The leader of the Sadrist movement in Iraq, Muqtada al-Sadr, said that the next government will be a national majority government, while the head of the Fatah Alliance Hadi al-Amiri considered that the understanding of the Sunni and Kurdish components imposes a Shiite understanding.

The leader of the Sadrist movement said that the next government would be a national majority government, and that there was no place for "sectarianism, ethnicity, corruption and militias" in Iraq.

Al-Sadr added - in his tweet - that the law will prevail with an impartial Iraqi judiciary, and that the Iraqi people will reject subordination, as he put it.

Parliamentary blocs have not yet been able to form alliances that could lead to the nomination of the prime minister and the formation of a new government.

On Saturday evening, a meeting of the Shiite coordination framework was held in Baghdad to discuss the issue of alliances with other political blocs, on the eve of the first session of the elected Iraqi parliament.

For his part, Hadi al-Amiri stressed that the coordinating framework that includes all Shiite forces with the exception of the Sadrist movement believes that what he described as tearing up the Shiite component is not in the interest of anyone.

Al-Amiri indicated - during his meeting with the joint Kurdish delegation in Baghdad - that the understanding of the Sunni and Kurdish components imposes a Shiite understanding.

He added that the coalition did everything it could to make the understandings a success in the face of the challenges facing the new government.

In turn, the Kurdish delegation stressed that the Kurds are allies of the Sunnis and Shiites, and they do not want to take sides without the other.