2005 Press Releases
Elections in Iraq
January 24, 2005
by United States Ambassador Dr. Roy L. Austin
On
January 30th, one year and ten months after Iraqis were liberated from
the tyranny of Saddam Hussein, they will go to the polls to take the
first decisive step toward building the free, democratic society that
the vast majority of Iraqi’s desire. In polling stations across Iraq
and around the world, Iraqi citizens will be able to cast their ballots
and make their individual contributions to Iraq’s democratization.
Finally, after a 30-year nightmare of repression, torture and murder,
the people of Iraq will begin taking charge of their own lives and
future.
From start to finish, these elections are being run by
Iraqis, for Iraqis. The Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq has
certified approximately 111 parties, coalitions and individuals who
will compete for 275 seats on the Transitional National Assembly. This
Assembly will in turn choose a president and two vice presidents, who
will then select a Prime Minister. The Transitional National Assembly
will also draft a constitution, which will be put to a public
referendum in October 2005. By December 2005, Iraqis will return to the
polls to elect a new national government under the auspices of their
newly enacted constitution.
In the January 30 election, Iraqis
will also vote for representatives to Iraq’s 18 provincial councils,
and to the Kurdistan National Assembly, thereby spreading and
instilling democracy even deeper into the fabric of Iraqi society.
The
stakes are high and clearly understood by everyone. While surveys show
that the vast majority of Iraqis want to vote in these elections, the
enemies of a free, stable and prosperous Iraq believe they have no
stake in a future of freedom. The evidence of their fury is all too
evident in the form of car bombs, assassinations, kidnappings and
intimidation. As the election draws near, unfortunately, this violence
is likely to intensify. Every individual Iraqi of voting age,
regardless of religious or ethnic affiliation, must make a choice and a
decision whether they will vote to move their country forward towards
the path of freedom, or yield to the threats and oppression of those
who seek to undermine Iraq’s future.
Now, as Iraq approaches the
elections, people everywhere can take heart in the courage shown each
day by ordinary Iraqis. The true Iraqi patriots are the people who
continue to get up and go to work for a better future. They are the
people who stand in line to become police officers and national
guardsmen, despite the fact that their colleagues have been abducted
and murdered. They are the people who drive to their offices, past the
same checkpoints at which suicide bombers struck and killed innocent
victims the day before. They are the Iraqis who care for orphaned
children, rebuild sewers and electrical stations, lay new roads, teach
in schools, and work for a brighter future. As they seek to realize
their hopes and aspirations for a better Iraq through elections, they
deserve the world’s respect and full support.
Building the
democracy desired by a large majority of Iraqis will require
persistence and patience. It will require firmness in the face of those
who advocate postponement of the elections. Postponement at this stage
will only encourage the forces of destruction and despair. Successful
elections, on the other hand, will land a serious blow on these forces.
If the Iraqi people have the courage to move forward and cast their
ballots for a democratic Iraq, then we, too, must show the same
resolve, supporting their effort as they take on this next challenge in
their transition to democracy.