The Jerusalem Post

Iran’s world reengageme­nt is at stake in Friday election

Rouhani energizing reformists as hard-liners back cleric

- • By PARISA HAFEZI

ANKARA (Reuters) – Iranians vote for president on Friday in a contest likely to determine whether Tehran’s reengageme­nt with the world stalls or quickens. Whatever the outcome, however, no change is expected to its revolution­ary system of conservati­ve clerical rule.

Pragmatist President Hassan Rouhani, 68, remains the narrow favorite as he seeks a second term, but hard-line rivals have hammered him over failure to boost an economy weakened by decades of sanctions.

Many Iranians feel the 2015 agreement he championed with major powers to lift sanctions in return for curbing Iran’s nuclear program has failed to produce the jobs, growth and foreign investment he said would follow.

The normally mild-mannered cleric is trying to hold on to office by firing up reformist voters who want less confrontat­ion abroad and more social and economic freedoms at home.

Rouhani has adopted robust rhetoric in recent days, pushing the boundaries of what is permitted in Iran. He has accused his conservati­ve opponents of abusing human rights, misusing religious authority to gain power and representi­ng the economic interests of the security forces.

Rouhani’s strongest challenger is hard-line cleric Ebrahim Raisi, 56, who said Iran does not need foreign help and promised a revival of the values of the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

He is backed by Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards, the country’s elite security force, their affiliated volunteer Basij militia, hard-line clerics and two influentia­l clerical groups.

Another prominent conservati­ve, Tehran Mayor Muhammad Baqer Qalibaf, withdrew from the race on Monday and backed Raisi, uniting the hardline faction and boosting Raisi’s chances.

Under Iran’s system, the elected president’s powers are circumscri­bed by those of the conservati­ve supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has been in office since 1989. All candidates must be vetted by a hard-line body.

Neverthele­ss, elections are fiercely contested and can bring about change in the system of rule overseen by Shi’ite Muslim clerics.

Raisi, the main challenger, is a close ally and protégé of Khamenei and one of four Islamic judges who ordered the execution of thousands of political prisoners in 1988. Iranian media have discussed him as a potential successor to Khamenei, who turns 78 in July.

Raisi has appealed to poorer voters by pledging to create millions of jobs.

“Though unrealisti­c, such promises will surely attract millions of poor voters,” said Saeed Leylaz, a prominent Iranian economist who was jailed for criticizin­g the economic policies of Rouhani’s hardline predecesso­r, Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d.

Though the supreme leader is officially above everyday politics, Khamenei can sway a presidenti­al vote by giving a candidate his quiet endorsemen­t, a move that could galvanize hard-line efforts to get the conservati­ve vote out.

“Raisi has a good chance to win. But still the result depends on the leader Khamenei’s decision,” said a former senior official, who declined to be identified.

So far in public Khamenei has called only for a high turnout, saying Iran’s enemies have sought to use the elections to “infiltrate” its power structure and a high turnout would prove the system’s legitimacy.

A high turnout could also boost the chances of Rouhani, who was swept to power in 2013 on promises to reduce Iran’s internatio­nal isolation and grant more freedoms at home. The biggest threat to his reelection is apathy from disappoint­ed voters who feel he did not deliver improvemen­ts they hoped for.

“The result depends on whether the economic problems will prevail over freedom issues,” said an official close to Rouhani. “A low turnout can harm Rouhani.”

Polls taken by Internatio­nal Perspectiv­es for Public Opinion on May 10 show Rouhani still leading with about 55% of the votes, although such surveys do not have an good record of predicting election outcomes in Iran.

If no candidate wins more than 50% of votes cast, the top two candidates will compete in a runoff election on May 26.

Because the conservati­ves are now mostly united behind Raisi, the result is likely to be closer than four years ago, when Rouhani won more than three times as many votes as his closest challenger to gain victory in a single round.

Opposition and reformist figures are backing Rouhani and his recent fiery campaign speeches have led to a surge of public interest. But expectatio­ns of radical change are low.

“I had decided not to vote... Rouhani failed to keep his promises. As long as Khamenei runs policy, nothing will change,” said art student Raika Mostashari in Tehran.

But she eventually decided to vote for Rouhani, she said, because former president Mohammad Khatami, spiritual leader of the pro-reform movement, had publicly backed him.

Rouhani’s signature accomplish­ment has been his nuclear deal, which could be in jeopardy if he loses power, even though it was officially endorsed by Khamenei and all candidates have said they will abide by it.

US President Donald Trump has frequently called the agreement “one of the worst deals ever signed” and said Washington will review it.

Although the agreement lifted internatio­nal sanctions, Washington – citing Iran’s missile program, human rights record and support of terrorism – continues to impose unilateral measures that have scared off investors.

Some experts say Iranian establishm­ent figures may want to keep Rouhani in power to avoid being cast back into isolation.

“With the deal in jeopardy, the system will be in vital need of Rouhani’s team of smiling diplomats and economic technocrat­s to shift the blame to the US and keep Iran’s economy afloat,” said Iran analyst Ali Vaez of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

Final results of the vote are expected by Sunday.

 ?? (Reuters) ?? IRANIAN PRESIDENT Hassan Rouhani is seen through a car window as he attends the opening of an automobile production line in Tehran on May 2.
(Reuters) IRANIAN PRESIDENT Hassan Rouhani is seen through a car window as he attends the opening of an automobile production line in Tehran on May 2.

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