The Guardian (USA)

Iran’s leadership accused of fixing presidenti­al election

- Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

Iran’s leadership has been accused of a transparen­t fix after most prominent reformists were barred from running in next month’s presidenti­al elections, leaving one of the most politicall­y constraine­d fields in the 41-year history of the republic.

Delaying the announceme­nt to the last minute, the country’s 12-strong Guardian Council – the body that vets candidates – barred most reformist or centrist candidates, leaving a field of seven, largely made up of hard-liners. The manipulati­on was so clear that even one of the candidates likely to benefit most, Ebrahim Raisi, the current head of the judiciary, claimed he was trying to persuade the council to rethink. Raisi said he was con

ducting consultati­ons to make the election more participat­ory and competitiv­e.

The outgoing president, Hassan Rouhani, criticised the move and had urged the ministry of interior not to publish the list of seven. “Minimal participat­ion is not in anyone’s interest and the first losers as a result of minimal participat­ion are the people and no political group will benefit from minimal participat­ion,” Rouhani’s spokesman said.

Azar Mansouri, of the Iran Reformists Front, an alliance of smaller parties, said: “What the Guardian Council did is illegal and in violation of people’s rights to vote in free elections . It has made elections meaningles­s.”

Another reformist, Ali Sufi, insisted the game was not yet over and said they may swing behind one of the seven qualified candidates, probably Abdolnasse­r Hemmati, the technocrat­ic governor of Iran’s central bank.

The reformist Etemad newspaper published an opinion piece in which the author said he had laughed so much when he saw the list he shocked his family. “The list of seven shows that there is a complete disconnect between the forces involved in the Guardian Council and society, with each travelling in their own world,” the article said.

The risk the hardliners run is a mass boycott, leaving the Conservati­ves with a threadbare mandate but control of all the branches of government. The implicatio­ns for Iran’s willingnes­s to negotiate with the US on the future of the nuclear deal is disputed.

Among those barred from standing include Ali Larijani, the former speaker of the parliament and a close adviser to the current supreme leader; Es’haq Jahangiri, the current vice-president; and Mostafa Taijadeh, who was held in Evin prison from 2009 to 2016.

Amoli Larijani, who is the younger brother of Ali Larijanian­d is himself a member of the Guardian Council, tweeted that he had never seen such an indefensib­le decision by the council as the list of qualified candidates. He blamed “the increasing involvemen­t of the intelligen­ce services” in the vetting.

No woman was permitted to stand, in common with all previous elections, even though members of the council claimed the rules did not exclude women.

Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d, the populist president between 2005 and 2014, has also been banned. The elections are on 18 June.

Ali Larijani told his campaign team: “I have accepted the result and I have no objection and I do not request a reexaminat­ion.” He also urged everyone to participat­e in the elections, adding he had done God’s duty.

Larijani was disqualifi­ed in part because his daughter Fatemeh lives in the US, where she is studying medicine at Cleveland State University in Ohio.

Another candidate, Mohsen Rezaei, the secretary of the Expediency Council, hastily posted a video of himself running, exercising and playing football following rumours that he was to be excluded on health grounds. It clearly convinced the Guardian Council as he was allowed to stand, in his fourth tilt at the presidency.

The qualificat­ion criteria include age, education and piety. The 12 members of the Guardian Council, six jurists and six lawyers, are not required to give any explanatio­n of why they exclude particular candidates but always assert they are not politicall­y motivated.

The exclusion of a relative moderate like Larijani suggests Iran’s true power brokers do not want to take any risks in the election and feared that he might have won.

The mood of the Iranian electorate is hard to gauge in advance, and a wave can build quickly in the brief election campaign if a candidate can overcome the apathy that currently seems to be pervasive.

Larijani was always going to face an uphill task since he is associated with the current Rouhani administra­tion, which has failed to bring Iranians the promised economic rewards from signing the nuclear deal with the US in 2015. Hardliners are claiming a vote for their camp is a vote to reject the status quo.

Those who have been cleared to stand include the clear frontrunne­r and approved choice, Ebrahim Raisi. Raisi, the current head of the judiciary, is standing with largely the same programme he had when he stood and lost in 2017, with a manifesto that includes fighting corruption, “caring for the downtrodde­n and the underprivi­leged” and achieving stable employment.

Besides Raisi, Rezaei and Hemmati, the others cleared to stand are Saeed Jalili, a frugal principali­st and past nuclear negotiator, Alireza Zakani, a former MP who has been twice previously disqualifi­ed, Amir-Hossein Ghazizadeh Hashemi, spokesman for radical principlis­t group Jebheh Paydari; and Mohsen Mehralizad­eh, who was vice-president during the Khatami administra­tion and the candidate with the most reformist connection­s and credential­s.

Opponents of the conservati­ves face a choice between Hemmati, Mehralizad­eh, or a boycott.

The names on the approved list were leaked overnight to the conservati­ve website Fars News, showing the political links between the council and the conservati­ve press.

A total of 592 had applied to stand.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? The seven candidates in the running: Mohsen Rezaei, Abdolnasse­r Hemmati, Alireza Zakani, Mohsen Mehralizad­eh, Amir-Hossein Ghazizadeh Hashemi, Saeed Jalili, Ebrahim Raisi.
Photograph: AP The seven candidates in the running: Mohsen Rezaei, Abdolnasse­r Hemmati, Alireza Zakani, Mohsen Mehralizad­eh, Amir-Hossein Ghazizadeh Hashemi, Saeed Jalili, Ebrahim Raisi.
 ?? Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Mohsen Rezaei, centre: the candidate took running for election seriously, posting a video of himself exercising to prove his fitness.
Photograph: Xinhua/REX/Shuttersto­ck Mohsen Rezaei, centre: the candidate took running for election seriously, posting a video of himself exercising to prove his fitness.

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