Published in the Jerusalem Post, 11 March 2024
National elections were held in Iran
on March 1. The results were
underwhelming. It took three days for the electoral authorities to count the
votes and consider the results. On March
4 Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi told a news conference in Tehran that
of Iran’s 61 million eligible voters, only some 25 million had deigned to
participate. The resultant turnout of
41% would be the lowest ever recorded in post-revolution Iran.
Even so, the BBC
published comments from voters skeptical
of the official announcement. One
said: "It's not the real result."
Another woman declared “People
believe it's actually less than 41%."
When asked what she thought the true turnout had been, she said comments
on Instagram suggested as low as 20%. "Some even say 15%," she added.
Some experts agreed.
The poll was held to
elect the 290 members of the national parliament, the Majles, and the 88
clerics who make up the Assembly of Experts, composed exclusively of male
Islamic scholars. Each member of the
Assembly will sit for a term of eight years and, should the occasion arise, be
tasked with selecting the country’s supreme leader. The occasion may indeed
arise. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei is 85 years old, and rumors about his health have been circulating
since 2022.
The
election results indicate that conservative politicians will dominate the next
parliament, which is scarcely surprising given the tightly controlled
procedures under which candidates are vetted as suitable to run in the
elections. This pre-election task is
undertaken by the country’s constitutional watchdog, the powerful Guardian
Council, half of whose members are directly selected by Khamenei.
In fact, of the 15,200 people who registered to stand in the
election, no fewer than 7,296 were disqualified, some of them well-known
critics of the regime, many of them moderates and reformers. Iranian women have demonstrated more than
once to the regime that they are a force to be reckoned with, and the Guardian
Council acknowledged reality by allowing 666 women to stand.
The popular mood during the pre-election campaign was somber. Powerful voices called on the nation to boycott the forthcoming poll. One with particular appeal was that of the imprisoned Narges Mohammadi, who won the 2023 Nobel Peace Prize for her work fighting the oppression of women in Iran.
She denounced the elections as sham, following what she called the "ruthless and brutal suppression" of the 2022 protests triggered by the death in custody of Mahsa Amini, arrested for wearing her hijab “improperly”..Mohammadi, a human
rights activist, has been arrested 13 times and sentenced to a total of 31
years in prison. Having already spent
some 12 years in jail serving multiple sentences, in January Iran's
Revolutionary Court sentenced her to an additional 15 months in prison,
doubtless in retaliation for what occurred at the Nobel Peace Award ceremony in
December.
Her children traveled to Stockholm to accept the Nobel award on her behalf. In her speech, smuggled from prison and read out on her behalf, she denounced Iran's "tyrannical" government. Referring to the 2022 protests, Mohammadi said young Iranians had "transformed the streets and public spaces into a place of widespread civil resistance."
Freedom of expression was
a major issue during pre-election campaigning.
Iranians are well aware of the growing
numbers of journalists, artists and other activists being arrested. The suppression of political dissent is also
resented. The most prominent figure in
the Green Movement, Mir-Hossein Mousavi, who was a presidential candidate in
2009, remains under permanent house arrest.
For a variety of reasons in 2021 it suited Supreme Leader Khamenei to approve the election of Hassan Rouhani as president, despite the fact that many in Iran regard him as a moderate. He has since fallen out of favor. Disqualified from running for the Assembly of Experts after 24 years of membership, Rouhani nonetheless cast his vote on election day. Another former president, the reformist Mohammad Khatami was, according to the Reform Front coalition, among those who abstained from voting.
On his official website Khatami posted that Iran is “very far from free and competitive elections."The head of Reform Front,
Azar Mansouri, said she hoped the state would learn its lesson from the low
turnout, and change the way it governed the nation.
The respected
London-based think tank, Chatham House, maintains that these Iranian elections
“should not be seen as a democratic exercise where people express their will at
the ballot box. As in many authoritarian
countries, elections in Iran have long been used to legitimize the power and
influence of the ruling elite.”
The regime, it says, has
failed to learn any lessons from the nationwide protests in 2022 following the
Mahsa Amini affair, and the subsequent brutal government crackdown. Rather
than attempting to build back popular legitimacy through inclusive elections, it
concludes, the political establishment has prioritized a further consolidation
of conservative power across both elected and unelected institutions.
Confirming his
reputation for turning the truth on its head, Supreme Leader Khamenei on March
5 hailed Iran’s elections as "great and epic", despite the boycott by
a large majority of voters. “The Iranian nation did a jihad and fulfilled their
social and civil duties,” he declared.
In response, reformist lawyer and former member of parliament Mahmoud Sadeghi tweeted: “Don’t the sixty percent who did not vote count as Iranians?”
Writing from Tehran’s Evin prison, where he has spent more than eight years behind bars, dissident reformist politician Mostafa Tajzadeh, an outspoken critic of Khamenei, called the elections “engineered” and a “historic failure” of the system and of the Supreme Leader.Published in the Jerusalem Post and the Jerusalem Post online titled: "Iran's take on democracy and the Irfanians that refused to play along", 11 May 2024:
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