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Friday election may be turning point for Iran
Friday could be a pivotal day in the history of Iran, as Iranians go to the polls in nationwide municipal elections while also electing members to the Assembly of Experts, Iran's most powerful religious body.
The elections are the first real test of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's political influence since he unexpectedly came to power 18 months ago. But they also could set the stage for a possible "Talibanization" of Iran.
Two rival factions within Iran's ruling conservative religious establishment are vying to seize control of the Assembly of Experts, which plays a pivotal role in Iranian politics by appointing and technically supervising Iran's supreme religious leader.
This week's elections are being held against a backdrop of persistent rumours that Iran's current Supreme Leader, 67-year-old Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, may be suffering from cancer.
Since those who are elected to the Assembly of Experts on Friday will hold their posts for 10 years, it's almost certain they will select Iran's next Supreme Leader and thereby determine both Iran's future domestic policy and its relationship to the rest of the world.
Ayatollah Khamenei is only the second Supreme Leader in the history of the Islamic Republic of Iran. He succeeded the Islamic Republic's founder, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1979.
Friday's municipal elections hold out the possibility of a return of Iranian reformists, who lost much of their influence during the 2005 presidential and parliamentary elections, as the poor and middle class protest against a stagnant economy dominated by high inflation and high unemployment and young people rebel against increasingly strict Islamic social standards.
But the ultra-conservative backers of Mr. Ahmadinejad aim to sidestep any defeats on the municipal front by seizing control of Assembly of Experts to tighten their control of Iran's religious establishment.
If hardline supporters of Mr. Ahmadinejad control the Assembly of Experts, that could remove all restraints on their exercise of power.
As a result, the election for the Assembly is turning into a three-way fight between 72-year-old Ayatollah Mohammad Mesbah Yazdi, the hardline spiritual and political mentor of Mr. Ahmadinejad who calls for a return to "the values of the Islamic Revolution," and former Iranian president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a pragmatic conservative who unsuccessfully challenged Mr. Ahmadinejad in last year's presidential election and has recently begun to side with Iran's reformists.
The third and still dominant element in the Assembly is the traditional conservative faction of Iran's "Militant Clergy," who are fiercely loyal to Ayatollah Khamenei.
Some observers suggest Ayatollah Khamenei has deliberately tried to balance the contending conservative factions by using Iran's Guardian Council to disqualify candidates from the Assembly elections.
Under Iran's complicated constitution, which limits the impact of popular voting by giving enormous power to the country's Muslim clergy, the Guardian Council vets candidates for all major elections and has the power to veto laws passed by parliament if they are inconsistent with Islamic law and the constitution.
The Council is made up of six theologians appointed by the Supreme Leader and six lawyers who are nominated by the judiciary and approved by parliament.
This year, the Guardian Council disqualified 330 potential candidates and approved only 163 for the 86 spots on the Assembly of Experts.
Among those disqualified was Majid Ansari, a Muslim cleric who is a member of the current Assembly.
According to Mehdi Khalaji of the Washington Institute of Near East Policy, Ayatollah Khamenei was so concerned by Ayatollah Yazdi's ambitions to succeed him as Supreme Leader that he had the Guardians Council step in and disqualify several of his candidates for the Assembly elections, including Ayatollah Yazdi's son, Ali Mesbah Yazdi.
"Essentially, the election results are already fixed and will only serve to consolidate more power in the hands of the current leadership," Mr. Khalaji said.
Still, the vote will highlight some of the growing strains in Iran's political life.
This week Mr. Ahmadinejad was the subject of an almost unprecedented outburst of opposition when students at Tehran's Amir Kabir university interrupted a speech he was giving by burning his picture, setting off firecrackers and shouting "Death to the Dictator".
A week earlier, nearly 3,000 students at Tehran University paraded through their campus chanting slogans "for freedom and against despotism."
It was the biggest show of dissent in Iran since Ayatollah Khamenei ordered paramilitary militias to crush student protests in Tehran at the height of the reformist movement in 1999.
Since he came to power in 2005, Mr. Ahmadinejad and Iran's religious conservatives have tried to dismantle Iran's reformist secularization of everyday life. They have waged war on illicit satellite TV receivers, increased repression of feminists, imposed strict censorship on the Internet and increased attacks on "deviant" religious groups.
Mr. Ahmadinejad has also tried to play to public opinion by adopting a threatening stance towards Israel, while belligerently insisting on Iran's right to develop nuclear technology in the face of stiff international opposition.
Even as Iran prepares to go to the polls on Friday, members of the United Nations Security Council are putting the final touches to a resolution that will punish Iran with selective sanctions that ban the export of equipment and technology that can be used in the country's nuclear program.
Friday election may be turning point for Iran
Friday could be a pivotal day in the history of Iran, as Iranians go to the polls in nationwide municipal elections while also electing members to the Assembly of Experts, Iran's most powerful religious body.
The elections are the first real test of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's political influence since he unexpectedly came to power 18 months ago. But they also could set the stage for a possible "Talibanization" of Iran.
Two rival factions within Iran's ruling conservative religious establishment are vying to seize control of the Assembly of Experts, which plays a pivotal role in Iranian politics by appointing and technically supervising Iran's supreme religious leader.
This week's elections are being held against a backdrop of persistent rumours that Iran's current Supreme Leader, 67-year-old Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, may be suffering from cancer.
Since those who are elected to the Assembly of Experts on Friday will hold their posts for 10 years, it's almost certain they will select Iran's next Supreme Leader and thereby determine both Iran's future domestic policy and its relationship to the rest of the world.
Ayatollah Khamenei is only the second Supreme Leader in the history of the Islamic Republic of Iran. He succeeded the Islamic Republic's founder, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1979.
Friday's municipal elections hold out the possibility of a return of Iranian reformists, who lost much of their influence during the 2005 presidential and parliamentary elections, as the poor and middle class protest against a stagnant economy dominated by high inflation and high unemployment and young people rebel against increasingly strict Islamic social standards.
But the ultra-conservative backers of Mr. Ahmadinejad aim to sidestep any defeats on the municipal front by seizing control of Assembly of Experts to tighten their control of Iran's religious establishment.
If hardline supporters of Mr. Ahmadinejad control the Assembly of Experts, that could remove all restraints on their exercise of power.
As a result, the election for the Assembly is turning into a three-way fight between 72-year-old Ayatollah Mohammad Mesbah Yazdi, the hardline spiritual and political mentor of Mr. Ahmadinejad who calls for a return to "the values of the Islamic Revolution," and former Iranian president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a pragmatic conservative who unsuccessfully challenged Mr. Ahmadinejad in last year's presidential election and has recently begun to side with Iran's reformists.
The third and still dominant element in the Assembly is the traditional conservative faction of Iran's "Militant Clergy," who are fiercely loyal to Ayatollah Khamenei.
Some observers suggest Ayatollah Khamenei has deliberately tried to balance the contending conservative factions by using Iran's Guardian Council to disqualify candidates from the Assembly elections.
Under Iran's complicated constitution, which limits the impact of popular voting by giving enormous power to the country's Muslim clergy, the Guardian Council vets candidates for all major elections and has the power to veto laws passed by parliament if they are inconsistent with Islamic law and the constitution.
The Council is made up of six theologians appointed by the Supreme Leader and six lawyers who are nominated by the judiciary and approved by parliament.
This year, the Guardian Council disqualified 330 potential candidates and approved only 163 for the 86 spots on the Assembly of Experts.
Among those disqualified was Majid Ansari, a Muslim cleric who is a member of the current Assembly.
According to Mehdi Khalaji of the Washington Institute of Near East Policy, Ayatollah Khamenei was so concerned by Ayatollah Yazdi's ambitions to succeed him as Supreme Leader that he had the Guardians Council step in and disqualify several of his candidates for the Assembly elections, including Ayatollah Yazdi's son, Ali Mesbah Yazdi.
"Essentially, the election results are already fixed and will only serve to consolidate more power in the hands of the current leadership," Mr. Khalaji said.
Still, the vote will highlight some of the growing strains in Iran's political life.
This week Mr. Ahmadinejad was the subject of an almost unprecedented outburst of opposition when students at Tehran's Amir Kabir university interrupted a speech he was giving by burning his picture, setting off firecrackers and shouting "Death to the Dictator".
A week earlier, nearly 3,000 students at Tehran University paraded through their campus chanting slogans "for freedom and against despotism."
It was the biggest show of dissent in Iran since Ayatollah Khamenei ordered paramilitary militias to crush student protests in Tehran at the height of the reformist movement in 1999.
Since he came to power in 2005, Mr. Ahmadinejad and Iran's religious conservatives have tried to dismantle Iran's reformist secularization of everyday life. They have waged war on illicit satellite TV receivers, increased repression of feminists, imposed strict censorship on the Internet and increased attacks on "deviant" religious groups.
Mr. Ahmadinejad has also tried to play to public opinion by adopting a threatening stance towards Israel, while belligerently insisting on Iran's right to develop nuclear technology in the face of stiff international opposition.
Even as Iran prepares to go to the polls on Friday, members of the United Nations Security Council are putting the final touches to a resolution that will punish Iran with selective sanctions that ban the export of equipment and technology that can be used in the country's nuclear program.



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