Business Day

Iran’s voter turnout hits new low

- Parisa Hafezi

Turnout in Iran’s parliament­ary election was about 41%, the country’s interior minister said on Monday, the lowest participat­ion since Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution that swept the clerical rulers into power.

Friday’s election was seen as a test of the clerical establishm­ent’s legitimacy amid mounting economic struggles and a lack of electoral options for a mostly young population chafing at political and social curbs.

“Some 25-million people out of over 61-million eligible Iranians voted in the March 1 election for the 290-seat legislatur­e,” interior minister Ahmad Vahidi told a televised news briefing.

In the 2020 parliament­ary election, turnout was 42.5%. About 62% of voters participat­ed in 2016.

Authoritie­s said the turnout “indicated the people’s trust in the sacred system of the Islamic Republic”.

Vahidi said invalid votes made up 5% of the total vote count. Some Iranian media reported that number to be as high as 30%, suggesting signs of disillusio­nment even among core supporters of the Islamic Republic.

“Authoritie­s should listen to the silent majority ... and reform the governance method ... I hope they realise before it’s too late to reverse the damage and harm this path will cause,” state media quoted reformist politician Azar Mansouri as saying.

In some constituen­cies, where candidates failed to get the required minimum 20% of the votes cast, a run-off will be held in April, Vahidi said.

In Tehran, which accounts for 30 seats in parliament, a second round will be held for 16 seats.

The election was the first since antigovern­ment protests in 2022/23 that spiralled into Iran’s worst political turmoil since the Islamic revolution and was quelled by a violent crackdown involving mass detentions and even executions.

With heavyweigh­t moderates and conservati­ves staying out and reformists calling the election not free and fair, the contest was essentiall­y among hardliners and low-key conservati­ves, all proclaimin­g loyalty to revolution­ary ideals.

Iran’s parliament, dominated by hardliners for more than two decades, has little impact on foreign policy or Tehran’s disputed nuclear programme. These issues are determined by the country’s top authority, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Activists and opposition groups, arguing that a high turnout would legitimise the Islamic Republic, had called for a boycott by widely distributi­ng the hashtags #VOTENoVote and #ElectionCi­rcus on the social media platform X.

Former president Mohammad Khatami, considered the spiritual leader of Iran’s reformists, was among critics who did not vote on Friday.

Opposition critics say the ruling clerics are no longer capable of solving an economic crisis caused by a mix of mismanagem­ent, corruption and US sanctions reimposed since 2018 when Washington ditched Tehran’s nuclear pact with major powers.

The parliament­ary election was twinned with a vote for the 88-seat Assembly of Experts, an influentia­l body that has the task of choosing the 84-year-old Khamenei’s successor.

 ?? /Reuters ?? People’s trust: Iranian interior minister Ahmad Vahidi speaks during a press conference after the parliament­ary elections in Tehran, Iran, on Monday.
/Reuters People’s trust: Iranian interior minister Ahmad Vahidi speaks during a press conference after the parliament­ary elections in Tehran, Iran, on Monday.

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