BAGHDAD (Reuters) – Parties that make up Iraq’s Shi’ite ruling alliance together took the single-largest bloc of votes in Baghdad and most of the country’s southern provinces in provincial council elections, a Reuters tally of preliminary results showed.
The election is seen as an indicator of the balance of power in a country where groups close to Iran have steadily gained influence, and comes ahead of 2025 parliamentary polls.
The results from the Independent High Electoral Commission, which included only raw votes and not the final seat allocation, show three electoral lists backed by the ruling Shi’ite Coordination Framework (CF) leading in most of the provinces.
They include a list backed by former prime minister Nouri al-Maliki; a list led by Hadi Al-Amiri’s Badr Organization that began as a Shi’ite paramilitary, and other Iran-backed factions; and a list including cleric Ammar al-Hakim and former Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi.
Amid a boycott by Shi’ite populist cleric Moqtada Sadr, their main political rival, the fractious parties that make up the CF competed on several lists, but said they would govern together following the vote.
They swept strongholds of Sadr as well as backers of the 2019 Tishreen anti-government protest movement, including Dhi Qar and Misan provinces.
A notable exception came in the southern oil-rich province of Basra, where a list backed by popular governor Asaad al-Eidani won with a landslide of more than 250,000 votes, more than all of the CF-backed lists put together.
They CF already form the single-largest bloc in parliament and are the main backers of the current government of Mohammed Shia al-Sudani.
With their gains in local elections, the CF have further consolidated their hold on power in the country of 43 million.
In the northern oil-rich city of Kirkuk, the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, a Kurdish party allied with the CF, took the most votes, followed by a Sunni Arab list and a Turkmen list.
(Reporting by Ahmed Rasheed and Timour Azhari; Writing by Timour Azhari; Editing by Alex Richardson and Tomasz Janowski)