Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has garnered
headlines around the world for his defiance of Washington, as well as his rhetorical
grandstanding on Palestinian issues, the existence of Israel, and his government's
alleged support of Shi'ite militias in Iraq.
Still, it appears that Iran's upcoming parliamentary elections in March will
be determined less by debates over the country's foreign policy than by rising
criticism of incompetence and economic mismanagement of conservatives and hardliners
in the legislature and in the office of the president.
"Ahmadinejad is in trouble, not only because his economic policies have
not worked; he has managed to antagonize almost the entire Iranian elite because
of his exclusivist management style," said Farideh Farhi, an independent
researcher on Iran and political scientist at the University of Hawaii.
The president and his allies in the Majlis (Iranian parliament) face opposition
from prominent reformists led by former President Mohammad Khatami, as well
as from conservatives who expect to challenge Ahmadinejad should the president's
hard-line slate fail to win votes.
Khatami's coalition brings together 21 moderate parties, including the Islamic
Iranian Participation Front, Khatami's Association of Combatant Clerics, and
the Executives of Construction Party (Kargozaran), founded by ex-cabinet members
from the presidency of Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani.
Defined as a "pragmatist" or a "centrist," Rafsanjani's
political history suggests the former president is more of an opportunist. But
his support for the slate and the inclusion of high-profile candidates, many
of whom previously worked in key ministry positions, will make it difficult
for the Guardian Council, Iran's electoral watchdog, to disqualify them.
The hard-line faction was bolstered Thursday when more than 2,000 reformist
candidates were disqualified from running, according to the Associated Press.
The council will not announce the final slate of approved candidates until March
5, which gives prospective parliamentarians little time to campaign before the
March 14 vote.
Out of an initial 7,200 prospective registered candidates, some 5,000 remain
in the running, according to Ali Reza Afshar, a top Interior Ministry official.
That is a significant decrease from the more than 4,000 reformist candidates
disqualified in 2004 by the Guardian Council, an appointed clerical body that
is only answerable to Iran's actual executive power, the supreme leader, Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei.
Iran's 2004 parliamentary crisis fractured the reform movement, leading to
a split over whether to boycott or participate in elections. Ahmadinejad, bolstered
by populist rhetoric and the support of the paramilitary groups closely linked
to Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps and loyal to the supreme leader, became
the unlikely winner of the 2005 presidential contest.
"He wasn't the candidate of the right until right at the end," said
Farhi during a talk Friday at the Washington-based Woodrow Wilson International
Center for Scholars. "Let us note the unpredictability."
A strong showing for centrists and reformists would constitute a rejection
of Ahmadinejad and his policies, which, Farhi says, have been described by critics
as "expansionary, inflationary, incompetent." It would also enhance
the role and stature of parliament, she said. "Everybody feels that the
Seventh Majlis has been totally ineffective."
The president himself has been criticized for slowing the pace of privatization,
mismanaging the budget, and appointing incompetent bureaucrats. He has been
attacked by reformists and centrists such as Rafsanjani, and must contend with
conservative opponents who could exploit dissatisfaction with Ahmadinejad to
seem more palatable to voters. Khamenei's enthusiasm for him also appears to
have cooled.
For conservatives, the major fight will be over who should lead the party's
election slate.
"Whoever is on top of Tehran's list becomes the main candidate to challenge
Ahmadinejad in the coming presidential elections," Farhi said.
That list includes former nuclear negotiators Hassan Rowhani and Ali Larijani,
both powerful conservative politicians, who may appeal to voters dissatisfied
with Ahmadinejad. Other possible names include former Foreign Minister Akbar
Velayati and former Intelligence Minister Ali Fallahian.
Iran has held 27 elections since the 1979 Revolution, and Iranians participate
in them, sometimes to a greater extent than U.S. citizens who vote in U.S. elections.
Fifty-five percent of eligible voters turned out for the 2004 presidential election,
the highest turnout in 36 years. Iran reported a 60 percent turnout in 2006
elections for local councils and the powerful Assembly of Experts, in which
Ahmadinejad's allies suffered a crushing defeat after a majority of seats went
to reformists and conservatives opposing him.
Unlike past elections, talks of boycott do not seem to be resonating, and,
contrary to the perceptions abroad, conservatives have managed to control the
foreign policy debate, particularly in light of recent developments over Iran's
nuclear program.
A U.S. intelligence estimate released last year said that Iran had at
least temporarily suspended its nuclear program in 2003, contradicting
findings in a similar 2005 report, which assessed that Iran was 10 years away
from developing weapons.
"They have managed to push 'the Great Satan' back on the nuclear issue,'"
said Farhi.
If anything, she said, U.S. foreign policy has succeeded in entrenching the
hardliners in power.
"I don't know if that is the intention," Farhi added.
(Inter Press Service)