Veto of Iraq’s Election Law Could Force Vote Delay
Veto of Iraq’s Election Law Could Force Vote Delay
By Rod Nordland and Riyadh Mohammed | NY Times
Iraq was thrown into a fresh political crisis on Wednesday after a vice president vetoed a newly passed election law, delaying the vote, setting off fresh sectarian wrangling and possibly complicating plans to withdraw American troops.
In a move that caught American officials by surprise, one of two vice presidents, Tariq al-Hashemi, said Wednesday that he had vetoed the new election law the night before; he had threatened a veto but the Americans did not expect him to follow through. Shortly afterward, the chief executive of Iraq’s United Nations-supported electoral commission said in an interview for the first time that the elections would have to be delayed.
The veto touched off a political explosion. Iraq’s prime minister, Nuri Kamal al-Maliki, condemned it as constitutionally questionable, while President Jalal Talabani, a Kurd, warned that delaying the elections risked creating a constitutional vacuum during which the Iraqi government would lose its legitimacy. Read more.
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
- Printer-friendly version
- Spotlight this page




























www.VelvetRevolution.us
Recent comments
24 min 18 sec ago
3 hours 22 min ago
4 hours 32 min ago
7 hours 35 min ago
7 hours 43 min ago
9 hours 21 sec ago
11 hours 14 min ago
12 hours 47 min ago
1 day 1 hour ago
1 day 12 hours ago