2018 Lebanese general election in North II

Voting to elect eleven members of the Lebanese parliament took place in the North II district on 6 May 2018, part of the general election of that year. The constituency had 350,147 registered to vote,[1][2] out of whom 146,419 voted. Residents elect 8 Sunni, 1 Alawite, 1 Greek Orthodox and 1 Maronite seat. The constituency contains three 'minor districts', Tripoli (corresponding to Tripoli District), Miniyeh and Danniyeh (the latter two corresponding to the Miniyeh-Danniyeh District).[3]

2018 Lebanese general election (South III)

← 2009 6 May 2018 2022 →

11 seats to the Parliament of Lebanon for North II constituency
  First party Second party Third party
 
Saad Hariri in Sochi, 13 September 2017.jpg
Najib Mikati World Economic Forum 2013 (cropped).jpg
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Leader Saad Hariri Najib Mikati Faisal Karami
Party Future Azm Movement Dignity Movement
Leader's seat Beirut II Tripoli Tripoli
Seats won 5 4 2
Popular vote 51,937 42,019 29,101
Percentage 35.47 28.70% 19.88%

Majority voting by municipality in the North II electoral district, covering the Tripoli and Miniyeh–Danniyeh District. The North II electoral district is divided into 3 minor districts: Tripoli, Miniyeh and Denniyeh.

Elected Prime Minister

Saad Hariri
Future Movement

Demographics

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The electorate is predominately Sunni (82.91%), with significant minorities of Greek Orthodox (6.24%), Alawites (6.04%) and Maronites (3.5%).[4] 0.51% of the electorate are Armenian Orthodox, 0.32% Armenian Catholics and 0.59% belong to other Christian communities.[5]

Elections

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With the new election law in place, the heavyweights of Tripoli politics went in different directions.[6] Justifying the decision to head to the polls alone, the Future Movement general secretary Ahmed Hariri stated that "[w]e will form our own list because we came to understand that a lot of people had taken advantage of us...".[6] In Dennieh, the 28-year old Sami Fatfat overtook his father Ahmad Fatfat's mantle as the Future Movement candidate.[7] Mohammad Safadi opted to stay out of the electoral race, calling for support to the Future list. Safadi announced his decision at a press conference at the Safadi Cultural Center.[6]

All in all, 8 lists were registered in the second northern electoral district; the "Determination" list of former Prime Minister Najib Mikati, the Future Movement list, a list led by Ashraf Rifi, the "National Dignity" list (alliance between Faisal Karami and Jihad Samad, with participation of Al-Ahbash and Marada Movement), the "People's Decision" list (alliance between Free Patriotic Movement and Kamal Kheir, joined by independents), the "Kulluna Watani" (We are all National) list (Sabaa Party, Movement of Citizens in the State, Socialist Arab Lebanon Vanguard Party, Resistance Movement and independents), the "Independent Decision" list (alliance between al-Jamaa al-Islamiah, ex-parliamentarian Mesbah Ahdab and independents) and the "Independent Civil Society" list (independents).[8][9][10]

Mikati launched his "Determination" list at an electoral meeting at the Quality Inn Hotel in Tripoli on March 18, 2018. Amongst his candidates were former minister Jean Obeid and Nicolas Nahas and incumbent Future parliamentarian Kazim Kheir.[11] Kheir was denied the Minnieh spot on the Future Movement list, a move that pushed him to join the Mikati list instead.[12]

Result by lists

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List Sunni (Tripoli, 5 seats) Maronite (Tripoli, 1 seat) Greek Orthodox (Tripoli, 1 seat) Alawite (Tripoli, 1 seat) Sunni (Dennieh, 2 seats) Sunni (Minnieh, 1 seat)
  "Future for the North" Mohammad Kabbara
9600 (6.56%)

(Future)[13]

Samir Jisr
9,527 (6.51%)

(Future)[13]

Dima Jamali
2066 (1.41%)

(Future)[13]

Chadi Nachabe

(Future)[13]

Walid Sawalhi

(Future)[13]

George Bkassini

(Future)[13]

Nima Mahfoud

(Future)[13]

Leila Chahoud

(Future)[13]

Sami Fafat
7,943 (5.42%)

(Future)[13]

Qassem Abdel Aziz

(Future)[13]

Osman Alameddine
10,221(6.98%)

(Future)[13]

  "Determination" Najib Mikati
21,300 (14.55%)

(Azm Movement)[14]

Rashid Mokhtam

(Azm Movement)[14]

Mohamed Nadim Jisr

(Azm Movement)[14]

Tawfiq Sultan

(Azm Movement)[14]

Mirfat Hawz

(Azm Movement)[14]

Jean Obeid
1,136 (0.78%)

(Azm Movement)[14]

Nicolas Nahas
1,057 (0.72%)(Azm Movement)[14]
Alawi Darwish
2,246 (1.53%)

(Azm Movement)[14]

Mohammed Fadhil

(Azm Movement)[14]

Jihad Yusuf

(Azm Movement)[14]

Kazim Kheir

(Azm Movement)[14]

  "National Dignity" Faisal Karami
7,126 (4.87%)

(Dignity Movement)[15]

Taha Naji

(Al-Ahbash)[16]

Mohammed Safouh Yakan

(National Gathering)[17]

Abdel Nasser Masri

(Lebanese People's Congress)[17]

Ayman Nouruddin Omar Rafli Anton Diab

(Marada)[16]

Ahmed Mahmoud Omran Jihad al-Samad
11,897(8.13%)
Adel Zreika

(Dignity Movement)[17]

  "Sovereign Lebanon" Ashraf Rifi Khaled Tadmori Mohammed Walid Qamaruddin Mohamed Salhab Ali Ayoubi Halim Zani George Jalad Badr Eid Ragheb Raad Oussama Amoun Waleed Masri
  "Independent Decision" Mesbah Ahdab Waseem Alwan

(al-Jama'a al-Islamiah)[18]

Nariman Jamal Tony Khalifa Menzeh Sawan Hisham Ibrahim (Al Moaie) Ali Farouk Samad Abdul Salam Trad Mohamed Ahmed
  "People's Decision" Khalid Roumieh Tony Maroni

(FPM)[19]

Nastas Koshary Mahmoud Shehadeh Ahmed Shandab Ali Hermoush Kamal Kheir
  "Independent Civil Society" Heba Naja Jamal Badawi Fadi Jamal Hassan Hassan Khalil Samah Arja Ayman Jamal Abdullah Rifai
  "Kulluna Watani" (We are all National) Nariman Chamaa (MMFD) Yehia Mawloud Mohammad Monzer Maaliki

(Lebanon Vanguard)[20]

Wathek Moukaddam Malek Moulawi

(Sabaa)

Moussa Khoury (MMFD) Farah Issa

(Sabaa)

Zeinelddine Dib Ahmad Douhaiby Dany Othman (Sabaa)
Source: Al-Modon[16] Ministry of Interior and Municipalities[21]

References

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  1. ^ "Daily Star". Archived from the original on 2018-08-24. Retrieved 2022-07-29.
  2. ^ "Daily Star". Archived from the original on 2018-04-22. Retrieved 2022-07-29.
  3. ^ 8 لوائح في الشمال الثانية: معركة تشتيت الأصوات. Al-Modon
  4. ^ 8 لوائح في الشمال الثانية: معركة تشتيت الأصوات. Al-Modon
  5. ^ دائرة الشمال الثانية. Annahar
  6. ^ a b c L'Orient Le Jour. Législatives : Une liste complète pour chaque leader tripolitain
  7. ^ L'Orient Le Jour. Sami Fatfat, l’expérience précoce du terrain
  8. ^ 77 لائحة تُقصي 334 مرشحاً: لبنان إلى الانتخابات Al-Akhbar
  9. ^ 8 لوائح في الشمال الثانية: معركة تشتيت الأصوات. Al-Modon
  10. ^ طرابلس: ماذا يجري بين قوى التغيير؟. Al-Modon
  11. ^ L'Orient Le Jour. Liban-Nord II : Mikati annonce sa liste…
  12. ^ Daily Star. Mikati launches election list with five-point plan
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k mtv. Names of Future Movement candidates for the parliamentary elections
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k بالأسماء: مرشحو تيار العزم في طرابلس. Janoubia
  15. ^ رئيس تيار الكرامة فيصل كرامي يشدد على ضرورة إيلاء الشمال أهمية إنمائية Archived 2018-10-12 at the Wayback Machine. NBN
  16. ^ a b c 8 لوائح في الشمال الثانية: معركة تشتيت الأصوات. Al-Modon
  17. ^ a b c كرامي اعلن لائحة الكرامة الوطنية في مهرجان حاشد بطرابلس: لا تنتخبوا الفشل المتمادي من 25 سنة ولا تجربوا المجرب. NBN
  18. ^ لقاء للماكينة الانتخابية للجماعة الإسلامية في طرابلس بحضور فضيلة الأمين العام. الجماعة الإسلامية.
  19. ^ Daily Star. FPM announces 46 candidates for elections Archived 2021-11-04 at the Wayback Machine
  20. ^ كلمة "لائحة وطني" في دائرة الشمال الثانية (طرابلس الضنية المنية) التي ألقاها الدكتور منذر معاليقي في حفل اطلاق اللائحة من مقهى فهيم. Socialist Arab Lebanon Vanguard Party
  21. ^ المسجلَّة في دائرة الشمال الثانية كما نشرتها المديرية العامة للشؤون السياسية واللاجئين[permanent dead link]. Ministry of Interior and Municipalities