BEIRUT, – After two humdrum rounds of legislative elections, Lebanon is poised for a heated contest Sunday that could determine whether an anti-Syrian coalition will muster a parliamentary majority and maintain momentum to thrust the country into a new era.
In the most critical round of a four-phase election, Christian and Muslim voters in the central Mount Lebanon region and the eastern Bekaa Valley will decide on nearly half of the 128 seats in parliament.
At stake domestically is the new legislature’s ability to dislodge remnants of Syrian control, after a 29-year military presence, from key institutions including the presidency. Syrian troops withdrew from Lebanon this spring, but the country continues to wield considerable influence.
“Syria is out of our geography, but not out of our politics or the region’s geopolitics,” Rafik Khoury, a columnist with the Al Anwar daily newspaper, said in an interview. “The difference is that a year ago, we were on death row. Now our sentence has been reduced to a one- or two-year prison term.”