Revealed: The MPs who aren’t voting for a president
Alex Rowell/Now Lebanon/September 29/16
More than a third of MPs have skipped 43 out of 44 presidential election sessions, official parliament data reveals
Today’s session – the 45th to be held since the conclusion of President Michel Suleiman’s term – was no exception, with parliament failing once again to so much as form a quorum. Who are these MPs, then; dozens of whom have skipped all but one of the forty-five sessions held thus far (while continuing, needless to say, to enjoy their taxpayer-funded salaries of at least $8,500 per month)? What political parties do they represent?
Using previously-unpublished data acquired from parliament’s records for the 44 sessions held between 23 April, 2014 and 7 September, 2016, in the below graphics NOW sets out in full detail exactly who has and has not been showing up to work. The data confirm some things already generally known – e.g., that MPs from the Hezbollah-led Loyalty to the Resistance and Free Patriotic Movement-led Change & Reform blocs have been boycotting parliament since its second electoral session, held on 30 April, 2014 – but they also reveal the patchy attendance records of other MPs of different political allegiances.
Among the key findings are that 43 MPs (34% of the total) attended no more than 1 of the 44 sessions. 57 MPs (45%) attended fewer than 10, while 67 MPs (52%) attended fewer than half. Only 3 MPs (Future’s Ammar Houri, The Democratic Gathering’s Antoine Saad, and Liberation & Development’s Nabih Berri) attended all 44. The three blocs with the highest average attendance rates were Al-Jamaa al-Islamiyah, the Lebanese Forces and the Amal Movement-led Liberation & Development.
(Source: Parliamentary data obtained by NOW for the period of 23 April, 2014 to 7 September, 2016)
Amin Nasr contributed reporting.