By Aska Ihsan Adil.
The approval of Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi’s new cabinet by the Iraqi Parliament on May 14, 2026, successfully brought an end to months of intense political deadlock following the national elections. Lawmakers granted confidence to 14 of the 23 proposed ministers alongside the government’s broader ministerial program. However, the final alignment highlighted a shifting dynamic in the country’s executive leadership.
Among the newly confirmed officials, Sarwa Abdulwahid was appointed to head the Ministry of Environment, making her the sole woman to secure a ministerial post in the current lineup. Nine portfolios, including high-stakes ministries such as Defense, Interior, Planning, and Higher Education, remain vacant due to ongoing disputes over nominees and political quotas, with negotiations set to resume in the coming weeks.
The composition of the al-Zaidi administration has sparked discussions surrounding the institutional framework of female representation in Iraq’s executive branch. While the Iraqi constitution firmly mandates a 25 percent quota for women in the 329-member parliament, resulting in 82 female lawmakers currently holding seats, no such binding minimum exists for the executive branch. Instead, cabinet positions are determined through intricate political bargaining among various blocs.
This structural gap has prompted responses from civic groups, especially when compared to the previous administration led by Mohammed Shia al-Sudani, which had a higher level of female representation in its cabinet. Under al-Sudani’s administration, the cabinet included three women in key ministerial positions: Taif Sami Mohammed in Finance, Hiyam Aboud al-Yasiri in Communications, and Evan Faeq Gabro managing Migration and Displacement.
The Iraq Center for Human Rights recently proposed the establishment of a dedicated Ministry for Women to better coordinate state-level support across vital sectors such as employment, education, social protection, and domestic violence prevention. Public interest groups and civil society organizations view this as an opportunity to advocate for formal institutional adjustments. Concurrently, various women’s rights organizations are calling for mandatory female representation to be expanded into federal, regional, and local executive bodies. Activists emphasize that a broader presence in the executive branch is essential for integrating diverse perspectives into major national decisions concerning infrastructure, security, and the economy.
While the state continues to utilize formal development channels, such as the National Strategy for Iraqi Women and the Women’s Cultural Forum, to strengthen leadership and administrative capacities within the public sector, civic groups maintain that these initiatives are most effective when paired with direct representation. Official statements, including President Nizar Amedi’s recent affirmations on the vital role of women in national reconstruction, reflect a foundational commitment to development, yet the composition of the cabinet highlights the complex nature of political bargaining. The final resolution of the cabinet lineup will serve as a practical example of how Iraq’s governance translates constitutional principles into real executive representation and how far institutional commitments align with political outcomes.

