Iranians vote in election, hardliners set to dominate
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[February 21, 2020]
By Parisa Hafezi and Babak Dehghanpisheh
DUBAI (Reuters) - Iranians were voting on
Friday in a parliamentary election likely to help hardline loyalists of
the supreme leader tighten their grip on power as the country faces
mounting U.S. pressure over its nuclear program and growing discontent
at home.
With thousands of potential candidates disqualified in favor of Supreme
Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's allies, the vote is not expected to ease
the country's nuclear standoff with the United States or lead to a
softer foreign policy.
The 290-member parliament's power is limited, but gains by security
hawks could weaken pragmatists and conservatives who back the ruling
theocracy but support more engagement with the outside world.
More hardline seats in the Assembly may also help them in the 2021
contest for president, a job with wide day-to-day control of government.
President Hassan Rouhani, from the pragmatist faction, won the last two
elections on promises to open Iran to the outside world.
Washington's 2018 withdrawal from Iran's nuclear deal with world powers,
and its reimposition of sanctions, have hit Iran's economy hard and led
to widespread hardships.
A U.S. drone strike killed Iran's most prominent military commander,
Qassem Soleimani, at the Baghdad airport on Jan. 3.
Iran retaliated by attacking U.S. targets in Iraq with ballistic
missiles, killing no one but causing brain injuries in more than 100
soldiers.
Encouraging Iranians to vote, State TV showed footage of people lined up
at polling stations set up mainly at mosques.
"I am here to vote. It is my duty to follow martyr Soleimani's path,"
said a young voter at a mosque at a cemetery, where Soleimani is buried
in his hometown.
Soleimani, architect of Tehran’s overseas clandestine and military
operations as head of the Revolutionary Guards’ Quds Force, was a
national hero to many Iranians. He was Iran's most powerful figure after
Khamenei.
"Each vote put into the ballot box is a missile into the heart of
America," said Amirali Hajizadeh, head of the aerospace unit of the
Revolutionary Guards.
Rouhani urged Iranians to demonstrate "victory" by voting in large
numbers. "Our enemies will be further disappointed by the high turnout,"
he said after voting.
Turnout is seen as a critical test of the popularity of the clerical
establishment.
Many Iranians who took part in large protests in November demanded their
leaders focus on the economy and tackling corruption.
Iranian authorities predicted a turnout of about 50%, compared to 62%
and 66% respectively in the 2016 and 2012 votes.
Four hours after polls opened, an Interior Ministry official said about
5 million Iranians out of 58 million eligible voters had cast their
ballots, the ISNA news agency reported.
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Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei casts his vote at a
polling station during parliamentary elections in Tehran, Iran
February 21, 2020.Official Khamenei website/Handout via REUTERS
Iranians contacted by Reuters by telephone said turnout was low in
some districts in the capital.
"In my area in central Tehran not many people are voting. There is
one polling station just beside my house in Javadiyeh and only a
handful of voters were there when I last checked an hour ago," said
sports teacher Amirhossein, 28.
State television said voting would run for 10 hours, but could be
extended for a couple of hours depending on turnout.
"RELIGIOUS DUTY"
The slate of hardline candidates is dominated by loyalists to
Khamenei, including former members of the Guards, who answer
directly to the supreme leader, and their affiliated Basij militia,
insiders and analysts say.
Former Guards commander Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf tops the
parliamentary list of the main hardline coalition for Tehran's 30
seats in the assembly.
Khamenei was the first to cast his vote, broadcast live on
television.
"Voting is a religious duty ... which will also guarantee the
national interests of Iran," he said.
With Iran facing growing isolation on the global stage and
discontent at home over economic hardship, analysts have described
the election as a litmus test of the leader's handling of the
political and economic crises.
The Guardian Council removed 6,850 moderates and leading
conservatives from the field, and permitting voters a choice mostly
between hardline and low-key conservative candidates loyal to
Khamenei.
On Thursday, the U.S. Treasury Department imposed sanctions on
members of the Guardian Council and its Elections Supervision
Committee over the candidate bans. The spokesman for the Guardian
Council said he was honored to be blacklisted by the United States.
Iran's clerical establishment has faced a legitimacy crisis since
last year when protests over a fuel price hike turned political with
demonstrators calling for "regime change". The unrest was met with
the bloodiest crackdown since the 1979 Islamic revolution, killing
hundreds.
Many Iranians are also angry over the shooting down of a Ukrainian
passenger plane in error in January that killed all 176 people on
board, mainly Iranians. After days of denials, Tehran said the
Guards were to blame.
(Additional reporting by Babak Dehghanpisheh; Writing by Parisa
Hafezi; Editing by Michael Georgy and Janet Lawrence)
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