Foreign Policy
June 6, 2013
By Robin Wright
June 6, 2013
By Robin Wright
The field of
candidates may be limited, but the outside world can still learn a lot from
Iran’s 2013 presidential poll. The election will provide three pivotal metrics
about the Islamic republic now that the Ahmadinejad era is ending.
First,
the (real) turnout at the polls will indicate how many Iranians still have an
interest in the world’s only modern theocracy. The government is quite obsessed
with the number of people who vote to prove it still has a public mandate.
Voting has become almost an existential issue for the ruling clerics.
"A vote for any of these eight candidates is a vote for the Islamic Republic and a vote of confidence in the system and our electoral process," Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said in a public appeal on June 4. He charged
that the outside world was plotting to ensure a low turnout. Leaders clearly
hope at least 60 percent of the estimated 50 million voters will turn out.
Second,
reaction to the results will signal whether the public deems the election process
itself legitimate. It’s no small issue. Many Iranians believed the 2009
presidential poll was fraught with fraud—and that Ahmadinejad was not really
reelected. The reaction sparked the greatest challenge to the Iranian regime
since the 1979 revolution. It gave birth to a new opposition movement.
Over
the next eight months, millions turned out in cities across Iran to challenge
the results—and to demand “Where is my vote?” The regime had to use brutal
force, arrest thousands, and hold Stalinesque trials to quash the new Green
Movement opposition.
In
2013, the regime has already witnessed signs of discontent even before the
vote. On June 4, thousands reportedly turned the funeral for Ayatollah Jalaluddin
Taheri into an anti-government demonstration in Isfahan. Taheri had been the
Friday Prayer Leader in Isfahan. He had earlier criticized the regime for
corruption, eventually resigning from the post. He also called the 2009
election “invalid.”
At
his funeral, supporters chanted “death to the dictator,” a reference to the supreme
leader and a rallying cry from 2009. Others shouted “Free Mousavi and
Karroubi,” the two reformist presidential candidates in 2009 and co-leaders of
the Green Movement. They have been under house arrest for more than two years.
Again,
the regime has publicly conceded its concern about the day-after-the-vote. On
June 4, the supreme leader charged that unnamed foreign powers were plotting to
foment “sedition” after the poll.
Third,
the new president—if the election is credible—may indicate who is capturing the
public imagination. Iranians surprised the outside world—and themselves—in
electing dark horses in both 1997 and 2005. The regime favorites were trounced
in both polls.
In
a stunning upset, the 1997 election brought to power Mohammad Khatami, a purged
former culture minister who was director of the national library. The vote
marked the beginning of the reform era.
In
2005, the final runoff was defined as a battle between “the turban and the hat”
– or a cleric against a layman. Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a former
president, ran against little- known Tehran Mayor Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
For
the first time since the revolution’s early days, a cleric did not win. The
vote was widely interpreted as public rejection of the clerical monopoly of
power—more than as overwhelming support for Ahmadinejad, an engineer and
specialist in traffic management.
Because of past controversies and
regime paranoia, the list of candidates in 2013 offers little variety—arguably
less than in any election since the revolution. Even former President
Rafsanjani was disqualified from running—along with more than 670 others
candidates. Two of the 2009 presidential candidates—a former prime minister and
a former speaker of parliament—are still under house arrest.
But
the eight candidates, all ardent supporters of the revolution and Islamic rule,
don’t have cookie cutter views. The televised debates have even had flashes of
disagreements over the economy, censorship, academic freedom, and women’s
rights.
The
election will also be telling about the key to Iran’s future–its
disproportionately large young population. Because the Islamic regime
aggressively encouraged larger families in the 1980s, its population almost
doubled from 34 million to 62 million in a decade. Today, about two-thirds of
Iran’s 75 million people are under age 35. Even more striking, about half of
voters are reportedly under 35.
The young also face the widest array of
challenges in Iranian society, from inadequate access to higher education and
serious housing shortages to increasing unemployment or underemployment. All
three are pivotal to independence and marriage. Frustrations among the young
have been reflected in several growing social problems, from narcotics to
prostitution.
The
big issue for the regime, however, is the level of political engagement. Half
of Iran’s electorate was born after the revolution. They have no memory of the
monarchy—or the factors that inflamed passions behind the revolution. Since
youth played a huge part in the 2009 protests, their interest in voting, their
choices at the polls, and their reaction to the results could also be
disproportionately important—and potentially decisive.
In the end, Iran’s president may not have
real executive power. Khamenei—ironically himself a former president—still
dominates the policy process. Iran’s supreme leader has a virtual veto over
almost everything.
Yet
the president does matter in Iran. His administration strongly influences the
tone of politics, the economy and the cultural atmospherics—as well as many
appointments.
Khatami
allowed the flowering of an independent press, fewer restrictions on women, and
wider cultural expression in the arts. He talked about bringing down the “wall
of distrust” with the outside world and introduced the idea of a dialogue among
civilizations at the United Nations. He also brought many other reformers with
their own ideas about ways to open up Iran into top jobs.
In
contrast, Ahmadinejad brought into power many from his days in the
Revolutionary Guards during the 1980-1988 war with Iraq. His closest aide was
an in-law through the marriage of their children. Both men framed policy
considerations in terms of the return of the missing 12th imam, whom
many Shiites believe went into “occultation” or hiding in 941 AD and whose
reemergence would bring peace and justice to the world.
So this vote will
count. Despite the huge array of restrictions on the election, Iranians will be
able to signal a lot about what they’re thinking at a particularly important
juncture in Tehran’s relations with the outside world.
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