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All in the family
Michael Young , NOW Contributor , August 13, 2009
Telecommunications Minister Gebran Bassil, the son-in-law of his party’s leader.

So, Michel Aoun’s campaign to improve Lebanon can now be distilled down to one overriding concern: the appointment of his son-in-law, Gebran Bassil, as minister. Aoun insists that Bassil will be named, even though this contradicts an agreement reached between prime minister-designate Saad Hariri and President Michel Sleiman to bar from the cabinet candidates who failed to win a parliamentary seat.

The disagreement has been poorly framed. To lose an election should not prevent someone from becoming a minister, particularly in Lebanon. Nor does the constitution say anything about this matter. How does one win a seat in Lebanon’s parliament? Generally, by riding the coattails of a powerful politician who sponsors or heads a candidate list. Very rarely are parliamentarians chosen for their intrinsic merits. Therefore, the notion that a minister must have, first, won an election, or quite simply not participated in an election at all, means that he or she generally must either be beholden to one of the more powerful political leaders or avoided the risk of competing for a parliamentary seat.

What makes Ziad Baroud, otherwise an excellent minister, more legitimate in the cabinet than, let’s say, Misbah al-Ahdab? Baroud didn’t seek popular legitimacy (nor did he have to), while Ahdab, several times elected to parliament, lost last June because he stood as an independent. Why should Ahdab be penalized even as a petition is circulating to bring Baroud back? One can be a fine minister but a poor parliamentarian; one can be superlative at both; or one can be abysmal at both. There is no correlation between the roles of minister and parliamentarian, and popular approval certainly does not qualify one to sit in the cabinet, where many good decisions may necessitate being unpopular.   

Which brings us back to Gebran Bassil. His defeat in Batroun is not enough to deny him a cabinet portfolio. If we need to judge him, then let’s do so according to different benchmarks. How did he fare as Telecommunications minister? As a layman all I can say is that while I may be paying less for my mobile telephone communications, rarely has service been as bad. Conversations are routinely cut off and most of the time it’s very difficult to hear what a correspondent is saying. The cellular system has crashed several times this summer from the overload, which is undoubtedly a black mark against the minister.

But is that enough to say that Bassil should not return to the cabinet? Yes and no. Yes, in the sense that if you’re not going to evaluate ministers by their performance, then what will you evaluate them by? But no, in that unless parliament and the cabinet introduce a systematic method of assessing ministerial performance, it makes no sense to pick and choose who deserves to be removed from office or denied a cabinet seat.

That leaves us with the single valid measuring stick to determine whether Bassil should again be a minister: the principles the Aounists themselves espouse, which in fact concern no one but the Aounists. For a movement that has often insisted, and very loudly, that it represents change and reform, nepotism is something to steer away from. Michel Aoun doesn’t have a son, so he’s advancing the career of his son-in-law, whom he wishes to see take over the leadership of his movement. With greater reluctance, Aoun also gave his nephew Alain a helpful push prior to the June elections, by asking Shakib Qortbawi to withdraw from the Baabda list on his behalf. Ironically, Alain Aoun, among the most sensible people around his uncle, is on bad terms with Gebran Bassil, and would like nothing more than for Hariri and Sleiman to have their way.

It must be demoralizing for the Aounist faithful to watch as their movement turns into a family affair. That’s not to say that Alain Aoun or Gebran Bassil are unpopular among their followers; quite the contrary. However, they are also emerging as major rivals for leadership, which means that the Free Patriotic Movement is beginning to look little different than other family-based political organizations in Lebanon.

Does that exclude Bassil from a ministry, or for that matter Alain Aoun? No. The question is whether other deserving Aounists, like the handful of voiceless parliamentarians who crave a reward for having stuck by Michel Aoun through thick and thin, can continue to stomach their secondary status. Instead of making such a fuss over Bassil, for example, shouldn’t Aoun be promoting more credible people like Qortbawi?

Of course that’s for the Aounists to thrash out. If Michel Aoun insists on Gebran Bassil, fine. Let the Aounists clean up their internal mess, but without trying to assure us that they represent something different.

Michael Young is opinion editor of the Daily Star newspaper in Beirut.

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Comments ( 47 )
Posted by
Arzak Ya Libnan
August 29. 2009
thank you for your reply of the sharon pictures plastered all over beirut, that our "lebanese" resistance tore down and replaced with assad pictures... yes we are all as u said ignorant, it is naturally lebanese to post pictures of assad in lebanon.. i would suggest making him honorary president, but i am too worried you would take me seriously. if you like him so much.. the border is no more than 2 hours away. maybe them nuggets taste better than ours
Posted by
sami
August 29. 2009
You totally miss the point,as usual.We also love to drive Renault 12, or BMW X 5,my favorite.Ya Einstein,motorcycles are the forefronts for boy scouts,their eyes and ears,why else did the "state" cracked down on them recently?
Posted by
Arzak Ya Libnan
August 29. 2009
thank you ever so much for removing all of sharons posters off the streets of beirut. I was getting very annoyed by them. Let me think.. scramble... burn down... hmm... close down... burn down... hmmmm... wait.. wait its coming.. yeah i think burning down is worse. but then again i am an infidel traitor who has no reason. You oh high and nobel are correct. scrambling a channel is alot worse than burning a station down.. tool... and i am so scared of motorcycles, id rather be in a renault 12 than on a motorcycle.
Posted by
sami
August 28. 2009
Rafik Hariri closed down Al Jadeed TV station because it disagreed with him.It is owned by a Sunni not a Shiaa.The US,France and Germany scrambled/closed down Al Manar for ever,while some boy scouts burned down Al Mustakbal TV station for a day or two.Which one is more acceptable?
Posted by
sami
August 26. 2009
I find Assads picture more attractive than Sharons picture.Boy scouts only,trust me,these were only boys,wait till the real things happens.This is what we are telling Israel if they even think of attacking Lebanon and this is what I am telling the likes of you the next time you even think of attacking HA.You will not have the opportunity to bring your AK47 out of the closet.You will find us standing above you while you are sleeping,we are everywhere.Look around you.Did you notice the sudden increase of motorcycles?
Posted by
Arzak Ya Libnan
August 25. 2009
And closing down a station, or scrambling a signal is not different than burning down the place right. Heil hitler, cause when 1 german sldier got shot, they killed 1000's in reprisal. Same thing isnt it. So heil my fuhrer. And yes Mr. LEBANESE resistance, we need pictures of Al-Assad plastered to all our walls... and you talk about loyalty to lebanon? how truly sad it is to see people with such a limited and programbable mind... sorry.. you are not fit to be president, your title and all privilages that accompany such title.
Posted by
Arzak Ya Libnan
August 25. 2009
We know the serial numbers on your weapons.. ok mr. President, and honorary member of HA leadership, please tell me the serail number of the Ak we got at home. We only sent boyscouts? well its not like you were fighting the cream of the crop anyways. stop talking about yourself like you are all mighty and all powerfull.. and even sometimes Godlike. 3ayb.. its Ramadan 7abeebi. and relax, if things keep going the way they are, you will have your dream of flexing your HA muscles. and really get it through your head, you are not a member of HA let alone in the leadership. so YOU DO NOT KNOW SQUAT. Read sami.. read.. YOU KNOW NOTHING EXCEPT WHAT THEY TELL YOU AND YOU NOD YOUR HEAD AT. jeez, how come ive never seen you giving speeaches instead of nasrallah, or your name in the news.
Posted by
sami
August 24. 2009
In your comments you said that everyone in your village owns an AK 47 etc and its OK but not RPG...So I questioned "then is it OK to have AK but not OK to have RPG." Trust me we know who has what,we even know the serial number of each AK you have,that is why it only took 20 minutes to end your fitnah in Beirut.We only sent boy scouts not the SSNP.Some may have burned the Mustakbal sews station and it went back to work the next day but Hariri the Father closed down Al Jadeed TV station,and the USA closed down Al Manar,do you see similarities?
Posted by
Arzak Ya Libnan
August 23. 2009
And i love that you say YOU know.. like you are in the leadership of HA. you know squat, you only know what your hizib tells you. I told you before, weapons are not hard to come by, there are plenty of countries willing to givee them to either side. So dont gloat too much about your made in iran weapons.. LOL.. Believe me i want that day to come sooner than later.
Posted by
Arzak Ya Libnan
August 23. 2009
Sami Sami.. only to a mind like you would there be no difference between an Ak47 and an RPG. Thank you for limiting your assault to the streets of Sunni neighborhoods and stopping at the front door of houses. Next thing i know bitrabi7na jmeeleh that you guys wipped your feet on the welcome mat before you came into the house and slaughtered people. I have said before, most of the dirty work was done by SSNP trash .. and not by HA. Yet they did so under the cover of HA. It is ok for you and ure allies to burn a tv station, but nobody mess with your comm. network. And i look forward to the day you mentioned. And believe me i can name a few of those you killed, yet out of respect i will not bring them into a convo. with the likes of you
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