Lebanon kicks off candidate registration for 'historic' general election

Lebanon kicks off candidate registration for 'historic' general election
Lebanon has officially begun accepting candidates for the upcoming general election, scheduled for May.
2 min read
05 February, 2018
Lebanon's elections will use a form of proportional vote for the first time ever [Getty]

Lebanon has officially began accepting candidates for the upcoming general election, scheduled for May.

Lebanon's Interior Ministry opened the so-called candidate registry on Monday, with one North Lebanon already filing his papers, according to local press reports.

Lebanon in December announced that it will hold its first legislative elections in nearly a decade on 6 May 2018.

Politicians had cited security concerns, political crises and a dispute over the election law for postponing the vote and twice-extending their terms, triggering protests.

Prime Minister Saad Hariri's government agreed on a new election law in June but setting a date was held up while officials debated technical details and registered Lebanese citizens abroad. The law was then ratified by parliament. 

More than 90,000 Lebanese citizens living abroad registered to vote last month in the country's first ever parliamentary election that allowed non-resident citizens to vote from their country of residence. 

Lebanese citizens abroad would be able to vote on 22 and 28 April, a first for the country.

The Lebanese diaspora population of 4 to 6 million likely outnumbers Lebanon's domestic citizen population of just over 4 million, but only some 1.2 million diaspora members are thought to have maintained citizenship.

The elections will be held under a proportional voting system never used before in Lebanon, said The Daily Star.

Under this system, the number of seats won will be proportional to the percentage of votes won by a party, after sectarian quotas are factored in.

This could give a chance for groups from outside the traditional political club consisting of long-standing dynasties and sectarian parties to enter parliament, though critics remain pessimistic about the possibility of radical change.

Lebanon is ranked as partly free by Freedom House.