Full results from Iran’s March 14 parliamentary elections have yet to be announced, but the Interior Ministry says conservative allies of hard-line President Mahmud Ahmadinejad received 74 percent of parliament’s 290 seats decided so far.
Although reformists are questioning the vote count, it was always clear that conservatives — who call themselves “principle-ists” for their loyalty to the Islamic republic’s values — would fare well. After all, the Guardians Council — an unelected body of jurists and clerics answerable only to the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — had barred hundreds of opposition reformists from running on grounds they were insufficiently loyal to Islam or the 1979 revolution.
Because of those disqualifications, the EU Presidency called the elections “neither free nor free” — a judgment rejected by Iran’s Foreign Ministry as “hasty, politically motivated, opportunistic, and hence unacceptable.”
Nonetheless, the question now is how the results bode for Ahmadinejad’s future ahead of next year’s vital presidential election.
Many observers say the election results do not necessarily mean the political atmosphere in the new Majlis will be the same as in the outgoing parliament — or that all conservative deputies will necessarily back Ahmadinejad’s policies.
Isa Sahakhiz, a Tehran-based independent journalist, tells Radio Farda that the president and his government will face challenges from the new legislature. Sahakhiz says those challenges will come not only from some 50 reformists and a group of independents in the Majlis, but from some conservatives themselves.
“The issue is there are some moderate people and Mr. Ahmadinejad’s rivals among the [conservatives] who have been elected to the parliament,” Sahakhiz says. “I think the government is going to face serious challenges, especially during discussions over the economy. In some cases, the situation would go to the brink of crisis.”
Some prominent conservatives apparently share the same viewpoint.
Ali Larijani, a conservative who secured an impressive victory in the religious city of Qom, warned the results “should not lead to arrogance” among conservatives. Larijani, Iran’s former top nuclear negotiator, predicted that the new Majlis would be “much more effective than the current one, and give priority to national interests.”
Larijani belongs to those conservatives known as “revisionists.” They backed Ahmadinejad at the beginning of his presidency, but later distanced themselves over his uncompromising stance on the nuclear issues as well as his economic policies.
Many Iranians blame Ahmadinejad for high unemployment and inflation that has soared reportedly to as high as 20 percent.
Larijani will head a powerful bloc of more pragmatic conservatives inside the new parliament, and according to some media reports he may be offered the post of speaker of the Majlis.
The speaker of the current Majlis, Gholam-Ali Hadad-Adel, is another critic of the president’s approach to economic issues. Hadad-Adel, reelected in a landslide in Tehran, said his faction does not intend to have disputes with the president but added that it “will not blindly approve all the government’s decisions, either.”
Both Larijani and Hadad-Adel, as well as former reformist President Mohammad Khatami, are seen by many as potential candidates in the 2009 presidential vote. So is the mayor of Tehran, Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, also seen as a pragmatic conservative.
With such powerful rivals reportedly lining up for a run at the presidency, observers inside Iran say that Ahmadinejad is far from guaranteed reelection next year despite his allies’ victory on March 14.
So as one election comes to a close, the campaign for another seems to have already begun.
Copyright (c) 2008. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
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