Lawmakers will elect a parliamentary speaker and two deputies in
their first session. They will later elect a new president who
will task the leader of the largest bloc to form a government as
prime minister.
The main winner of the Oct. 10 election was Shi'ite cleric
Moqtada al-Sadr, a populist who has positioned himself as a
staunch opponent of both Iran and the United States.
Sadr's bloc, already the biggest in the 329-seat parliament,
will expand to 73 seats from 54. Its main rivals for years, the
Fatah bloc of factions linked to pro-Tehran militia, meanwhile,
saw its parliamentary representation collapse to just 17 seats
from 48.
Fatah bloc political leaders held a meeting with cleric Sadr at
his home in the southern holy city of Najaf on Wednesday to
discuss the formation of the government, but no clear results
have been announced after the meeting, said two Shi'ite
officials who attended.
"Atmospheres were positive and we think we need to hold more
meetings to reach common ground," said one Shi'ite official.
Because no coalition won a majority, Shi’ite, Sunni and Kurdish
coalitions have been jockeying for position in the new
government.
(Reporting by Ahmed Rasheed; Editing by Gareth Jones and Hugh
Lawson)
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