Iranian presidential election, 2005
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The Iranian presidential election of 2005, the ninth presidential election in Iranian
history, took place in two rounds, first on
Mohammad Khatami, the previous
The first round of the election was a very close race with minor differences in the number of votes won by each candidate
which led to a run-off a week later with Ahmadinejad and ex-president
This was the first presidential runoff in the history of Iran. Before the run-off took place, it was compared to the
2002 French presidential election, where the splintering of the
left-wing vote similarly led to a run-off between the moderate
Results
While pre-voting polls mostly favored a run-off between Rafsanjani and Mostafa Moeen[citation needed], the actual vote counts from the
Ministry of Interior unexpectedly put Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and
The tabulated results follow: Summary of the 17 and 24 June 2005 Iranian Presidential election
results |- !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" align=left|Candidates !style="background-color:#E9E9E9"
align=right|Votes 1st round !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" align=right|% !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" align=right|Votes
2nd round !style="background-color:#E9E9E9" align=right|% |- |align=left|
Election controversies
After the first round of the election, some people, including
Also, some political groups, including the reformist party
Many of the controversies include the Guardian Council in the illegal activities, including it publishing an opinion poll before the election putting Ahmadinejad as the front-runner against all other opinion polls, and it announcing the partial results of the election on the day after the election, putting Ahmadinejad on the second rank while he was still in the third rank in the partial statistics published by the Ministry of Interior, which led to President Khatami going to the Ministry several times and explicitly asking the Council to not announce any more partial results.
Turnout and boycotts
The
Also, some voters, including exiled citizens belonging to opposition political groups or
While some members of the intellectual community in Iran supported the boycott, some key figures, residing inside Iran or
exiled to Europe or North America, had asked their readers and the general population to vote in the election, reasoning that not
voting in the election would result in the election of one of the three conservative candidates, who were all
After the results of the first round, many of the supporters of the boycott are now supporting Hashemi Rafsanjani, and many of
the supporters of the reformist candidates, including many supporters of Moeen, are doing the same.
Also, Emadeddin Baghi, the President of the Iranian Association for Supporting Prisoners' Rights and one of the boycotters, has also spoken in support of Rafsanjani and mentioned that while he still considers Rafsanjani a conservative, he prefers his traditional conservatism to Ahmadinezhad's fundamentalism.
Schedule
The schedule of the election had been decided between the Ministry of Interior and the Guardian Council for
In the first round, Iranian nationals born on or before
The first three suggestions by the Ministry, for May 13, May
20, and June 10,
The second round of the election will happen on
Candidates
The registration of the candidates finished on
The candidates must have first be approved by the
Also, there was a high probability of rejection of women, because of an ambiguous term ("rejāl", رجال) in the Constitution of Iran, a requirement for presidential candidates, which may be interpreted as either "men" or "nobles". The Guardian Council, who is also the official interpreter of the constitution, has mentioned on previous elections that the restriction has not been considered in depth yet, since according to the Council's opinion there were no women registered to run for presidency who fulfilled the other requirements of the constitution; but still, the Council believes that the requirement of rejaal would not match women.
There had also been discussions for a new law proposed in the
Approved candidates
The list of all the people who have officially registered to run for the post is not available to the public, but the Guardian
Council published a final list of six approved candidates on May 22, rejecting all independent
candidates and some candidates from the both wings, specially the reformist candidates Mostafa
Moeen and
These are the candidates approved by the Council of Guardians:
Trans-party
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani , Chairman of theExpediency Discernment Council and a former President of Iran, who has won the support of several parties from both of the wings (and may still win more support), but is considered to be leaned towards the conservatives more than towards the reformists. Ironically, the reformist alliance considered him as a possible candidate of theirs more than the conservative alliance. He was invited to run for president by Executives of Construction Party (reformist), Combatant Clergy Association (conservative), Islamic Labour Party (conservative), and Workers' House (reformist), as well as several other parties across the whole spectrum of positions. Rafsanjani confirmed he is running for the election onMay 10 , after lots of speculations [5].
Reformists
Mehdi Karroubi , former Majlis Speaker, Secretary General ofAssociation of Combatant Clerics (MCS), supported by MCS, Islamic Association of Engineers, Majma'-e Gorooh-haa-ye Khat-te Emam, and Democracy Party of Iran.Mohsen Mehralizadeh , Vice-President and Head of National Sports Organization, member of IIPF. Mehralizadeh has first announced that he will be running for the post on behalf of the Iranian younger generation, but not if the reformist alliance reaches consensus on another candidate, but during the registration mentioned that he will remain in the race until the end.- Mostafa Moeen, former Minister of Science, Research and Technology, supported by
Islamic Iran Participation Front (IIPF) and Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution Organization (MIRO). Confirmed to run onDecember 29 , 2004. IIPF, an influential reformist party in Iran, has mentioned that they won't support any presidential candidate outside the party, except Mousavi and Moeen. Since Mousavi has declined to run, they supported Moeen, whom they claimed to be the most probable candidate to win the approval of other parties in the reformist alliance. Some conservative Majlis representatives had asked for the Guardian Council's rejection of Moeen, which happened finally but was reversed after a letter by Ayatollah Khamenei. Moeen had announced that he would chooseMohammad Reza Khatami as his First Vice President if he was elected, and had already chosen Elaheh Koulaee, a female representative of the sixthIslamic Assembly , as his spokeswoman.
Conservatives
- Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Mayor of Tehran, member of
Islamic Society of Engineers (ISE), supported by some parts of
Alliance of Builders of Islamic Iran (ABII). Although Ahmadinejad
said he would not seek nomination on
February 2 ,2005 , he returned to the scene later. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf , former Commander of Police (niroo-ye entezaami). Contrary to the public announcement of Ayatollah Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran, that nobody knows who he will personally vote for, Ghalibaf had claimed privately that he is the person Khamenei will vote for.Ali Larijani , Supreme Leader's representative inNational Security Council and a former director of IRIB, who was supposed to be the major conservative candidate, as chosen by the "Council for Coordinating the Revolution Forces" (showrā-ye hamāhangi-e nirūhā-ye enǧelāb), a council of some older and very influential leaders of the conservative alliance.
Rejected candidates
- Reformists:
- Akbar A'lami, Majlis representative of Tabriz.
Ebrahim Asgharzadeh , former member of Tehran city council, Secretary General of Islamic Iran Solidarity Party (Hezb-e Hambastegi-e Irān-e Eslāmi), and one of the hostage-takers in Iran hostage crisis. It should be noted that Asgharzadeh was even not supported by his own party (Islamic Iran Solidarity Party). Asgharzadeh was rejected by the Guardian Council to run as a candidate in the2001 presidential elections , which had made him unlikely to be approved this time.- Mostafa Kavakebian, secretary-general of Democracy Party (hezb-e mardomsālāri). Kavakebian supported Karroubi after he himself was rejected.
- Conservatives:
- Zabihollah Bakhshi, commonly known as Haji Bakhshi, militia leader
- Rafat Bayat, Majlis representative from Zanjan, a member of
conservative caucus in parliament. On
March 30 , she stated that she would run independently, not supported by any significant party in the conservative alliance [6]. It was assumed by some people that she would probably get rejected by the Guardian Council, because of the rejāl requirement (see above). - Reza Zavare'i, former member of Guardian Council, invited to run by Chekaad-e Daaneshjooyaan-e Mosalmaan
- Independents:
- Nasser Hejazi, former goalkeeper of the national football team and former coach of the
Esteghlal football club. After his rejection, Hejazi is supporting Hashemi Rafsanjani as president. - Mohammad Hossein Pahlevan, known as Arshia, pop singer
Azam Taleghani , daughter ofAyatollah Mahmoud Taleghani .- Ebrahim Yazdi, former Minister of Foreign affairs in the
Interim Government of 1979 , secretary general ofFreedom Movement Party . After being rejected by the Guardian Council, Yazdi is supporting Moeen for the presidency.
- Nasser Hejazi, former goalkeeper of the national football team and former coach of the
- Unknown affiliation:
- Ayatollah Mohammad Sajjadi ([7])
Declinations and withdrawals
The most important withdrawal was that of
Also, several people were considered possible candidates for the post, who later declined to run early in the race or at the final moments before registration. A list of the ones considered seriously in the media includes:
- Reformists:
- Safdar Hosseini, Minister of Economy and Finance Affair, member of IIPF
Hadi Khamenei , member of Society of Forces Following the Line of the Imam, declined on December 6, 2004Mohammad Reza Khatami , former Majlis Vice Speaker, Secretary General of IIPF- Hassan Khomeini, grandson of Ruhollah Khomeini
Mir-Hossein Mousavi , former Prime Minister, declined on October 12, 2004- Mohammad Mousavi-Khoiniha, member of MCS, declined on November 21, 2004
- Behzad Nabavi, former Majlis Vice Speaker, member of MIRO
Mohammad Ali Najafi , former Minister of Education- Abdollah Ramezanzadeh, Spokesman of Government, member of IIPF
- Conservatives:
Gholam Ali Haddad-Adel , Speaker ofMajlis , he declined his activities for election and said that he will try to re-ally conservatives for election.- Abdollah Jasbi, President of Islamic Azad University. Jasbi withdrew in favour of Hashemi Rafsanjani.
- Mohammad Javad Larijani, Director of
IPM . He strongly endorses his brother Ali Larijani for presidency. - Hossein Mirmohammad-Sadeghi, former speaker of Judiciary Branch
- Ahmad Tavakkoli, Majlis representative and Director of Majlis Research Center and former presidential candidate. Tavakkoli resigned from the race on
May 1 ,2005 , telling that he is doing this to help minimize the diversity in the conservative camp. He is supporting Ghalibaf in the elections. - Ali Akbar Velayati, an Adviser to the Supreme Leader for foreign affairs, and a former
Minister of Foreign Affairs . Velayati was supported inside the conservative alliance by Islamic Coalition Party (ICP). Valayati had confirmed that he does not accept the support of the Council for Coordination and will run independently, unless Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, who was the President of Iran during Velayati's ministership, runs. OnMay 14 , Velayati did not register to run until the official deadline, and then announced that he is supporting Rafsanjani in the elections.
- Independents:
Shirin Ebadi , winner of Nobel Peace Prize in2003 , declined onJanuary 2 ,2005 , despite support among some independent groups and parties, which are usually called pro-Human rights
External links
- Guide to Iran's presidential polls, from BBC News
- Angus Reid Consultants - Election Tracker
- Wrong way elections table at the Center for Range Voting
- The text of the Iranian law for presidential elections (in Persian)
- Shargh's Guide to Elections (in Persian)
- ISNA report on Mousavi's declination, reported by Karroubi (in Persian)
- Situation on December 6 (in Persian)
- Run off results from the BBC
- http://tofoiran.packdeal.com/clips/DrIman/20060906-DrIman-CNN-225.asx
Sources
- Iran newspaper on the elections atmosphere after Mousavi'e declination (in Persian)
- various news articles by
Shargh newspaper and BBC Persian
| Mahmoud Ahmadinejad |
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