Indeed. And what is the Right-Wing Media Circus going to tell the American people about the wonders of the purple-finger election?
Prominent politicians also said in interviews that the delay in forming a government could force the assembly to take an extra half-year to write the permanent constitution, pushing the deadline for a first draft well beyond the original target date of Aug. 15…
The anger boiled over into a shouting match today and showed the fiery tensions that are rising as the main political parties fail to reach an agreement to form a coalition government, more than two months after Iraqi voters defied insurgent threats to vote in the first free elections here in a half-century.
And lest anyone think that the difficulty of forming a government is primarily ethnic or religious, the following makes clear that greed and mistrust are the driving factors:
“The negotiation regarding this is held up, is frozen,” he said.
The meeting of the Iraqi constitutional assembly intended to appoint a speaker today. They were unable to do so, primarily because the leading candidate, Sheik Ghazi al-Yawer, a Sunni, took his name out of the running. Another Sunni, Fawaz al-Jabar, may become the new leading candidate.
If there is one positive in all this, it is the continued recognition on the part of Sistani’s dominate faction, that efforts must be made to compromise and that the viability of a new government will depend on inclusiveness. Yet, the longer the formation of the government is delayed, the more problematic the roadmap, and the longer before we’ll see a draw down of U.S. troops in Iraq.
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