By: Al-Araby al-Jadeed & agencies
Sleiman Frangieh, the 50-year-old Lebanese lawmaker is being talked about as a credible presidential candidate under an emerging deal that could end the country’s 18-month-long political crisis.
After months of political bickering that brought the Lebanese state to near complete paralysis, former Prime Minister Saad Hariri tossed Frangieh’s name in the ring following a meeting between the two men in Paris two weeks ago.
For a year and a half since President Michel Suleiman stepped down after his six-year-term ended, Lebanon has been without a head of state as lawmakers repeatedly failed to agree on a consensus president.
According to the country’s power-sharing system, the president must be a Maronite Christian, the prime minister a Sunni Muslim and the parliament speaker a Shia Muslim.
The two main party blocks continued to reject each other’s presidential candidates, despite 32 parliament sessions called for by Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri to elect a president
The deadlock and paralysis reached its peak during the summer, when the country was shaken by the largest protests in years over the government’s inability to find a solution to Lebanon’s ongoing trash problem.
The demonstrations quickly developed into protests against the entire political establishment.