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Path history-politics/iraqi-elections-2005.md
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Date 2005-01-30
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Table of Contents

January 2005 Iraqi Parliamentary Election

Category: History & Politics Key figures: Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, Ibrahim al-Jaafari, Ayad Allawi

Summary

On January 30, 2005, Iraq held nationwide elections to choose a 275-member Transitional National Assembly, in the first multi-party democratic vote in the country in roughly fifty years — its first such election since 1953. Held under the Transitional Administrative Law during the international occupation that followed the 2003 U.S.-led invasion, the assembly was charged with exercising legislative authority and drafting a permanent constitution.

About 8.4 million ballots were cast, for an overall turnout of roughly 58%, though participation varied sharply by region — reaching about 89% in the Kurdish province of Dahuk but falling to around 2% in the Sunni-majority province of Anbar. The election proceeded amid widespread insurgent threats and violence: at least 44 people were killed in some nine separate attacks on or near polling stations, including suicide bombings.

The Shia-led United Iraqi Alliance, tacitly backed by Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, emerged as the largest bloc with about 48% of the vote and 140 of the 275 seats. The Democratic Patriotic Alliance of Kurdistan finished second with roughly 26%, and interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi’s Iraqi List placed third. Major Sunni Arab parties largely boycotted the vote, leaving that community underrepresented. The new assembly went on to form the Iraqi Transitional Government, with Ibrahim al-Jaafari of the United Iraqi Alliance becoming prime minister.

Significance

The January 2005 election was a landmark in post-invasion Iraq, marking the country’s return to multi-party electoral politics after decades of authoritarian rule. It produced the assembly that drafted Iraq’s permanent constitution, ratified later in 2005, and it elevated Shia and Kurdish blocs to political dominance. The widespread Sunni boycott, however, foreshadowed the sectarian tensions and contested legitimacy that shaped Iraq’s subsequent transition and insurgency.

Sources