In the
Iraqi Transitional Government, al-Nujaifi was appointed
Minister of Industry. During his one-year tenure, he
privatized most of the state-owned companies which included firms working in sectors from petrochemical and cement to sugar, silk and heavy industry. He campaigned against the ratification of the
Constitution of Iraq. Following the
Iraqi legislative election of December 2005, he was nominated by the
Iraqi National List to become a member of the
Council of Representatives. On 26 January 2006, he survived an assassination attempt, when a roadside bomb detonated close to his convoy near the town of
Balad, killing three of his bodyguards. Heading a parliamentary committee to assess the humanitarian situation in
Nineveh Governorate, he criticized the conduct of governor
Duraid Kashmoula: "We have seen no trace of the huge sums of money said to have been appropriated for the province and could gather no idea on how they were spent." In September 2006 al-Nujaifi's bodyguard was assassinated. Later that month, al-Nujaifi sparked a walkout by the 55 MPSs of the
Kurdistan Alliance when in a parliamentary speech he belittled the historical and current role of
Kurds in Mosul area. His speech was seen
chauvinist by the Kurds, urging even fellow members of the Iraqi National List to distance themselves from al-Nujaifi's words. al-Nujaifi claimed in October 2008 that the
2008 attacks on Christians in Mosul were carried out by Kurdish
peshmerga and
intelligence operatives.
Speaker of the Council of Representatives The al-Nujaifi brothers'
al-Hadba party contested the
2010 parliamentary election as part of the cross-sectarian
Iraqiyya bloc, which became the largest parliamentary force.
Iraqiyya, however, didn't manage to secure a clear majority to elect its Shiite leader
Ayad Allawi to replace current
prime minister Nouri al-Maliki. On 11 November 2010, after three days of pressure talk, al-Nujaifi was elected the
Speaker of the Council of Representatives, obtaining 227 votes out of 295, with 30 MPs not attending the session. In turn, the power-sharing deal brokered by Kurdish politician
Massoud Barzani secured al-Maliki and President
Jalal Talabani's posts. Named "the inner circle's new face", Nujaifi by then was the highest-ranking Sunni politician of Iraq, As the prime minister cleared the path,
Salim al-Jabouri from the
Muttahidoon-allied
Diyala is Our Identity coalition became the new parliamentary speaker.
Vice president al-Nujaifi was assigned the post of one of the three
Vice Presidents of Iraq, along with the former prime ministers
al-Maliki and
Allawi on 8 September 2014. On 11 August 2015, these largely ceremonial posts were however altogether abolished as part of prime minister
Haider al-Abadi's reform plans. Later, he filed a complaint against the decision, considering it to be against the Constitution. Also
Nouri al-Maliki promised to cling to his post. On 10 October 2016, the three posts of Vice Presidents were restored by the
Supreme Court of Iraq which termed their abolition as unconstitutional. ==References==