Syria Holds First Parliamentary Vote Since Assad’s Ouster, Testing Inclusivity Under Islamist-Led Authorities
World 12:18 PM - 2025-10-05
Reuters
A member of the electoral colleges votes to select the new Syrian Parliament, 5 October 2025.
Members of Syria's electoral colleges will gather on Sunday to vote for new lawmakers, a milestone in the country's shift away from the ousted regime of Bashar al-Assad and a major test of inclusivity under its current Islamist-led authorities.
President Ahmed al-Sharaa, who came to power after his rebel offensive toppled Assad in December, is trying to consolidate his hold over a nation fractured by a 14-year war and bouts of sectarian violence that fueled distrust of him among minorities.
The indirect vote will see a combined 6,000 electors cast ballots at regional electoral colleges starting around 9:00 a.m. local (0600 GMT), with polls closing around 5:00 p.m. (1400 GMT).
A committee appointed by Sharaa approved 1,570 candidates who showcased their platforms in seminars and debates this week. But public electioneering was muted, with no posters or billboards visible in major cities, Reuters reporters said.
Sunday's vote will determine two-thirds of the 210-seat parliament, and results are expected the same night. But the legislature will not be formally established until Sharaa, a former Al Qaeda fighter, selects the remaining third.
The authorities say they resorted to this system rather than universal suffrage due to a lack of reliable population data and following the displacement of millions of Syrians by the war.
Citing security and political reasons, they postponed the vote in three provinces held by minority groups - leaving 19 seats in parliament empty.
Critics have slammed those moves, saying a partial and indirect vote is unrepresentative and too centrally managed.
Analysts say Sharaa's selection of 70 lawmakers will ultimately determine the new body's effectiveness and legitimacy: choosing women or minority lawmakers could add diversity, but loyalists could help him to issue laws without a legislative challenge.
Article was originally published by Reuters
PUKMEDIA
More news
-
Oil Prices Fall for Third Straight Day as Hormuz Shipping Recovers
10:50 AM - 2026-06-24 -
Qubad Talabani Discusses Tourism Development Strategy in Meeting with Tourism Board
06:27 PM - 2026-06-23 -
Iraq Increases Kirkuk Oil Exports to 7 Million Barrels a Month, Says SOMO
03:37 PM - 2026-06-23 -
Vance Says Talks with Iranian Officials Laid ‘Good Foundation’ for Deal to End War
01:06 PM - 2026-06-23
see more
Kurdistan 05:36 PM - 2026-06-24 PUK President Visits Gorran Movement Headquarters to Strengthen Relations
PUK President, KJG Leader Discuss Unified Efforts to Resolve Outstanding Issues
04:00 PM - 2026-06-24
Teen Author and Translator Pursues Multilingual Success
01:24 PM - 2026-06-24
International Day of Women in Diplomacy Celebrated Worldwide
09:27 AM - 2026-06-24
Darbaz Kosrat Rasul Receives Russian Ambassador for Talks on Political Developments
10:36 PM - 2026-06-23
Most read
-
Iraq Increases Kirkuk Oil Exports to 7 Million Barrels a Month, Says SOMO
Iraq 03:37 PM - 2026-06-23 -
Hero Khan: Fighter, Diplomat, Witness
Opinions 09:51 AM - 2026-06-24 -
Qubad Talabani: Baghdad and Erbil Must Work Together to Strengthen Iraq’s Economy
Kurdistan 05:13 PM - 2026-06-23 -
Qubad Talabani Discusses Tourism Development Strategy in Meeting with Tourism Board
Kurdistan 06:27 PM - 2026-06-23 -
Teen Author and Translator Pursues Multilingual Success
Kurdistan 01:24 PM - 2026-06-24 -
Darbaz Kosrat Rasul Receives Russian Ambassador for Talks on Political Developments
P.U.K 10:36 PM - 2026-06-23 -
Trump Claims Iran Agreed to Nuclear Inspections, Tehran Rejects Assertion
World 03:56 PM - 2026-06-23 -
PUK President, KJG Leader Discuss Unified Efforts to Resolve Outstanding Issues
Kurdistan 04:00 PM - 2026-06-24




.jpg)

Application

