Sayyed Nasrallah made the remarks in a meeting with Marada Party leader, MP Sleiman Frangieh that Patriotic Movement Chief, MP Michel Aoun is the leading presidential candidate, stressing that March 8 coalition should have a united stance regarding the issue of the presidential vote.
Lebanese press reported on Saturday that Sayyed Nasrallah received Frangieh on Thursday night, and that the two discussed several regional and local issues, on top of which was the presidential vote in Lebanon.
As-Safir daily reported that Sayyed Nasrallah had informed Frangieh that Hezbollah will not back down on Aoun. "We gave him our word and he has the priority."
The daily said that the March 8 coalition agreed on remaining united and patient in tackling the presidential crisis.
Meanwhile, Al-Akhbar newspaper said that the Marada leader underscored his commitment to the March 8 alliance during the meeting, denying claims that he offered former PM Saad Hariri any political guarantees in exchange for his support for his candidacy.
"I vehemently back Aoun's presidential bid, but how long are we going to remain at this standstill...what is our backup plan?" the newspaper quoted Frangieh as telling Sayyed Nasrallah.
Reports emerged last week showing that the 50-year-old Frangieh had met on December 3 with French President Francois Hollande and Hariri, who currently resides in Paris, to reach a deal on Lebanon’s 18-month political deadlock to elect a president. Hariri had earlier proposed Frangieh as a potential candidate with political observers raising the possibility that Hariri could return to Lebanon as the prime minister under a deal with Frangieh.
In Lebanon’s power-sharing system, the president must be a Christian, the prime minister a Sunni Muslim and the parliament speaker a Shia Muslim. Any presidential candidate would have to receive the backing of the two main political blocs, the March 8 alliance and the rival March 14 alliance, to win the necessary majority from the legislature’s 128 members.
Aoun is supported by Hezbollah and its March 8 allies for the presidency against his political rival Samir Geagea, who is backed by the March 14 coalition.
Lebanon has been in a presidential vacuum since former President Michel Sleiman’s tenure ended in May 2014. The parliament has failed to find a successor.
Lebanese political factions are reportedly split on the foreign-backed conflict in neighboring Syria, causing a stalemate over the choice of president.