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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Middle
East : Iran
Outcome of Iranian election points to simmering popular discontent
By Peter Symonds
18 March 2008
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Counting in last Fridays parliamentary election in Iran
is still to be finalised, but the main trends are clear. The conservatives,
also known as principalists for their hard-line defence of the
countrys theocratic state, will again dominate the majlis
or national assembly. The reformers, who advocate limited democratic
reforms, an accommodation with the major powers and economic restructuring,
will retain a small parliamentary presence despite the disqualification
of many of their leading contenders prior to the poll.
A great deal of attention focussed on the overall vote, amid
fears in the political establishment that many people, disgusted
with all factions, would simply not participate. Supreme leader
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, senior
government officials and the state-run media pulled out all stops,
urging people to vote as their patriotic duty to counter international
criticism of the election. In a bid to maximise the numbers, polling
hours were extended late into the night last Friday.
The nervousness in ruling circles was evident in the speed
with which the Interior Ministry announced the initial results
on Sunday: a win for the conservatives and a turnout of more than
60 percent. Supreme leader Khamenei immediately hailed the outcome,
declaring: Once again, your glorious and powerful presence
in the election foiled enemies plots. Their psychological
war to make a low turnout was no more than an empty bubble.
While higher than the all-time low of 50.5 percent in 2004,
the overall vote last Friday was still well below previous parliamentary
elections. In Tehran, the official figure was only 40 percent.
Critics have suggested that even these results were doctored.
Economist Fariborz Raisdana told the Telegraph that the
overall turnout was likely to have been only 35 percent. This
is not a true election. They hold it because they want to show
off to the world and persuade people they are democratic,
he said.
Whatever the actual turnout, there is undoubtedly widespread
alienation and dissatisfaction over the lack of basic democratic
rights, skyrocketting inflation and high levels of unemployment.
Ahmadinejad won the 2005 presidential election by making populist
promises to help the poor and pledging to take a tough stance
against the Bush administrations menacing threats over Irans
nuclear programs. He was able to capitalise on disaffection with
his predecessor, the reformist Mohammed Khatami, who had failed
to implement democratic reforms in the face of hard-line opposition
and presided over declining living standards produced by his free
market policies.
According to the Interior Ministry, the conservatives won 71
percent of seats so far decided in last Fridays poll. Ahmadinejads
supporters claimed the outcome as a victory, but there are divisions
even within the conservative camp. Those backing the president
ran on list for the United Principalist Front, while conservatives
critical of his handling of the economy and his abrasive foreign
policy stood for the Broad Principalist Coalition.
According to the Mehr news agency, the United Principalist
Front won 88 seats and the Broad Principalist Coalition 75 seats.
Two reform groupsKhatamis supporters and Etemad-e
Meligained 23 and 17 seats respectively. Some 49 independents
were also elected. The remainder of the 290 seats will be decided
in a second round of voting next month.
All of these figures, however, are approximate. Other reports
put the number of finalised seats at only 204. Moreover, who is
counted in which camp is confused by the indistinct character
of the coalitions and the fact that a large number of candidates
stood on multiple lists. Amir Ali Amiri, the coalition coordinator
for the Broad Principalists, claimed that his group would have
80 seats, but only 32 of those successful candidates had stood
solely for that list.
The reformers are claiming a victory simply because their faction
will have a similar number of seats as in the previous parliament40.
Reformist politician Mohammad Ali Abtahi told the media: The
important message for us was that it was the right decision not
to back down after the mass rejection of prominent reformist candidates
and stay in the race. We managed to mess up their plans.
In fact, the decision to stand, rather than mount a boycott to
protest the disqualifications, reflected the unwillingness of
the reformers to mount any serious political challenge to the
dominant conservative factions.
The validity of the vote, particularly in Tehran, has been
questioned. Various figures have been reported for the seats decided
in the capitalfrom 14 to 24 out of a total of 30, with the
remainder to be decided in the second round. All of the seats,
however, have gone to Ahmadinejads supporters with none
being won by reformers or rival conservatives. An editorial in
National Confidence, a pro-reformist newspaper, asked:
How it can be that reformists won 30 percent of the seats
in rural areas, but [none so far] in the capital where reformists
enjoy more media support?
Tehran is also the base of support for Tehran mayor Mohammad
Baqer Qalibaf, who, along with former top nuclear negotiator Ali
Larijani, are key figures in the Broad Principalist Coalition.
Qalibaf swept to power in Tehran in nationwide local elections
in 2006, exploiting deep discontent among working people over
deteriorating living standards. The official inflation rate is
nearly 20 percent, with the cost of basic food items and housing
rising sharply. While fuel prices are still low, the government
imposed unpopular rationing last year in a bid to rein in the
cost of subsidies.
The election outcome sets the stage for the presidential poll
due next year. The strong showing by Ali Larijani, who won a seat
with 76 percent of the vote in the holy city of Qom, places him
in a strong position if he decides to challenge Ahmadinejad for
the presidency. Qalibaf is also positioning himself as a possible
contender for the post. All of these calculations, however, depend
on factors that are beyond the control of Ahmadinejad or his potential
rivals.
All of the factions in Tehran are no doubt watching the US
election very closely. Larijani, in particular, may be calculating
that a new US administration would be more amenable to an easing
of relations with Iran. While he has played down any fundamental
differences with Ahmadinejad over nuclear policy, Larijani has
been critical of the presidents rhetoric as unnecessarily
antagonistic to the major powers. At the same time, US President
Bush has not ruled out the option of using military force against
Iran and is quite capable of launching such an attack in his remaining
months in officea move that would dramatically alter the
political equation in Tehran.
Any downturn in the world economy will inevitably impact on
Iran producing a further decline in what for many are already
intolerable conditions. In such conditions, Ahmadinejads
already tattered image as the man of the people who promised to
put oil money on everyones table would rapidly disintegrate.
All of his rivals, however, are advancing economic policies that
would rein in government spending and deepen the gulf between
rich and poor.
The results of the stage-managed election in Iran only serve
to underscore the narrow range of opinion represented in the political
establishment in which support for Iranian capitalism and the
theocratic state that emerged from the 1979 revolution are mandatory.
All factions are acutely aware that the simmering popular discontent
that found so little expression in last Fridays poll will
not go away and has the potential to erupt in unexpected forms.
See Also:
Iranians vote amid concern about US aggression
and falling living standards
[14 March 2008]
Top US commander in Middle East quits
over Iran war report
[13 March 2008]
Ahmadinejad under fire in
lead up to Iran's parliamentary election
[16 February 2008]
Iranian government intensifies
crackdown on left-wing opposition
SEP and ISSE demand immediate release of arrested students
[28 January 2008]
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