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PUK’s Nizar Amedi wins decisive vote as behind-the-scenes bargaining between Kurdish rivals and Shiite blocs reshapes Iraq’s political future
Iraq’s parliament on Saturday elected Nizar Amedi as president, ending months of political paralysis but exposing the fragile, deal-driven foundations of the country’s post-2003 power-sharing system.
The victory of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan nominee—backed by party leader Bafel Talabani—was not merely a constitutional milestone. It was the outcome of weeks of closed-door bargaining between Kurdish rivals, Shiite blocs, and Sunni factions, each seeking leverage in the formation of Iraq’s next government.
A senior researcher of kurdish affairs Mohammed Salih argues that "the continued KDP-PUK disputes will ultimately result in such weak forms of representation in Baghdad and hurt Kurds. This was a missed opportunity for the Kurdish parties to put their house in order and prevent external interference." He also argues that PUK’s insistence on getting more than its fair share as based on electoral entitlement is the main driver of these internal Kurdish divisions. The KDP, however, should have shown flexibility and pursued an understanding to prevent this outcome.
In a two-round parliamentary vote, Amedi secured a commanding victory:
Key rival candidates—including Fuad Hussein, backed by the Kurdistan Democratic Party—were eliminated after failing to build cross-bloc support . The result confirms the continuation of a long-standing convention: Iraq’s presidency remains in Kurdish hands, and specifically within the PUK’s orbit since 2005 .
Amedi’s decades inside the presidential system—serving under leaders like Jalal Talabani and Fuad Masum—made him a low-risk candidate for competing factions .
Behind the scenes, KDP figures reportedly engaged in negotiations with both the PUK and Shiite blocs, but failed to extract a decisive concession.
The decisive factor in Amedi’s victory was not Kurdish unity—but Baghdad’s arithmetic. The powerful Shiite coalition, the Coordination Framework, played a pivotal role by:
The bloc is widely expected to push for the return of Nouri al-Maliki as prime minister, a move already stirring domestic and international controversy . Sunni factions, meanwhile, largely aligned with the emerging consensus, favoring stability over prolonged deadlock.
Interviews with Iraqi political insiders and party officials in social media accounts point to several key behind-the-scenes dynamics:
Rather than pushing a polarizing figure, the PUK offered Amedi as a neutral administrator, reassuring Shiite and Sunni blocs that he would not disrupt the balance of power.
Shiite factions reportedly supported Amedi in exchange for Kurdish acquiescence—or neutrality—on the selection of the next prime minister.
The lack of a unified Kurdish front allowed Baghdad-based blocs to:
The election came months after constitutional deadlines, increasing pressure on all parties to reach a deal as Iraq faced regional instability and economic strain .
Though largely ceremonial, the Iraqi presidency is a constitutional trigger point: The president must nominate the prime minister. This sets the entire government formation process in motion. Without a president, Iraq remains politically frozen,
Amedi’s election therefore marks the end of a five-month political vacuum. The beginning of a high-stakes battle over the premiership and a test of whether Iraq’s power-sharing system can still function
This election underscores a deeper shift:
For now, Talabani has secured a tactical victory. But the strategic question remains: at what cost to Kurdish influence and Iraq’s political balance?
#Iraq #Kurdistan #PUK #KDP #NizarAmedi #BafelTalabani #Baghdad #MiddleEast #IraqPolitics #Geopolitics
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