Iran Holds Parliamentary Election Likely to Bolster Hardliners

DUBAI (Reuters) —
Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei arrives to cast his vote at a polling station during parliamentary elections in Tehran, Iran, Friday. (Official Khamenei website/Handout via Reuters)

Iranians began voting on Friday in a parliamentary election likely to help religious rulers 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 hardliners loyal to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the vote is not expected to influence the country’s fraught relationship with the United States.

Even though the parliament does not wield significant power, 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.

Washington’s withdrawal in 2018 from Iran‘s nuclear deal with world powers, and its reimposition of crippling sanctions, have hurt pragmatists who supported the pact.

Tensions between Iran and the United States have increased dramatically since a U.S. drone strike killed the country’s most prominent military commander, Qassem Soleimani, at the Baghdad airport on Jan. 3.

Iran retaliated on Jan. 8 by attacking U.S. targets in Iraq with domestically built ballistic missiles, killing no one but causing brain injuries in more than 100 soldiers.

State media said voting is set to run for 10 hours, with about 58 million Iranians eligible to vote for the representatives in the 290-member parliament.

The U.S. Treasury Department has imposed sanctions on the members of the Guardian Council and its Elections Supervision Committee over the candidate bans.

On Friday Iran‘s election vetting body spokesman said he was honored to be blacklisted by the United States, according to state news agency IRIB.

Khamenei was the first to cast his vote.

“Voting is a religious duty … which will also guarantee the national interests of Iran,” Khamenei said after he voted, broadcast live on state media. “I am urging Iranians to vote early.”

With Iran facing growing isolation on the global stage and discontent at home over economic hardships, analysts have said the election was a referendum on the leaders’ handling of political and economic crises.

For Khamenei, a big turnout would signal to arch-foe Washington that Iran is unbowed by sanctions and the killing of Soleimani.

The Guardian Council has ensured that hardliners dominate the field, removing 6,850 moderates and leading conservatives and permitting voters a choice mostly between hardline and low-key conservative candidates loyal to Khamenei.

The authorities have been under pressure since last year when protests over a fuel price hike were met with the bloodiest crackdown since the 1979 Islamic revolution, killing hundreds.

But reformers have failed to capitalize on the unrest.

State media showed people waiting to vote in polling stations across the country.

“Each vote put into the ballot box, is a missile into the heart of America,” said Amirali Hajizadeh, head of the aerospace unit of Iran‘s elite Revolutionary Guards.

To Read The Full Story

Are you already a subscriber?
Click to log in!