Thursday, February 18, 2010 - 12:45 PM

By David Bender
On March 7th, Iraq
will hold its second parliamentary election and the world will again see
pictures of Iraqis' purple fingers. But these images of democratic
participation may obscure more than they reveal: Iraq's democracy is in
trouble. Currently, only 28 of more than 500 banned opposition candidates will
be permitted to run in the election. Through clever political and judicial
manipulation, the opposition has been eliminated before election day and left
with no clear constitutional or legal recourse.
Since January, an aggressive campaign to ban more than 500 largely Sunni and
secular Shia candidates -- mostly from Iyad Allawi's largely Sunni and secular
Shia Iraqiyya Alliance for alleged Baathist links -- has started to undermine
the weak democratic process that was beginning to take shape in 2009. The
Iraqiyya Alliance presented a non-sectarian alternative to the increasingly
unpopular Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al Maliki; and as a pro-US, secular
nationalist, Allawi is a nightmare for pro-Iran factions in Iraq. With Maliki's
support, the Justice and Accountability Council (JAC), which is charged with
de-Baathification and is run by two notoriously pro-Iran figures, Ahmed Chalabi
and Ali Faisal al Lami, ordered electoral bans against many Iraqiyya candidates
linking them to Baathism.
Given the atrocities perpetrated by the Baath party in Iraq, it is understandable
that many Iraqis -- especially the Shia and Kurds -- support the ban against
candidates with alleged Baathist links or sympathies. In reality, however, the
bans were never about any genuine fear of a Baathist resurgence. The JAC could
have banned any of these candidates at any time in the last two years, but it
waited until two months before the election, just as Iraqiyya appeared to be
gaining electoral momentum. It's essentially a case of Maliki and the Shia
parties -- along with some subdued Kurdish support -- coming together to remove
a mutual rival.
The Obama administration, concerned by the increasingly anti-democratic actions
of the Iraqi government and the growing prospect of a Sunni boycott, sent Vice
President Joe Biden to Baghdad at the end of January. He pressed the Iraqi
government to allow the banned candidates to run in the election and then be
investigated for Baathist sympathies after the election. Soon after, on Feb. 3,
an Iraqi appeals court issued an order that essentially adopted the Biden plan
and it appeared, for a moment, that the elections would go ahead with full
voter participation. But Maliki reacted furiously, calling the ruling "illegal
and unconstitutional," and assembled a group of four of the most powerful
figures in the country to overturn it: himself, President Jalal Talabani,
Speaker of the Parliament Ayad al Samarrai, and Head of the Higher Judicial
Council Midhat al Mahmud. The group pushed the supposedly independent judiciary
to rule that the bans would stand.
It's too early to say that Iraq's experiment with multi-ethnic and
multi-sectarian democracy is doomed. Ultimately, the country's political
stability will depend on post-election dynamics, including the government's new
formation, rather than on vote tallies alone. But the government's unapologetic
manipulation of the system to suppress Sunni participation bodes poorly for the
country's democratic prospects and Sunni participation in the political
process.
The Call, from Ian Bremmer, uses cutting-edge political science to predict the political future -- and how it will shape the global economy.
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