logo
Lebanese Forces to MTV: Expat Voting Law Must Be Included or We Withdraw

Lebanese Forces to MTV: Expat Voting Law Must Be Included or We Withdraw

MTV Lebanona day ago

The upcoming legislative session scheduled before noon today takes precedence over all other Lebanese issues, especially given the explosive file it carries: the roposal to quickly reintroduce a law that allows Lebanese expatriates to vote for all 128 parliamentary seats in the upcoming elections has not been added to the session agenda by Speaker Nabih Berri.
Since yesterday, the Lebanese Forces have announced that starting today, the approach will be more confrontational to prevent expatriates from being excluded from the national entitlement and the "insistence on politically displacing them." In this context, Ziad Hawat, a member of the Strong Republic bloc, confirmed that 65 MPs have signed a petition to include this item on today's session agenda, stressing that if Berri practices selectivity and refuses to include it, they will withdraw from the session.
Hawat pointed out in an interview with MTV's website that "expatriates form a crucial backbone of the Lebanese economy, especially during times of crisis. Their transfers in 2023 accounted for about 30.7% of the GDP. So how can they be deprived of participating in building the new Lebanon and its political map by choosing a new political class?"
He also stressed that these expatriates, on whom the Lebanese economy depends annually to keep moving by sending nearly 7 billion dollars, have the right to vote, hold politicians accountable, and play an active role in Lebanese political life after having been displaced multiple times due to poor political management and some being tied to destructive alliances. Therefore, Berri bears a national responsibility as does the Council's Bureau.
Hawat added: "We will lead this battle till the end, as excluding them from the electoral process takes us back to times of oppression. It is necessary to act quickly today to pass the law so that the Ministry of Interior can start preparations to involve them in the electoral process and collect the necessary data, which requires months of work, instead of leaving it till the last minute as usual."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hezbollah MP: We have 2 plans  for reconstruction
Hezbollah MP: We have 2 plans  for reconstruction

Ya Libnan

timean hour ago

  • Ya Libnan

Hezbollah MP: We have 2 plans for reconstruction

Hezbollah MP Hassan Fadlallah said today : 'We have two plans for reconstruction: the first relates to funding for destroyed homes, and the second relates to rebuilding infrastructure.' Fadlallah emphasized that 'the state is responsible for its citizens regarding reconstruction, and 400,000 families have been affected by the shelter and restoration project implemented by Hezbollah.' He added, 'If we want to implement the ministerial statement, the Taif Agreement, and what the constitution stipulates, why is there a delay in implementing the electoral law?' According to analysts , 'Hezbollah keeps forgetting that it was the one that started the war against Israel and no country in the world is willing to help in the reconstruction of the hundreds of thousands of homes or infrastructure as long as the party refuses to disarm and hand over its weapons to the Lebanese army. The estimated cost of reconstruction according to the World bank is $11 billion. Lebanon has been trying for several years to secure an IMF backed loan of $3 billion and hasn't been able to so far and Fadlallah knows that. Lebanon is in no position handle such a task on its own. One analyst told Ya Libnan ' All Fadlallah is doing is shifting the blame , to make Hezbollah look good'. Hezbollah is considered the master of deception in Lebanon'.

Parliamentary session: Diaspora seats fuel political divide as Lebanese parliament pushes through agenda
Parliamentary session: Diaspora seats fuel political divide as Lebanese parliament pushes through agenda

LBCI

time10 hours ago

  • LBCI

Parliamentary session: Diaspora seats fuel political divide as Lebanese parliament pushes through agenda

Report by Maroun Nassif, English adaptation by Yasmine Jaroudi After an hour and a half of tense political discussions, Lebanese MPs opposing the allocation of six parliamentary seats to expatriates failed to disrupt a legislative session aimed at addressing multiple pending laws. Members of the Lebanese Forces, the Kataeb Party, several Change MPs, and independents staged a walkout from the parliamentary hall in an attempt to obstruct the quorum. However, the session continued with 68 MPs in attendance, securing the required quorum. The session remained valid due to the presence of MPs from the Amal-Hezbollah duo and their allies, as well as MPs from the Free Patriotic Movement (FPM), the Progressive Socialist Party (PSP), the Moderate Bloc, and the Tashnag Party. Despite their support for abolishing the six diaspora seats and having signed a draft amendment to the electoral law, MPs from the PSP, the Moderate Bloc, and Tashnag chose to attend, citing their refusal to obstruct state institutions. At the start of the session, before the walkout, MPs Paula Yacoubian, Georges Adwan, and Michel Moawad attempted to convince Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri to add the draft electoral law amendment to the agenda under an "accelerated and repeated" procedure. Berri rejected the request, noting that he has never fast-tracked such proposals when similar drafts are already under review by parliamentary committees. He suggested instead that the subcommittee meet weekly to expedite discussions and approval. In response, MPs Kabalan Kabalan and Ali Fayad reminded the chamber that, according to the constitution, changes to the electoral law require a two-thirds majority in the Cabinet, questioning the attempt to push through amendments under an expedited process. Meanwhile, FPM leader MP Gebran Bassil denounced the push to amend expatriate voting as an attempt to "hijack or eliminate" the six diaspora seats. Despite the political standoff, the parliamentary session proceeded and approved several key items on the agenda, including additional funding for the Judges' Mutual Fund, financial allocations for Lebanese University professors, a law exempting victims of Israeli attacks from certain taxes and fees, and legislation canceling some fee increases from the 2015 budget.

Hezbollah's Qmati says deadline must be set for Israel not for Hezbollah
Hezbollah's Qmati says deadline must be set for Israel not for Hezbollah

Nahar Net

time16 hours ago

  • Nahar Net

Hezbollah's Qmati says deadline must be set for Israel not for Hezbollah

by Naharnet Newsdesk 3 hours Hezbollah political bureau member Mahmoud Qmati has said that a deadline must be set for Israel and not for Hezbollah, calling again for Israel's halt of attacks and withdrawal from south Lebanon before demanding Hezbollah to disarm. Qmati said Sunday that liberating the five occupied hills in south Lebanon, freeing the Lebanese prisoners, halting the "Israeli aggression and violations", and the "unconditional reconstruction" of war-hit regions have always been a national priority to the President, the Prime Minister and the Lebanese government. "These are not just Hezbollah's demands but an official Lebanese stance," Qmati said, adding that the U.S., although leading the ceasefire committee, is encouraging Israel to keep its attacks on Lebanon in order to put political and military pressure on the country. Qmati said that the conditions for reconstruction are humiliating, and that the priorities -- liberating the five occupied hills, freeing the Lebanese prisoners, halting the Israeli violations, and the unconditional reconstruction -- must be implemented before any domestic dialogue about Hezbollah's arms or any discussion about a defense strategy. "How can we have such a dialogue while our land is still occupied, prisoners are still in (Israeli) jails, and daily aggressions continue?" They want to change the priorities, they want the Lebanese to focus on one demand: the disarmament of the resistance, Qmati said. "We have cooperated and participated in all national junctures. The (Israeli) enemy is the side that must respect its deadlines, not the resistance." Israel has repeatedly bombed Lebanon despite the November ceasefire aimed at ending over a year of hostilities with Hezbollah. Under the ceasefire deal, Hezbollah was to pull its fighters back north of the Litani river and Israel was required to fully withdraw its troops from the country, but has kept them in five locations in south Lebanon that it deems strategic. But whether Hezbollah must first disarm or Israel must first withdraw remains a chicken and egg situation, and Israel, despite the ceasefire, has struck regions north of the Litani, and deep inside Lebanon, including Beirut's southern suburbs.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store