In the statement made by the Iraqi Election Commission, according to unofficial results, it pointed out that the Sairoon alliance supported by Muqtada es Sadr, one of the leading leaders of Iraq, set to win the elections.
Sadr, leader of the Sairoon alliance, who was on the post of the election through his social media account, announced that a technocratic government would be established.
Noting that the government to be established should serve the public, Sadr stated that the government should not use state treasury for its own interests, and state money should be used only for public service.
Sadr is estimated to have 54 seats in the 329-seat parliament.
How will the government be established?
According to the constitution of Iraq, the establishment of the government is spreading over a period of 90 days.
The Supreme Election Commission is expecting to publish official results in the next Monday.
President Fuad Masum will invite parliament to do its first session within 15 days.
The parliament speaker and two deputies will be elected at this session.
Within 30 days of the first session, the new president will be elected by parliament.
Within 15 days, the new president will give the task of setting up a party government with the highest seat party in parliament.
The prime minister will have 30 days to form a cabinet and receive approval from parliament.
Following the cabinet's decision, the parliament will nominate both the government program and individual ministers. The ministers need to support the majority of the parliamentary representatives in order to start their task in the parliamentary.
Who is Muqtada al-Sadr?
Muqtada es-Sadr was born August 12, 1973, as the fourth son of Ayatollah Muhammad Sadiq.
Sadr, who studied theology for a while, did not complete his education after he lost his father in an assassination. Two of his brothers were killed by Saddam Hussein's order on February 19, 1999.
In April 2003, the Sadr Bureau established by its supporters in the city of Sadr began to serve. Health, food and clean water are the main types of services they provide.
Sadr, who has always been opposed to the American presence in Iraq, established the resistance organization Mehdi Army in 2003.
Sadr's supporters backed the United Iraqi Alliance in parliament in the December 2005 elections. But in November 2006, Sadr declared that he had boycotted the Iraqi government at a summit in Jordan led by prime minister Nouri al-Maliki and George Bush.
This boycott lasted for two months, then the Sadrs returned to their positions.
In April 2007, Sadr called for a rally in Najaf, demanding that Nuri al-Maliki agrees on a timetable for withdrawing US forces from Iraq.
Since that time, conflicts have continued between Sadr's loyal warriors and the American and Iraqi forces.
Sadr's blog had a strong influence in the 2010 parliamentary elections.
ILKHA