Under the Iraqi constitution of 1925, Iraq was a constitutional monarchy, with a bicameral legislature consisting of an elected House of Representatives and an appointed Senate. The lower house was elected every four years by manhood suffrage (women did not vote). The first Parliament met in 1925. Ten general elections were held before the overthrow of the monarchy in 1958.

Between 1958 and 2003 Iraq was ruled by multiple dictatorships, socialist, Arabist then Ba'athist under the regime of Ahmed Hassan Al Bakr, who came to power in 1968, then Saddam Hussein in 1979. On 16 October 2002, after a well-publicized show election, Iraqi officials declared that Saddam had been re-elected to another seven-year term as president by a 100% unanimous vote of all 11,445,638 eligible Iraqis, eclipsing the 99.96% received in 1995. Foreign governments dismissed the vote as lacking credibility.

Latest results

PartyVotes%Seats
Reconstruction and Development Coalition1,318,68711.7446
Kurdistan Democratic Party1,101,3579.8126
Progress Party939,8108.3727
State of Law Coalition728,4466.4929
Al-Sadiqoun Bloc686,9026.1227
Badr Organization556,8504.9618
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan548,9284.8915
Alliance of Nation State Forces513,7154.5718
Azem Alliance483,7374.3115
National Sovereignty Alliance316,4152.829
Iraqi Fundamental Coalition291,1282.598
Rights Movement231,0132.066
National Determination Alliance226,4692.025
Good News, Iraq211,2761.884
Ishraqat Kanoon199,3351.788
Services Alliance [ar]190,7071.705
Tasmim Alliance173,7611.556
Kurdistan Islamic Union166,9541.494
National Stance Movement156,9951.405
New Generation Movement139,2471.243
Al-Anbar Is Our Identity Alliance128,3251.143
Nineveh for Its People111,1250.993
Wasit Ajmal Alliance106,1520.954
National Party of the Masses104,7490.933
Qimam Coalition97,6350.873
Tafawq Alliance84,3260.752
Alternative Alliance71,6970.640
Sumerian Movement66,4680.592
Unified Iraqi Turkmen Front66,1790.592
Al-Faw Zakho Coalition64,2630.571
Saladin Unified Alliance57,1500.511
Nineveh's People Union56,4200.502
Arab Project54,5730.491
Diyala First Coalition53,4690.481
Arab Alliance of Kirkuk53,0460.471
Saladin Partnership Alliance50,9800.451
National Identity50,2000.451
Kurdistan Justice Group49,7560.441
Yazidi Cause Alliance49,2110.441
Our Hawks41,4340.370
Kirkuk Turkmen Salvation Alliance32,7510.290
National Depth Alliance31,8290.280
Thabitun30,4490.271
Nineveh First Alliance29,3810.260
Idraak Movement28,4910.251
State Support Bloc21,6150.191
People's Front21,0080.190
Qadimun20,1930.180
National Hadbaa Alliance18,3830.160
The Youth Machine14,9150.130
Civil Party12,9740.120
Civil Democratic Alliance9,0690.080
Leadership Alliance8,2260.070
National Pioneers Movement7,3890.070
Kurdistan Social Democratic Party7,1000.060
Sharqat Alliance6,9410.060
Diwaniyah Flame5,6120.050
Iraqi Altruism Party5,5050.050
Al-Umran Party4,2610.040
National Tribal Movement in Iraq4,1120.040
Iraq Reform Party4,0560.040
Rescuers3,9780.040
Iraqi Turkmen Front2,3950.020
National Brigade Party1,7740.020
Al-Daae Party1,7310.020
National Spread Party1,6030.010
Our Cause Movement1,3240.010
Fayli Front1,1590.010
National Al-Refah Party2340.000
Independents22,4950.200
Christian minority candidates154,2271.375
Feyli minority candidates39,0550.351
Yazidi minority candidates32,1690.291
Mandaean minority candidates27,4570.241
Shabak minority candidates17,1580.151
Total11,229,909100.00329
Valid votes11,267,16193.92
Invalid/blank votes729,9236.08
Total votes11,997,084100.00
Registered voters/turnout21,406,88256.04
Source: ,

Parliamentary elections

January 2005 Iraqi parliamentary election

The multinational force's 2003 invasion of Iraq overthrew Saddam's government and installed an interim administration.

An initial Iraqi attempt at holding local elections was canceled by Paul Bremer.

This government held elections on 30 January 2005 to begin the process of writing a constitution. International groups and the formerly excluded factions claimed that the January 2005 elections were the first free elections in Iraq's history, with a fair representation of all groups. This is in stark contrast to previous elections, such as the 16 October 2002 referendum on the extension of his role as president, when Saddam Hussein claimed that 100% of the voters voted "yes" and that 100% of Iraqi's had voted (approximately 24,001,820 people). Opponents of the occupation, such as the various insurgent groups, claimed the elections were not free and fair, citing flaws in the process. The UN adviser to Iraq's election commission Craig Jenness said the complaints were not significant; "I don't see anything that would necessitate a rerun.... There were nearly 7,000 candidates standing in this election and only 275 seats, so you're always going to have winners and losers and it's normal that the losers won't always be happy about it."

December 2005 Iraqi parliamentary election

2009 request for national elections

The issue arising was the interpretation of Article 56 of the constitution which states:

First: The electoral term of the Council of Representatives shall be four calendar years, starting with its first session and ending with the conclusion of the fourth year.

Second: The new Council of Representatives shall be elected forty-five days before the conclusion of the preceding electoral term. The previous election had been on 15 December 2005.

The opening session of the Council of Representatives had been 16 March 2006 (the swearing in session) and the first substantive session of the Council of Representatives was then held on 22 April 2006. The Court was of the opinion that the swearing in session on 16 March 2006 was the "first session" as required by Article 56(First). It therefore followed that the conclusion of the fourth year would be on 15 March 2010 and that the election should be 45 days prior to 15 March 2010, i.e., 30 January 2010. The court decided that the calendar year referred to was the 365-day Gregorian year (and not for example the 360-day Hijri year).

2010 Iraqi parliamentary election

PartyVotes%Seats+/–
Iraqi National Movement2,849,61224.7291+54
State of Law Coalition2,792,08324.2289+64
National Iraqi Alliance2,092,06618.1570–35
Kurdistan List1,681,71414.5943–10
Movement for Change476,4784.138+8
Iraqi Accord Front298,2262.596–38
Unity Alliance of Iraq306,6472.664+4
Kurdistan Islamic Union243,7202.114–1
Islamic Group of Kurdistan152,5301.322+1
Reserved seats for ethnic minorities61,1530.538+6
Others572,1834.96
Total11,526,412100.00325+50
Registered voters/turnout18,902,073
Source:

2018 parliamentary election

2021 Iraqi parliamentary election

2025 Iraqi parliamentary election

On 17 November 2025, the Iraqi Independent High Electoral Commission announced that the Reconstruction and Development coalition, led by Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, topped the final results with 46 seats in the 329-member Council of Representatives, followed by the Progress (Taqaddum) party of former Parliament Speaker Mohammed al-Halbousi with 36 seats, and the State of Law coalition of former Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki with 29 seats. Subsequently, the Shia-led Coordination Framework declared that it had constituted itself as the largest parliamentary bloc by uniting its component parties, thereby positioning itself as a central force in government formation and parliamentary negotiations.

Presidential elections

2004 Iraqi presidential election

2005 Iraqi presidential election

2006 Iraqi presidential election

2010 Iraqi presidential election

2014 Iraqi presidential election

CandidatePartyFirst roundSecond round
Votes%Votes%
Fuad MasumPatriotic Union of Kurdistan17576.4222192.86
Hussein Al-MoussawiIndependent31.31177.14
Hanan al-FatlawiState of Law Coalition3716.16
Faiq Al Sheikh AliCivil Democratic Alliance104.37
Hameed Hammadi20.87
Hussein Al-Lami10.44
Thaer Ghanem10.44
Total229100.00238100.00
Valid votes22983.2723885.30
Invalid/blank votes4616.734114.70
Total votes275100.00279100.00
Registered voters/turnout32883.8432885.06
Source:

2018 Iraqi presidential election

CandidatePartyFirst roundSecond round
Votes%Votes%
Barham SalihPatriotic Union of Kurdistan16558.7221990.87
Fuad HusseinKurdistan Democratic Party8931.67229.13
Sarwa Abdel WahidIndependent186.41
Abbas Mohammed Nouri41.42
Nawar Saad Al-Mulla20.71
Munqith Abdul Latif Al-Saffa20.71
Thaer Ghanem10.36
Total281100.00241100.00
Valid votes28193.0524188.60
Invalid votes134.30248.82
Blank votes82.6572.57
Total votes302100.00272100.00
Registered voters/turnout32991.7932982.67
Source:

2022 Iraqi presidential election

Results
CandidatesPartiesFirst roundSecond round
Votes%Votes%
Abdul Latif RashidPUK15761.3316262.07
Barham SalihPUK9938.679937.93
Required majority220 votes50% of votes
Valid votes25692.4226197.03
Blank and invalid votes217.5882.97
Total277100269100
Abstention5215.816018.24
Registered voters / turnout32984.1932981.76

2026 Iraqi presidential election

Results
CanditatesPartiesFirst roundSecond round
Votes%Votes%
Nizar AmidiPUK20882.5422790.08
Muthanna Amin[ar]KIU176.75155.95
Fuad HusseinKDP166.35Eliminated
Abdullah Al-UlawiIndependent20.79
Required majority220 votes50% of votes
Valid votes24396.4324296.03
Blank and invalid votes93.57103.97
Total252100252100
Abstention3323.403323.40
Registered voters / turnout32976.6032976.60

Local governorate elections

2005 Iraqi governorate elections

PartyTotal seatsParty leader
Supreme Council for Islamic Revolution in Iraq195Abdel Aziz al-Hakim
Kurdistan Democratic Party91Massoud Barzani
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan80Jalal Talabani
Sadr Movement60Muqtada al-Sadr
al-Fadhila Islamic Party49Abdelrahim Al-Husseini
Iraqi Islamic Party45Tariq al-Hashemi
Islamic Da'awa Party42Ibrahim al-Jaafari
Iraqi National Accord18Iyad Allawi
Kurdistan Islamic Union10Salaheddine Bahaaeddin
Reconciliation and Liberation Bloc10Misha'an al-Juburi
Iraqi Communist Party8Hamid Majid Mousa
Iraqi Republican Group7
Other Parties133-
Total748-

2009 Iraqi governorate elections

PartyTotal votesPercentageTotal seatsParty leader
State of Law Coalition1,362,59419.1%126Nouri al-Maliki
al-Mehraab Martyr List482,8006.8%52Abdul Aziz al-Hakim
Independent Free Movement434,8496.1%43Muqtada al-Sadr
Iraqi Accord Front449,5756.3%32Tariq al-Hashemi
Iraqi National List404,2015.7%26Ayad Allawi
National Reform Trend273,1303.8%23Ibrahim al-Jaafari
Brotherhood List353,3285.0%20Barzani, Talabani
National Iraqi Project Gathering328,2504.6%19Saleh al-Mutlaq
Al-Hadbaa National List435,5956.1%19Atheel al-Nujaifi
Awakening Council56,2620.8%8Abu Risha
Islamic Virtue Party140,6482.0%6Abdul al-Huseini
Other Parties2,422,42433.7%66-
Total7,143,656100%440-

Provincial turnout

GovernorateVotes castSeats
Anbar317,07429
Babil487,85830
Baghdad1,694,93057
Basra646,10935
Dhi Qar453,80631
Diyala430,40729
Karbala291,47927
Maysan234,39827
Muthanna207,75226
Najaf338,54028
Nineveh995,16937
Qadisiyyah332,17628
Saladin403,76428
Wasit310,19428
Total:7,143,656440

2013 Iraqi governorate elections

PartyTotal votesPercentageTotal seatsParty leader
State of Law Coalition1,890,56726.21%102Nouri al-Maliki
Citizens Alliance943,64613.08%66Ammar al-Hakim
Liberal Coalition653,7639.06%60Muqtada al-Sadr
Muttahidoon518,9687.19%35Atheel al-Nujaifi
Arabian Al Iraqia18Saleh al-Mutlaq
Kurdistan List255,3623.54%17Barham Salih
Al Iraqia National and United Coalition298,1984.13%16Ayad Allawi
Civil Democratic Alliance11Ali Khathem Aziz
Loyalty to Najaf118,3101.64%9Adnan al-Zurufi
Islamic Dawa Party – Iraq Organisation7Hashim Al-Mosawy
Iraqi People's Coalition8
Hope of Rafidain3
Iraq's Benevolence and Generosity List65,6340.91%3Dr Rushdi Said
National White Bloc44,7650.62%2Hassan Alawi
Other Parties99-
Total7,214,146100%447-
Source: , , ,

2013 elections statistics

Source:[bettersourceneeded]

  • Overall turnout: 51% (Similar to turnout in 2009 Elections)
  • Number of registered eligible voters: Approx. 13,800,000 (Including 14,000 prisoners, 55,000 hospital patients and 53,000 displaced Iraqis eligible to vote).
  • Number of voters turned out: 6,400,777 voters
  • Elections are held: 12 provinces (out of 18 provinces). Four provinces are part of the semi-autonomous region Kurdistan with their Elections in September 2013, two provinces (Anbar, Nineveh) requested to postpone their elections due to security reasons.
  • No. of seats contested: 378 seats in Province Councils (Local Government).
  • Number of candidates: 8138
  • Female candidates: 2205
  • Male candidates: 5933

This is the sixth voting exercise by Iraqis in 10 years:

  • 2004 National Assembly Elections
  • 2005 Constitution Referendum
  • 2005 Parliamentary Elections
  • 2009 Provincial Councils
  • 2010 Parliamentary elections
  • 2013 Provincial Council (Saturday 20 April)
  • Number of parties and alliances competing: 256 parties and 50 political alliances
  • International independent observers (non-Iraqi): 350
  • Local independent observers: 6,000
  • Political parties’ observers (political entity representatives): 267,388
  • Polling stations: 5,370 (5,178)¹
  • Ballot boxes: 32,445 (32,201)² election ballot box Including polling stations in prisons and hospitals.
  • Polling stations opening time: 07:00 to 17:00 (Baghdad Time)
  • IHEC Help Centre Freephone: 2800 calls received from voters.
  • Local Help Centres set up by IHEC: 12 (one in each province).
  • IHEC staff (including reserve staff): 180,000 100% of staff in this election were Iraqis
  • Local journalists and media: 2,256
  • International journalists: 187

Basra

Summary of the 20 April 2013 Basra governorate election results
Party/CoalitionAllied national partiesLeaderSeatsChangeVotes%±%
State of Law CoalitionIslamic Dawa PartyNouri Al-Maliki164292,65845.17%8.18%
Citizens AllianceISCIAmmar al-Hakim61121,87518.81%7.22%
Liberal CoalitionLiberal Bloc Tribal Forces Coalition Sadrist MovementDhia Najim al-Asadi3158,3129.00%4.04%
Basra Independent CoalitionKafaat al-Iraq National Fidelity Loyalty to Najaf ICICSO2229,3844.54%4.54%
Gathering of Justice and Unityal-Faiz1124,5133.78%0.38%
Al Barsa’s Civil AllianceMovement for Justice & Development Democratic Movement Labour & National Salvation Coalition People's Party (Iraq) National Meeting NDP Iraqi Communist PartyFaiq Al Sheikh Ali1117,5412.71%
Alternative Movement1115,6432.41%
Islamic Dawa Party – Iraq Organisation1115,4932.39%
Will of Iraq Movement1113,9402.15%
Al Iraqia National and United Coalition1113,3192.06%
Muttahidoon1110,3861.60%
National White Bloc8,2471.27%1.27%
Al Basra’s People8,2461.27%
New Dawn Bloc4,1150.64%
Iraqi Council for Reform and Change3,5360.55%
Iraq’s Benevolence and Generosity List2,5680.40%
Iraq’s Advocates for State Support1,7820.28%
Islamic Advocates' Party1,6710.26%
Novac Aram Butrosian Abu MarianaIndependent1,1650.18%
Alaa’ Fawzi Kamel TutunjiIndependent8120.13%
Doctor Saad Mitri BotrosIndependent6430.10%
Mohammad Al MaryaniIndependent5920.09%
Chaldean Syriac Assyrian Popular Council5880.09%
Legal Advisor Sanaa’ Al AsadiIndependent5650.09%
Na’el Ghanem Aziz HannaIndependent3430.05%
Total35-647,937100%
Sources: , , , 2015-05-28 at the Wayback Machine,

In Basrah the numbers were as follows: Voter turnout: 42%

Registered eligible voters: Approx. 1,600,000

Ballots cast: Approx. 650,000

Candidates: 656

Contested seats: 35 Council seats (1 seat reserved for Christian quota)

Political entities: 25 (party and alliance)

In the first elections since the withdrawal of U.S. forces, the Iraqi Independent Electoral Commission (IHEC) confirmed that 6,400,777 voters cast their votes.

2023 Iraqi governorate elections

PartyTotal votesPercentageTotal seatsParty leader
State of Law Coalition1,890,56726.21%102Nouri al-Maliki
Citizens Alliance943,64613.08%66Ammar al-Hakim
Liberal Coalition653,7639.06%60Muqtada al-Sadr
Muttahidoon518,9687.19%35Atheel al-Nujaifi
Arabian Al Iraqia18Saleh al-Mutlaq
Kurdistan List255,3623.54%17Barham Salih
Al Iraqia National and United Coalition298,1984.13%16Ayad Allawi
Civil Democratic Alliance11Ali Khathem Aziz
Loyalty to Najaf118,3101.64%9Adnan al-Zurufi
Islamic Dawa Party – Iraq Organisation7Hashim Al-Mosawy
Iraqi People's Coalition8
Hope of Rafidain3
Iraq's Benevolence and Generosity List65,6340.91%3Dr Rushdi Said
National White Bloc44,7650.62%2Hassan Alawi
Other Parties99-
Total7,214,146100%447-
Source: , , ,

Referendums

1921 Iraqi monarchy referendum

1995 Iraqi presidential referendum

2002 Iraqi presidential referendum

2005 Iraqi constitutional referendum

Iraqi referendum on the Status of Forces Agreement

See also

Notes

External links

  • 13 December 2009 at theWayback Machine
  • says Regional Expert
  • (Qantara.de)
  • Reports, Maps and Assessments of Iraq from the UN Inter-Agency Information & Analysis Unit