Libya's three rival councils sign a joint elections roadmap, targeting February 2027
Aguila Saleh, Mohamed al-Menfi, and Mohammed Takala agreed on June 18 on a Document of Principles for simultaneous presidential and parliamentary polls, the first time all three institutions have jointly signed an electoral plan
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Summary
Libya's three rival governing bodies signed a joint "Document of Principles" on June 18, ending years of parallel roadmaps from rival institutions. House of Representatives speaker Aguila Saleh, Presidential Council chairman Mohamed al-Menfi, and High Council of State head Mohammed Takala jointly committed to holding simultaneous presidential and parliamentary elections no later than February 17, 2027, under the 6+6 joint committee's electoral laws and the 13th Constitutional Amendment. A supreme oversight committee will be established to supervise implementation. The agreement also calls for unifying sovereign institutions, establishing a joint 2027 budget, and protecting Libya's frozen overseas assets.
Why it matters
Libya has not held a successful national election since 2012. The eastern Khalifa Haftar-aligned HoR and the Tripoli-based institutions have historically refused to legitimise each other's roadmaps; the joint signature removes that blocking point. Whether the legal framework will hold, and whether Haftar himself endorses the timeline, remain the pivotal uncertainties.
What to watch
- Whether Khalifa Haftar, who controls the Libyan National Army, publicly endorses the February 2027 timeline.
- Completion of the "6+6 committee" constitutional and legal framework, the technical prerequisite for polls.
- UN Security Council and UNSMIL response to the agreement, and whether international monitors will be appointed.