Iran's parliament is in the balance in election where reformist politicians want to consolidate their recent comeback. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
TEHRAN
- Nearly a quarter of Iran's parliamentary seats are at stake Friday in
an election where reformist politicians want to consolidate their
recent comeback and minimise the clout of hardline lawmakers.
The
second round run-off poll was needed because no candidate in 68
constituencies managed to win 25 percent of the votes cast in the
initial nationwide ballot on February 26.
Reformists
who backed the country's moderate President Hassan Rouhani made big
gains in the first round following Iran's implementation of a nuclear
deal with world powers, which lifted sanctions blamed for long hobbling
the Islamic republic's economy.
Conservative lawmakers,
including vehement opponents of the West who openly criticised the
landmark agreement that reined in Iran's atomic programme, lost dozens
of seats.
In the capital even the head of the
conservative coalition was ejected, in a wipeout that saw the reformist
faction -- known as the List of Hope -- win all 30 seats for Tehran.
Despite
that loss the conservatives held on nationally, winning 103 seats
against 95 for their reformist and moderate rivals in the 290-member
parliament.
But the split result -- other seats were
won by nominally independent candidates and minorities -- meant no
faction won a majority.
Friday's contest, which sees
the top two candidates in initial voting stand for the remaining seats
in major cities such as Tabriz, Isfahan and Shiraz as well as dozens of
towns, could change that.
Mohammad Reza Aref, leader of
the pro-Rouhani List of Hope, has set a target of at least another 40
seats, reiterating that February's poll showed Iranians want change and
greater influence in parliament would make reforms more likely.
Unlike
the vote two months ago there has been little attention on Friday's
election, which has been overshadowed by concern in Tehran that no
benefits are being generated by the nuclear deal.
The
agreement between Iran and six powers -- Britain, China, France, Russia
and the United States plus Germany -- became possible because supreme
leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei backed Rouhani's government.
- Nuclear deal in dispute -
However
Khamenei and top officials have since warned that the United States is
not keeping its side of the bargain and is instead erecting barriers for
European banks seeking to work in Iran.
February's voting came less than six weeks after the nuclear deal formally came into force.
Although
the vote was split three ways between Rouhani's reformist and moderate
allies, conservatives and independents, the result gave the president
more leverage to push for reform-minded legislation.
Rouhani
will likely be able to muster support from key backers and create a
working majority when the new parliament is sworn in next month.
Economic changes, including new laws to encourage foreign investment and privatisation of state industries, are expected.
The
most dramatic outcome in February's election, however, was the
resurgence of the reformists, a political camp largely silenced after a
disputed election in 2009 saw Rouhani's hardline predecessor Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad returned to office.
That vote was followed by bloody street protests in which dozens of people were killed.
If
conservatives perform more strongly on Friday amid concern over the
nuclear deal -- Rouhani's main achievement since his landslide election
win in June 2013 -- his hopes for a more pro-government parliament could
founder.
The conservatives have not changed tack ahead
of Friday's voting, keeping up pressure over what they say is a silent
agenda among reformists to give up the principles of the 1979 Islamic
revolution.
"We hope that people in this round can have
a parliament in line with the goals of Imam and the leadership by
electing principlists, said Gholam-Ali Hadad Adel, head of the
conservative coalition.
He was referring to the Islamic
republic's founder Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and Khamenei, who
succeeded the revolutionary leader and is Iran's ultimate authority.
From
a population of almost 80 million -- 60 percent of which is no older
than 30 -- 62 percent of 55 million eligible voters cast ballots in
February. Around 17 million citizens are eligible to vote on Friday.
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Wednesday 27 April 2016
Nearly quarter of Iran's parliament seats at stake in election run-off
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