Prime Minister-designate Tammam Salam shied away from lauding Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblat's latest stances, which he said have always changed the balance of power in Lebanon.
Jumblat's latest remarks “draw attention,” Salam told As Safir newspaper published on Thursday.
“His stances had always had the biggest effect in … producing a new political equation,” he said.
On Wednesday, Jumblat told Egypt’s Middle East News Agency MENA that he “will study the available options, including a neutral de facto cabinet, should a neutral technocratic one be rejected.”
“I do not want to take the risk in advocating a de facto government as I was among the first to demand the establishment of a national unity cabinet that Prime Minister-designate Tammam Salam had described as one of national reconciliation,” he said.
In his remarks to As Safir, Salam hoped that Eid al-Fitr would be an occasion for all political parties to “review their behavior” and facilitate the formation of the new cabinet to resolve pending issues.
The PM-designate refused to announce a date for the line-up, saying “I make my choices based on my convictions … which stem from the national interest and what is beneficial for the country.”
“In this case, the timing becomes a secondary issue,” he said. “It's not important if the government is born before or after the Eid.”
Salam reiterated that he is seeking to come up with a cabinet that is “compatible with the requirements of the nation's interest.”
His attempts to form a government of rival political figures have faced major obstacles over conditions and counter-conditions set by the bickering March 8 and March 14 alliances.
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