*** ----> Lebanon fails to elect new president as political crisis deepens | THE DAILY TRIBUNE | KINGDOM OF BAHRAIN

Lebanon fails to elect new president as political crisis deepens

Agencies | Beirut      

The Daily Tribune – www.newsofbahrain.com

Lebanon’s parliament failed to elect a new president after a first round of voting yesterday amid deep divisions over a replacement for Michel Aoun whose term expires next month.

A majority of lawmakers cast blank ballots, suggesting the election process is likely to drag on, an outcome Lebanon can ill afford as it wrestles with a crippling financial crisis. Speaker Nabih Berri said he would call a new session of parliament “when an agreement is reached on the next president” -- a process that could take months in a country where constitutional deadlines are routinely missed.

Yesterday’s session was attended by 122 of parliament’s 128 members, of whom 66 cast blank ballots. Christian politician Michel Moawad, the son of former president Rene Moawad, emerged as the front-runner but his 36 votes fell well short of the 86 needed to win in the first round.

Under Lebanon’s longstanding confessional power-sharing system, the presidency is reserved for a Maronite Christian. A walkout by some MPs meant there was no second round of voting. Deep divisions among lawmakers have raised fears Lebanon could be left without a president after Aoun’s mandate expires at the end of October.

The incumbent’s own election in 2016 came after a 29-month vacancy at the presidential palace as lawmakers made 45 failed attempts to reach consensus on a candidate. The political parties that must now agree on the next head of state have yet to appoint a new government to replace the outgoing one after its mandate expired in May.

“If there is a political vacuum, the economic crisis would intensify and there is a clear risk of security incidents,” said analyst Karim Bitar. The Lebanese pound has lost more than 95 percent of its value on the black market since 2019 in a financial meltdown branded by the World Bank as one of the worst in modern times.

The crisis has caused poverty rates to reach more than 80 percent of the population, as food prices have risen by 2,000 percent, the United Nations has said. The international community has pressed Lebanese lawmakers to elect a new president in “timely” fashion to avoid plunging the country deeper into crisis.