Elections have become a daily affair in Lebanon with the affairs of the collapse and its successive political, economic and social series.
The forces participating in power, led by Hezbollah, are preparing for it an occasion to mobilize popular legitimacy that fortifies the viability of the remaining seized state institutions and bodies and provides the dominant weapon with a parliamentary cover for the next four years.
The forces opposing the authority, as well as the parties that have recently emerged from it, consider it a referendum on the size of its presence and a starting point for political violations that it can build upon.