Los Angeles Times

Moderates sweep in Tehran

Unofficial results are a resounding vote of confidence for Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.

- By Ramin Mostaghim and Shashank Bengali shashank.bengali@latimes.com Special correspond­ent Mostaghim reported from Tehran and Times staff writer Bengali from Mumbai, India.

TEHRAN — Reformists and moderates swept all 30 parliament­ary seats in the Iranian capital, according to unofficial election results announced Sunday, marking a resounding vote of conf idence for President Hassan Rouhani.

Although state television reported that conservati­ve candidates were leading in other parts of Iran, the clean sweep in Tehran — where lawmakers hold outsize inf luence in the 290- seat parliament — was seen as an endorsemen­t of the deal Rouhani sealed with six world powers last year to curb Iran’s nuclear program.

Nasim, a news agency loyal to hard- liners, acknowledg­ed that Rouhani’s moderate and reformist allies, who favor better relations with the West, won all 30 seats in Tehran.

A leading hard- liner, Gholam Ali Haddad Adel, was in 31st place, according to reports.

A high voter turnout exceeding 60% of Iran’s 55 million eligible voters appeared to propel moderates and reformists to their best electoral showing in more than a decade. Final results were expected Monday.

Hard- liners who oppose the nuclear deal also suffered significan­t setbacks in a parallel election taking place for the Assembly of Experts, an 88- member panel of Islamic jurists who are supposed to select the clerical supreme leader, the most powerful f igure in Iran’s hy- brid political system.

Two of the most conservati­ve members of the assembly, Mohammad Yazdi and Mesbah Yazdi, lost reelection bids after a social media campaign to oust hard- liners. The assembly election is being closely watched because its members could choose the successor to the current supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who is 76 and believed to be in declining health.

Friday’s vote was seen as a referendum on the nuclear agreement, which prompted the United States and other countries to lift harsh economic sanctions that had left Iran increasing­ly isolated from the Western world. Rouhani was elected in 2013 on promises to resolve the nuclear dispute, repair ties with the West, improve the economy and expand social freedoms.

Hamid Reza Taraghi, a prominent conservati­ve lawmaker, predicted that the pro- democracy reformists would hold 25% of seats in the new parliament, a major turnaround. The group has been all but shut out of the legislatur­e since boycotting the 2004 parliament­ary elections after many of its candidates were disqualifi­ed by the hard- line Guardian Council.

Moderates who have allied with the reformists in this election to make up the pro- Rouhani “List of Hope” would win about 15% of seats, Taraghi said. About 50 seats were expected to require runoff elections.

Together that would give Rouhani a significan­t bloc of support in parliament, which until now has thwarted his efforts to introduce political reforms and more social freedoms.

But the coalition could prove fragile under pressure from conservati­ves, who were on track to win a roughly equal number of seats, and hard- liners who still control most of the reins of power in the Islamic Republic.

“They will be divided and in disarray and will fail to be effective,” Taraghi said of the pro- Rouhani group.

Analysts said Rouhani and his allies need to manage the expectatio­ns of supporters impatient for rapid change in a country in which half of the electorate is younger than 35.

Buoyed by their apparent electoral success, reformists renewed calls Sunday for the release of former presidenti­al candidates Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi, who are under house arrest.

Since taking office, Rou- hani has been unable to secure the release of political prisoners, a sign of hard- liners’ enduring clout.

“As experience indicates, the reformists usually are good at raising expectatio­ns to woo votes from middleclas­s people but are not good at all in meeting and managing the expectatio­ns after the elections,” said Farshad Ghorbanpou­r, a political analyst.

 ?? Abedin Taherkenar­eh European Pressphoto Agency ?? NEWSPAPERS ATTRACT a man’s attention in Tehran. Final results from Friday’s elections are expected to be released Monday.
Abedin Taherkenar­eh European Pressphoto Agency NEWSPAPERS ATTRACT a man’s attention in Tehran. Final results from Friday’s elections are expected to be released Monday.

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