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"The U.N. is not a party in the political process and it shouldn't be," al-Maliki added. Al-Maliki's recount demand is only one track of a multi-pronged effort that could bloc Allawi from attempting to form a new government and keeping the incumbent in place. Neither Allawi's bloc, with 91 seats in the 325-member assembly, nor al-Maliki's with 89, have an outright majority, but Allawi should be entitled to the first shot at forging a ruling coalition. However, just before the final results were released, al-Maliki extracted a Supreme Court decision that allows alliances and super-coalitions
-- negotiated and formed after the elections -- to form the next government if they have the largest number of parliament seats. There has also been a push to have 50 candidates, mostly from Allawi's Iraqiya list, disqualified over alleged ties to Saddam Hussein's regime. A government vetting committee in charge of the disqualifications is to have a press conference later Monday that may shed light on the fate of those candidates. Al-Maliki has also opened negotiations with both Iraq's Kurdish Alliance and the Shiite religious bloc, two major groups whose votes he will need for any future government.
[Associated
Press;
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