1970 Lebanese presidential election

An indirect presidential election was held in the Parliament of Lebanon on 5 November 1970, resulting in Deputy Suleiman Frangieh being elected President of the Lebanese Republic.

1970 Lebanese presidential election

17 August 1970
 
Nominee Suleiman Frangieh Élias Sarkis
Party Marada Movement Template:Free Patriotic Movement/meta/color Chehabist
Electoral vote 50 49
Percentage 50.51% 49.49%

President before election

Henri Helou
Chehabist

Elected President

Suleiman Frangieh
Marada Movement Template:Free Patriotic Movement/meta/color

This article is part of a series on the
politics and government of
Lebanon

 Lebanon portal

By convention, the presidency is always attributed to a Maronite Christian. Under the article 49 of the Lebanese Constitution, a qualified majority of two-thirds of the members of the then 99-seat Lebanese Parliament is required to elect the president in the first round. After the second round of election, the president is elected by an absolute majority of the total number of deputies in office.[1]

Suleiman Frangieh, a deputy representing Zgharta in North Lebanon, posed as a conservative consensus candidate, gaining the support from both the left and right and across religious factions due to backlash from the 12 continuous years of reform from the Chehabist regimes. In what was possibly the most controversial presidential election in Lebanon, he was elected by the thinnest margin possible - on a 1 vote difference - on the 17 August 1970 by 50 of the 99 Representatives.

Results

All 99 MPs were present. Usually, a consensus candidate would have been agreed before-hand, however in this case both Frangieh and Sarkis had roughly equal support In the first round, a majority of two-thirds of present deputies was required; in the second and subsequent rounds, however, only a simple majority was needed.[2]

In the first round, no one received the 2/3 threshold needed, therefore the election proceeded to the second round. In that round, however, an extra ballot was cast (there were 100 votes in the urn and only 99 deputies in total), therefore the round was negated. In the third round, Frangieh won an upset victory over Élias Sarkis, the official candidate of the Chehabist regime, due to a last minute change of Kamal Jumblatt, who ordered one of his deputies to vote for Frangieh.[3] The Speaker of the Chamber, Sabri Hamadeh, refused to announce the results on a 1-vote difference and walked out of the parliament building. As he exited the chamber, Deputy Speaker Michel Georges Sassine exercised his functions as Acting Speaker and declared Suleiman Frangieh the 10th President of the Lebanese Republic.[4]

Candidate First round Second round Third round
Votes%Votes%Votes%
Suleiman Frangieh3838.45050.5
Élias Sarkis4545.54949.5
Pierre Gemayel1010.1
Jamil Lahoud55.1
Adnan Hakim11.0
Extra ballot010
Total9910010099100
Eligible voters/turnout991009999100
Source: The Monthly

Aftermath

About 5 years later, the Lebanese Civil War began as armed right-wing Christian militias began clashing more often with left-wing Muslim PLO militias in Beirut.

gollark: This is me: http://www.murderousmaths.co.uk/miscpix/golplassm.gif
gollark: That is not me.
gollark: The policy is very clear.
gollark: > You agree that your mind, thoughts, soul and other distinguishing characteristics may be repurposed/utilized at any time for the training of GPT-██ or other artificial intelligences at the discretion of the PotatOS Advanced Projects team. You also agree that your soul may be temporarily[6] be placed into various apioformic entities (see Appendix 6.7) for various purposes³. You can opt out of this by being soulless and an empty husk of what you once were. You are permitted to maintain consciousness as long as this does not negatively affect PotatOS™ operations. You agree that you either are a robot or may be converted into one if it is deemed necessary.
gollark: The potatOS privacy policy supersedes it, and in any case I'm not a company/organization/whatever.

References

  1. Rabbath, Edmond. "La Constitution libanaise. Origines, textes et commentaires". Beyrouth: Publications de l'Université Libanaise, 1982, p. 301.
  2. Election of the Presidents of the Lebanese Republic The Monthly, 9 July 2014
  3. Zamir, Meir (1980). "The Lebanese presidential elections of 1970 and their impact on the civil war of 1975–1976". Middle Eastern Studies. 16: 49–70. doi:10.1080/00263208008700424.
  4. "Talking To: Edmund Rizk".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.