size=45]Some new alliances also appear belonging to figures who lead armed factions, and others appear to be affiliated with traditional parties with new names.[/size]
    [size=45]The current and former heads of parliament have also split into two different coalitions, one of which includes former prime ministers and may be the broader alliance.[/size]
    [size=45]In the latest update of the commission, the number of alliances may reach more than 40 coalitions, of which 30 are actually authorized, and eight have decided to run in the elections, compared to 11 registered.[/size]
    [size=45]The total number of approved parties reached 250, of which 110 will run in the elections, while 65 other parties are still registered.[/size]
    [size=45]It is assumed that early legislative elections will take place on October 10, after the previous date, which was in June, was postponed.[/size]
    [size=45]The Broader Alliance[/size]
    [size=45]The surprise of the alliances may be a new alliance between the leader of the Wisdom Movement, Ammar al-Hakim and Parliament Speaker Muhammad al-Halbousi.[/size]
    [size=45]Fahd al-Jubouri, a member of the General Authority in the Wisdom Movement, says to Al-Mada that the movement "has endeavors to establish a large coalition that transcends components and sects."[/size]
    [size=45]In June 2020, Al-Hakim announced the formation of the (Iraqis) coalition, which was considered at the time to be a movement supporting the government of Mustafa Al-Kazemi.[/size]
    [size=45]Al-Jubouri stressed that Al-Hikma "has not been decided yet as to whether he will run in the elections under the first name or with the Iraqis."[/size]
    [size=45]But he added, "Wisdom is close to an alliance with Parliament Speaker Muhammad al-Halbousi, former Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, and the Kurdistan Democratic Party."[/size]
    [size=45]Al-Hakim and Al-Halbousi arrived in Anbar on Saturday, and met with officials and tribal sheikhs in the province.[/size]
    [size=45]Some readings considered the visit to be a promotion of the new alliance. In the 2018 elections, Al-Hikma won 19 seats on the "wisdom movement" list.[/size]
    [size=45]On the other hand, when Al-Halbousi won the last elections, he was a partner in the Al-Hal party led by Jamal Al-Karbouli, who won 8 seats at the time.[/size]
    [size=45]Al-Halbousi then left the Solution Party and formed another party, the Progress Party, in 2019.[/size]
    [size=45]On the other hand, the third partner in the new coalition, Haider al-Abadi, had won 44 seats in the 2018 elections within the victory coalition, before Faleh al-Fayyad defected and took most of the seats with him.[/size]
    [size=45]So far, there has been no comment from Al-Abadi and the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) on the supposed alliance, while most of the other Shiite forces seem to have maintained the old alliances.[/size]
    [size=45]Detachable construction[/size]
    [size=45]According to political sources who spoke to (Al-Mada), the Al-Binaa Alliance, which included the most prominent coalitions within it «Hadi al-Amiri (Al-Fateh) and Nuri al-Maliki (State of Law) along with some Sunni forces» will not repeat the ball again.[/size]
    [size=45]Both the Al-Fateh Alliance and State of Law registered officially and separately in the Electoral Commission, while it is clear from the statements of the Sadrists that they may run in the elections individually as well.[/size]
    [size=45]Saeron won the most votes in the 2018 elections with 54 seats, followed by Al-Fateh with 48 seats, while State of Law won 25 seats.[/size]
    [size=45]Within the Shiite alliances, the sources told Al-Mada that a new alliance had been registered under the name Qaderoon, headed by Hassan Al-Hasnawi, whose name was associated with the leadership of the "Imam-AJ" faction.[/size]
    [size=45]Rumors also circulated two years ago, that Al-Hasnawi, who was the head of the Trust, was affiliated with the Dawa Party, Maliki's wing.[/size]
    [size=45]The slogans and “logos” used by the party (the Confidence Party) in its competition in the 2018 elections, show similarity to the slogans of the Dawa Party and the rule of law.[/size]
    [size=45]The sources also confirmed the registration of the "National Approach" coalition, which is the alternative name for the Virtue Alliance, which won 7 seats in the 2018 elections.[/size]
    [size=45]Also, appeared in the alliances registration lists for the 2021 elections, an alliance in the name of the Coalition of Competencies for Change headed by Representative Haitham al-Jubouri, whose alliance won two seats in 2018.[/size]
    [size=45]The dagger is back[/size]
    [size=45]With regard to the Sunni forces, a new grouping called the "Alliance of Determination" led by Khamis Al-Khanjar, which withdrew in the last hours of the 2018 elections, due to Shiite objections, leaked.[/size]
    [size=45]According to what reached (Al-Mada), “Al-Azm” includes former Parliament Speaker Salim al-Jubouri, leader of the Al-Hall Party, Jamal al-Karbouli, and his brother, MP Muhammad al-Karbouli, after he defected from the Progress Party, which is headed by Muhammad al-Halbousi.[/size]
    [size=45]In addition to these, other names were nominated within the new coalition, such as former Defense Minister Khaled al-Obeidi, former Diyala MP Salah Muzahim al-Jubouri, and Representative Muthanna al-Samarrai.[/size]
    [size=45]In addition to the governor of Kirkuk, Rakan al-Jubouri, the businessman from Diyala, Salman al-Lahibi, the former MP for Nineveh, Muhammad Nuri al-Abed Rabbo, and the deputy for Salah al-Din Qutayba al-Jubouri.[/size]
    [size=45]However, political sources questioned statements by Al-Mada by some of the names mentioned in the Al-Azm Alliance.[/size]
    [size=45]And those sources said that Khaled Al-Obeidi will run in the elections alone, within a new party, the "confrontation party."[/size]
    [size=45]The name of the deputy Muthanna al-Samarrai also appeared with the controversial politician Mishaan al-Jubouri in an alliance in the name of Gharib, the "Falcons Alliance."[/size]
    [size=45]Parties of the Western Regions[/size]
    [size=45]From the alliances in the northern and western regions, a new alliance emerged that was registered in the commission under the name “Mother of the Two Rivers”, and in the 2018 elections there was an alliance called “Umm al-Rabiein clans” in Mosul.[/size]
    [size=45]Also, according to political sources, an alliance was registered in the Commission, according to political sources, while Diyala mentioned two alliances, namely: Diyala al-Tahadi, which was headed in 2018 by the former Diyala MP Muzahim al-Jubouri, in addition to Diyala, our identity, which was previously led by Salim al-Jabouri.[/size]
    [size=45]And registered in the Commission a coalition called "United", while it is not known if it is the same coalition that participated in the 2018 elections, headed by the former Speaker of Parliament, Osama Al-Nujaifi, who announced two months ago the formation of a new alliance.[/size]
    [size=45]Al-Nujaifi called the "National Salvation Project" to his coalition, who said last February, that he is in partnership with the politician and businessman Jamal Al-Dhari, and stressed that "the nascent alliance will be open to everyone who matches with us in visions and goals."[/size]
    [size=45]In the last elections, United won 4 seats in the decision-making coalition, which at the time included 7 streams, and won 15 seats.[/size]
    [size=45]Hamid al-Mutlaq, a former deputy, considers the "state of fragmentation" in the Sunni alliances, which is part of a general situation witnessed by most political forces due to "failure."[/size]
    [size=45]"Most of the political forces have failed to build the country as they are struggling to form alliances, far from the interest of Iraq," al-Mutlaq, a former deputy from Anbar, said for (long).[/size]
    [size=45]Al-Mutlaq, who is the head of the Dialogue and Change Party, criticized "the rotation of old faces in the names of new alliances," noting that he will not run in the elections "if we do not guarantee the integrity and independence of the commission."[/size]
    [size=45][You must be registered and logged in to see this link.]

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