Bobby Ghosh, Columnist

Early Elections Won’t Save Iraq’s Prime Minister

With the country facing multiple crises, Mustafa al-Kadhimi will  have a much harder time winning a mandate to rule.

A protest in Basra denounces the lack of electricity and services.

Photographer: Hussein Faleh/AFP

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When Mustafa al-Kadhimi became Iraq’s prime minister on May 7, after five months of political deadlock in Baghdad, I argued his best chance of success was to fail fast. The only way to clean the Augean stables of Iraqi politics was with the strong broom of a popular mandate — and that could only be obtained from elections. Thoroughgoing political and economic reforms would require a majority — or at least a plurality with which to build an irresistible coalition — in parliament.

Last week, the prime minister called for early elections — on June 6, 2021, a year ahead of schedule. But Iraq’s circumstances have deteriorated so much in the three months since he took office, Kadhimi will have a much harder time convincing Iraqis to give him a mandate to rule.