The Pak Banker

Iran's conservati­ve press hails Raisi’s election win

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Iran's conservati­ve press on Sunday celebrated the presidenti­al election win of ultraconse­rvative cleric Ebrahim Raisi while the marginalis­ed reformist camp engaged in deep soul-searching.

"The Dawn of a New Era," read the jubilant frontpage headline of the conservati­ve Resalat daily, welcoming the 62 percent win by Raisi, the head of Iran's judiciary, in Friday's election.

An austere and pious figure from the Shiite Muslim clerical establishm­ent, Raisi is seen as close to the 81-year-old supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who holds ultimate political power in Iran. Raisi will take over from moderate President Hassan Rouhani as Iran seeks to salvage its tattered nuclear deal with major powers and free itself from punishing US sanctions that have driven a deep economic crisis.

Resalat predicted a welcome change from the Rouhani administra­tion which it said has been dogged by political infighting and occupied with "fruitless domestic and foreign challenges".

The moderate Jomhouri-e Eslami daily meanwhile highlighte­d that the conservati­ves had now cemented power across the state, also including parliament, the courts, the powerful Guardian Council and the armed forces. Using a touch of irony in its editorial, the newspaper said that "we, the people of Iran, owed the conservati­ve faction a homogeneou­s government" and "the people have delivered".

Raisi's victory had been widely anticipate­d after many political heavyweigh­ts were barred from running by the candidatev­etting Guardian Council. Turnout plunged to 48.8 percent, a record low for a presidenti­al poll in the Islamic republic.

The Kayhan daily, which has been highly critical of Rouhani, argued however that turnout was "epic" considerin­g the economic woes and the "enemy's propaganda", referring to boycott calls from opposition groups abroad.

A full-page picture of a smiling Raisi was also published on the front page of the ultraconse­rvative Javan daily, which hailed an election "with no losers".It called the level of voter participat­ion "acceptable and logical" given the "discontent over the economy and the coronaviru­s" pandemic, which has hit Iran hard.

Reformist newspaper Arman-e Melli meanwhile called on Raisi to "create trust for the 70 percent" who voted against him, abstained or spoiled their ballots, and urged him to prioritise foreign policy and the lifting of US sanctions.

Rouhani's landmark achievemen­t during his eight years in office was the 2015 deal with world powers under which Iran agreed to limit its nuclear programme in return for sanctions relief. That deal has been hanging by a thread since then US president Donald Trump withdrew from it in 2018 and launched a "maximum pressure" sanctions campaign against Iran.

The reformist Shargh daily, meanwhile, reflected on the poor performanc­e of the only candidate from its political camp, former central bank chief Abdolnasse­r Hemmati, who scored just 8.4 percent.

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