My Way News:
"Yet asked what Iraqis would vote for on Jan. 30, Maithem Modher, a 24-year-old computer company employee, was unclear.
'We will vote to choose a president,' he said. 'If any person gets a majority, he will win the presidency.'
Others were not sure when the election would take place.
'On Jan. 15 we will elect a number of members and they will elect a constitution and a president,' said Mortadha Hussein, 34, a shopkeeper.
'I don't know how many members will be elected ... I only know that there are more then 200 political parties,' he said. 'I would be lying if I said I knew the parties or candidates.'
While 230 parties have registered for the election, most of them are grouping into coalitions that will put forward a list of candidates. The number of votes for each list will determine the number of candidates on the list that get seats.
Others seem confused about the nature of a free vote.
Iraq's most influential Shi'ite cleric, Ali al-Sistani, has issued an edict saying all Shi'ites, who make up 60 percent of the population, must vote, but hasn't said for which party.
Others believe the outcome's already decided.
'Iraq will be one constituency and the parliament seats will be allocated according to the ethnic and sectarian majority,' said Amir Ghazi, 23, a university science student, who believed Shi'ites were already destined to get 120 seats."
"Yet asked what Iraqis would vote for on Jan. 30, Maithem Modher, a 24-year-old computer company employee, was unclear.
'We will vote to choose a president,' he said. 'If any person gets a majority, he will win the presidency.'
Others were not sure when the election would take place.
'On Jan. 15 we will elect a number of members and they will elect a constitution and a president,' said Mortadha Hussein, 34, a shopkeeper.
'I don't know how many members will be elected ... I only know that there are more then 200 political parties,' he said. 'I would be lying if I said I knew the parties or candidates.'
While 230 parties have registered for the election, most of them are grouping into coalitions that will put forward a list of candidates. The number of votes for each list will determine the number of candidates on the list that get seats.
Others seem confused about the nature of a free vote.
Iraq's most influential Shi'ite cleric, Ali al-Sistani, has issued an edict saying all Shi'ites, who make up 60 percent of the population, must vote, but hasn't said for which party.
Others believe the outcome's already decided.
'Iraq will be one constituency and the parliament seats will be allocated according to the ethnic and sectarian majority,' said Amir Ghazi, 23, a university science student, who believed Shi'ites were already destined to get 120 seats."
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