http://www.csmonitor.com/2004/1203/p01s02-woiq.htmlAs parties haggle over candidate lists, radical cleric Moqtada al-Sadr fights for a top spot.
By Annia Ciezadlo | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
SULAIMANIYA, IRAQ – With elections less than a month away, Iraq's would-be politicians are getting a crash course in one of democracy's least glamorous features: preelection backroom haggling.
As the deadline looms for submitting party slates to Iraq's electoral commission, Iraqi candidates are vying for plum positions on the all-important lists, which will determine who gets a seat in Iraq's new national parliament.
In a sense, these backroom bargains are the elections before the elections, pitting big players - mainly well-organized former exiles - against more-popular homegrown leaders, including top Shiite figures, the real king-makers in the process.
"The election is like an exam," says Sheikh Fatih Kashif al-Ghitta, a Shiite cleric from a prominent Najaf political family. " will show who really has a base of popular support and who is a fake; who has religious authority and who does not. It will clarify many things."
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