Friday, 2 March 2012 the Iranian parliamentary elections take place, but unlike 2009 the reform movement is not taking part. It is a contest among conservatives and this time around Ahmadinejad is taking on the Supreme Leader and the clerics:
The real competition in this election is among the so-called principalists – the various conservative forces that have fought so fiercely to control Iran’s government.In that context, some see this election as fundamentally a fight between supporters of President Ahmadinejad and loyalists of the Supreme Leader.
“There is an attempt to rally people around the Ahmadinejad faction,” says Hashemi, the analyst at the University of Denver. “And one of the things that the Ahmadinejad faction has been doing is to try and play off of the peoples’ general antipathy toward clerical rule.”
Mike Schuster – In Iran’s Election, Not All Candidates Are Welcome NPR 1 Mar 12
Yeah, that’s right, this time Ahmadinejad is the moderate.
Basically Ahmadinejad’s slow accretion of power as president just isn’t working any longer for the clerics and while they need a populist figurehead they would prefer he didn’t have too many notions of his own for ruling the country. Discredited by defeat of his faction in a popular vote, however, he would make a convenient scapegoat for the mismanagement of relations with the West and ensuing economic difficulties:
At the Valiasr roundabout in downtown Tehran, large posters display pictures of Mostafa Ahmadi Roshan, a nuclear scientist who was killed in a bombing in Tehran in January. “The martyrs’ eyes are on your vote,” the posters say. Iran has accused Israel and the U.S. of targeting nuclear scientists, at least four of whom have been killed in recent years, to halt the country’s technological progress. The U.S. denied involvement and Israel declined to comment.Concern that sanctions may destabilize Iran’s economy led to a run on the currency that caused the rial to lose half its value on unofficial markets, as Iranians rushed to buy foreign currencies to protect their savings.
Ladane Nasseri – Iranians Vote in Parliamentary Election Bloomberg 1 Mar 12
While the outcome of this crucial election has clearly forestalled any significant outcomes in relations with the West in recent weeks the question remains how they will be affected:
“Ahmadinejad has benefited from his populist, radical line internationally,” he said. “Anti-Israel, anti-West and fairly belligerent.”“However it’s worth just noting on the nuclear issue, it was Ahmadinejad who tried to look for compromise or was open to compromise in 2009 when nuclear negotiations were at their peak,” [Shashank Joshi, an analyst with the London-based Royal United Services Institute] said.
Henry Ridgwell – Iran Elections Pose Challenge Amid Economic Crisis VoA 1 Mar 12
Worth keeping an eye on the results. With Iran shaping up to be the biggest international issue in the run-up to the American presidential campaign the outcomes could have significant impacts. Ahmadinejad’s term ends in 2013 in any case; but without a strong base of support in the Iranian parliament his remaining influence could easily evaporate, leaving the clerics and Supreme Leader Khomenei in direct control but with a diminished buffer against domestic public opinion. And difficult choices to make.
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