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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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    The Kurdistan Democratic Party dominates the list of the highest winners in the elections

    Rocky
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    The Kurdistan Democratic Party dominates the list of the highest winners in the elections Empty The Kurdistan Democratic Party dominates the list of the highest winners in the elections

    Post by Rocky Sun 28 Nov 2021, 6:35 am

    [size=52]The Kurdistan Democratic Party dominates the list of the highest winners in the elections[/size]

    [size=45]Baghdad / Tamim Al-Hassan[/size]
    [size=45]The Kurdistan Democratic Party dominated the results of the top ten winners in the legislative elections that took place last month, with the participation of more than 3,200 candidates.
    The party alone reserved half of the number, while the "Progress" alliance and the emerging "Etdaad" movement shared the rest of the centers.[/size]
    [size=45]The Kurdish candidates achieved 6 positions within the first ten, including the first place, which is an individual candidate, compared to 4 Arab candidates.[/size]
    [size=45]4 deputies won among the top 10 winners, 2 of them from the Kurdish candidates, one from the Democratic Party, and the other two from "Progress".[/size]
    [size=45]The first 10 winning candidates collected 4% of the total votes cast in the poll that took place last October.[/size]
    [size=45]On the other hand, the first 180 winning candidates (about half of the parliament's 329 seats) won 20% of the seats.[/size]
    [size=45]In addition, about 90% of the candidates who participated in the elections got less than 5,000 votes, half of them got less than 1,000 votes.[/size]
    [size=45]On the other hand, 10% of the candidates who competed in the elections achieved results of less than 100 votes, including one female deputy.[/size]
    [size=45]10 deputies booked low positions after receiving less than 500 votes, and 7 deputies received less than 1,000 votes.[/size]
    [size=45]More than a month has passed since the Electoral Commission announced the results of the vote, while the judicial authorities are still checking the validity of those results.[/size]
    [size=45]top ten[/size]
    [size=45]Men dominated the list of the top ten winners with 400,000 votes out of about 10 million votes who participated in the elections, according to the commission's figures. Former MP Jamal Cougar came first in the whole of Iraq with 57 thousand votes in Dohuk. Cougar, a member of the Islamic Group in Kurdistan that did not participate in the elections, won this time among the individual candidacies who got (the individualists) for 40 seats in the next parliament.[/size]
    [size=45]In second place, former MP Nehru al-Kasanzani of the "Progress" coalition in Baghdad, led by former Parliament Speaker Muhammad al-Halbousi, came in with about 45,000 votes.[/size]
    [size=45]He is followed by the candidate of the extension movement, headed by activist Alaa Al-Rikabi, Daoud Al-Tai from Dhi Qar, with more than 41,000 votes.[/size]
    [size=45]And “Extension” is a new movement that emerged recently from the October protests and achieved 9 seats.[/size]
    [size=45]In fourth place, Shakhwan Abdullah, the former representative of Kirkuk within the Kurdistan Democratic Party.[/size]
    [size=45]Abdullah won more than 37,000 votes, while the party collected 32 seats across the country.[/size]
    [size=45]The party also ranked sixth after candidate Siban Aziz won more than 37,000 votes in Erbil, and the fifth for the leader of "progress" Muhammad al-Halbousi with 37,000 votes in Anbar.[/size]
    [size=45]And "Progress", a coalition participating for the first time in the elections, ranked second in the election results after the Sadrist movement, with 37 seats.[/size]
    [size=45]And the sixth place was won by the leader of the “extension” Alaa Al-Rikabi in Dhi Qar with 35,000 votes, and the seventh went to the Democratic Party after candidate Muhammad Siddiq won from Erbil with 34,000 votes.[/size]
    [size=45]As for the penultimate and last rank, the Democratic Party was also in Dohuk, where candidate Mowaffaq Shehab got about 30,000, and Khaled Al-Rikani got a number close to the latter.[/size]
    [size=45]The first 180 winners received about two million votes, which is equivalent to about 20% of all the votes, and the first 212 winners received 23% of the votes.[/size]
    [size=45]And 37 winners scored between 20 and 30 thousand votes, compared to 138 between 15 and 20 thousand votes, and 29 candidates received more than 10 thousand votes.[/size]
    [size=45]lowest numbers[/size]
    [size=45]In addition, 1,400 candidates received between 1,000 and 10,000 votes, and 1,382 candidates received between 500 and 1,000 votes, including 7 deputies and a former minister.[/size]
    [size=45]They are the former MP Hana Asghar, the former MP Suhad Al-Obeidi, the former MP for the Sadrist movement, Enas Al-Maksousi, the former Minister of Science and the former MP Abdul Karim Al-Samarrai, the MP Liqa Wardi, the former MP Harith Al-Harthy, and the former representative for the State of Law Khawla Manfi.[/size]
    [size=45]Four deputies received less than 500 votes, they are Muhammad Taqi al-Mawla, a leader in the Supreme Council, the former deputy and the former head of the Hajj Authority, who received 110 votes within the Al-Fateh Alliance.[/size]
    [size=45]And former MP Wissal Salim from the Republican Gathering Party affiliated with businessman Saad Assem al-Janabi, with 113 votes.[/size]
    [size=45]The former representative of Anbar, Abdullah Al-Kharbit, also received 131 votes within the Taqaddam coalition, and Media Jamal, the former representative of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan in Kirkuk, received 210 votes.[/size]
    [size=45]The head of the Bayrak al-Khair Party and former MP Muhammad al-Khalidi received 287 votes, and Nawal al-Araji, a former deputy from the Nahj (virtue) coalition, received 307 votes.[/size]
    [size=45]As for Muhammad Al-Hindawi, the former representative within the State of Law and the godfather of the Rafha Privileges Law, he received 343 votes, and Zala Naftji, the former Turkmen MP, received 459 votes.[/size]
    [size=45]Finally, in the list of less than 100 votes, is Basma Al-Saadi, a former deputy in the State of Law, who received 494 votes, while 5 candidates received less than 10 votes.[/size]
    [size=45]In addition, 250 candidates received less than 100 votes, including former MP Dalal Al-Gharawi of the Al-Wafa movement affiliated with former MP Adnan Al-Zorfi, who received only 88 votes, which is the lowest number of votes.[/size]
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