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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
Elie
August 13. 2009
This editorial is depressing for Lebanese that dream of a country that moves away from the feudal system to a more advanced and democratic one. Our problem in Lebanon, since 1943, is that the christian leaders are self-serving. Over the years, their behaviour plunged the country in mayhem. It was one time true that the Maronite Patriarche could force these selfish leaders to work as one. Hard to do nowadays. The salvation of Lebanon could only come from leaders that represent well their community and work for the betterment of ALL of Lebanon.
Posted by
The Lebanese
August 13. 2009
March 14 won, technically they don't have to appoint any ministers from March 8. But not in Lebanon, everything has to be with "Tawafouc". Gibran's followers always stated that "if Gibran loses the election, he'll always be a minister" that is wrong. If the people do not want you, you need to go home and forget about politics. Lebanon can not be on hold because of Gibran family SAGA
Posted by
Joseph John Chidiac
August 13. 2009
ALL IN THE FAMILY. First of all i would like to thank Michael Young and Now Lebanon for the above article.It's good to see Mr Young still not pulling any punches and he is calling it the way it is, unlike the majority of reporters in Lebanon.There is a lot of hypocrisy in Lebanon and Michel Aoun showing alot of hypocrisy at the moment,Aoun needs to stop shadow boxing and stop disrespecting the Lebanese voters.If the voters wanted Bassil they would have asked for him through the ballet box.Let's hope Aoun and FPM move on and stop been a distraction.Aoun needs to talk the talk and walk the walk or at least make an effort.
Posted by
Paul Abi Nasr
August 13. 2009
Very nice editorial...I would like to add that there is a further dimension to the re-appointment of Bassil by Aoun: he is trying to inflate an otherwise blown to pieces political career. Bassil was bound to play a secondary role in the upcoming political struggle because of the severe (and completely fair) beating he received in the elections. Aoun is desperately trying to keep him afloat. It is just sad.
Posted by
Greg
August 13. 2009
The only problem is that it already has been made official (although not legally binding as you said) that Parliamentary losers cannot be ministers. I bet M14 wouldn't mind appointing some parliament losers as ministers (Fares Souaid) but they hold true to the pledge and so such own. Plus his reasoning for appointing Bassil is absurd: "Because he doesnt want to look as if hes given into pressure" And I disagree with you, yea the Parliamentarian and the Minister are different BUT that doesnt mean that a parliamentary vote cant rule out ministers who are not doing their job, like in the Bassil case. It definetly can, and it did. Even under the heavy backing of major leader, the guy couldnt get close to victory. Anyways, your criticism of the Telecommunications Ministry is quite mild. Lebanon's cellular service cost is way greater than that of most developed countries (most of whom provide much better service). And he did not do any such action as a minister
Posted by
Aysha
August 13. 2009
Am I missing something here. It defies belief that anybody in a democracy believes they have a right to hold a Cabinet seat when they are unelected to Parliament. ... If this is the reason why the Cabinet has not been formed, then it is time for the people to put a stop to this nonsense. A big protest and Anoun may, just may, get the message. In order to ensure stability, we need a Cabinet formed NOW, not when it suits Anoun.
Posted by
Jean C Z Estiphan
August 13. 2009
I think it is great that the President and PM-to-be have said NO to the appointment of a failed candidate for Parliament to sit at the Cabinet table. This is progress, a positive development of the evolving constitutional democracy and a good standard to set. Hopefully in the future, ONLY M.P.s will be eligible to be named to Cabinet. (or at least only the President's Quota could be non-MPs). It is no good saying, as this correspondent does, that being an M.P. doesn't mean much ('because they are beholden to a powerful party or family). That is the case in any single parliamentary democracy with a winner-takes-all voting system like Lebanon. (The exact same thing could be said of the U.S.A., Canada, Japan or the U.K. - Mr Brown in England, for example, would have zero chance of winning a seat in Parliament if he contested seats that always fall to the Conservatives etc. etc). Every Lebanese M.P. has a Mandate. They got elected. That mean's something and should never be dismiss
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