Iranian election results trickle in, putting Hassan Rouhani in lead

Hopefully he is better than the last guy.

Iranian election results trickle in, putting Hassan Rouhani in lead - CNN.com

CNN) – Iran’s presidential election results trickled in Saturday, with early tallies giving centrist candidate Hassan Rouhani a clear lead, according to the Interior Ministry.

Iranian officials reported a high turnout, with some 70% of some 50 million registered voters – men and women, young and old – turning out, according to state-run Press TV.

The lines extended into the street at times, as voters waited to pick their choice to succeed two-term President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Based on early results, centrist candidate Hassan Rouhani had more votes than any other candidate, Interior Ministry officials said Saturday.

As of noon Saturday local time, Rouhani had 6,049,655 votes, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf had 1,844,463; Saeed Jalili had 1,400,712; Mohsen Rezaei had 1,518,964; Ali-Akbar Velayati had 729,044; and Mohammad Gharazi had 143,301.

Officials at the Interior Ministry’s election headquarters said that 11,686,139 valid ballots – of 12,091,699 in total – had been counted at 21,376 polling stations so far.

These votes still represent only a fraction of the total vote. If the 70% turnout figure is correct, there would be about 35 million votes.

When the final tally does come in, that doesn’t necessarily mean the election is over. If no single candidate gets more than half the vote, the top two finishers will face off in a runoff June 21.

That victor will take Ahmadinejad’s mantle as one of the country’s most visible figures, at a time when it’s dealing with widespread sanctions tied to international concern over its nuclear program.

But he won’t be Iran’s most powerful man: That distinction belongs to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who has been Iran’s supreme leader since 1989. He’s got plenty of backing, from conservative citizens to loyalist militia groups to, most notably, the Revolutionary Guard.

“Whoever is president, he’s going to have his hands relatively tied by the Revolutionary Guard if they don’t really like what he’s doing,” said Alireza Nader, a policy analyst at the Rand Corporation think tank.

Centrist candidate complained of irregularities

This reality of Iranian governance, though, didn’t prevent 680 men and women from officially seeking the office. The Guardian Council – a non-elected body made up of six clerics and six lawyers operating under the oversight of the supreme leader – narrowed that group down to eight. Two of those subsequently dropped out.

The final six contenders don’t include any women. Nor do they include Ahmadinejad’s aide and protege Esfandiar Rahim Mashaei, who was among those excluded by the Guardian Council.

Velayati, Ghalibaf and Jalili, who is Iran’s chief nuclear negotiator, are considered close to Khamenei and would be unlikely to challenge his authority. Of the three, Jalili saw the most popular support going into the vote.

Rouhani, meanwhile, has the backing of the highly influential former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.

Hours into the voting, Rouhani complained of a voting irregularity. A reform candidate, Mohammed Aref, who dropped out of the race earlier in the week, is still on some ballots.

Rouhani was worried that voters might mistakenly select Aref, which would amount to a vote thrown away. It was not clear how many ballot papers were concerned.

Four years ago, when allegations of election fraud sparked widespread protests, Iran’s police and the Basij, a feared paramilitary group, cracked down on the opposition Green Movement.

Protesters were jailed, and human rights groups alleged many were tortured and killed behind bars while the government quashed the uprising.

Reform politicians representing the movement, including Ahmadinejad’s election rival, former Prime Minister Mir Hossein Moussavi, have been under house arrest since 2011.

Despite the unrest, Ahmadinejad’s re-election was formally certified by the clerical establishment

Re: Iranian election results trickle in, putting Hassan Rouhani in lead

Hoping his win, but I don't think it will change much. Rafsanjani also tried but failed to change the system.
Unlike what many anti-Ahmedinejad people in the West think, the power in Iran resides not in the hands of the president but in the hands of the vali e faqih, Khamenei.
If Iranian people really want change then they should rise up against Khamenei. Just voting centrist presidential candidates won't change much.

Re: Iranian election results trickle in, putting Hassan Rouhani in lead

I think that the Iranian people know but they have to make a point somehow, even if is through candidates acceptable to the mullahs. Aref withdrawed after another liberal was not allowed. Anyway, it would be a hard struggle like Pakistan where an army of people have been indoctrinated on an ideology (basiji / rurals in iran's case) who would face the city folks.

Re: Iranian election results trickle in, putting Hassan Rouhani in lead

There is no need for that ...

Re: Iranian election results trickle in, putting Hassan Rouhani in lead

In the end it helped the reformists that Aref withdrew as now all the reformist factions had a single candidate to vote for and he won. It is also astonishing to note that for more than 200,000 positions for local and municipal bodies there were more than 800,000 candidates in total! a fact that will hardly get a mention on mainstream media.

Re: Iranian election results trickle in, putting Hassan Rouhani in lead

When are you making a move to Iran? :slight_smile:

Re: Iranian election results trickle in, putting Hassan Rouhani in lead

it shows true democracy