Palestinian Villagers Vote in Municipal Elections
WEST BANK (Middle East Eye) – Palestinian villagers in the occupied West Bank voted in local elections on Saturday amid growing dissatisfaction over the rule of President Mahmoud Abbas and a boycott by Hamas.
No legislative or presidential election has been held in the Palestinian territories for 15 years, while the last municipal vote took place in 2017.
Hamas resistance movement, who rule the besieged Gaza Strip, announced their opposition to the polls after the Palestinian Authority announced their decision to indefinitely delay presidential and parliamentary elections earlier this year.
Of the 367 villages in the West Bank, 60 had no candidates standing and another 162 had a single list, leaving only 154 villages actually voting on Saturday.
The spokesman for the Palestinian Central Elections Commission, Fareed Taam Allah, told AFP that polling stations had opened in all villages scheduled to hold votes on Saturday.
Polling stations are open until 7pm with some 405,000 people eligible to vote, according to the elections committee.
The municipal vote - the first of two stages, with cities and towns due to vote in March 2022 - is widely considered inconsequential, with most candidates running as independents and Hamas not taking part.
Political analyst Jihad Harb told AFP the elections were “politically unimportant because they are taking place in villages and not the big cities” yet, and are “futile” in the absence of Hamas.
Hamas had been poised to sweep the parliamentary election scheduled for May, which was widely seen as the real reason for Abbas’s 11th-hour postponement of the poll, citing the Zionist regime’s refusal to allow voting in annexed east Al-Quds.
Abbas’s presidential term was supposed to end in 2009.