Analysis: Conservative Presidential Candidates Speak Up In Iran
Two conservative figures have announced their
intention to be presidential candidates, although a date for the election has
not been announced yet. Continuing controversy over who should or should not be
a candidate makes it clear that Iran's right wing is not as monolithic as the
conservatives' domination of the February 2004 parliamentary election would lead
one to believe.
The first person to announce his candidacy for the
2005 presidential election is former Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Velayati, who is
currently an adviser to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Radio Farda
reported on 27 November. Velayati is considered a conservative, and he met with
leaders of the hard-line Islamic Coalition Party just a few days before
announcing his candidacy.
At that meeting, according to a commentary in the 24 November "Farhang-i Ashti,"
Velayati emphasized the need for unity among the conservatives. He was implying
that the differences between young right-wingers and middle-aged ones
(fundamentalist vs. pro-values) are too great right now for them to agree on a
candidate. Velayati falls somewhere in the middle of the rightist current,
according to the commentary, between Expediency Council Chairman Ayatollah Ali
Akbar Hashemi-Rafsanjani and Tehran Mayor Mahmud Ahmadinejad. Velayati
represents the "middle-aged right," according to the commentary.
He predicted that Velayati would withdraw his candidacy to support Hashemi-Rafsanjani's candidacy.
Other prospective conservative candidates include former state broadcasting
chief Ali Larijani and Tehran parliamentary representative Ahmad Tavakoli. "I
hope to be able to run in the presidential election," Tavakoli said at a 6
December rally at Tehran University, IRNA reported. Two days earlier, Tavakoli
said in Tehran: "I am serious about participating in the presidential election,"
Mehr News Agency reported. Tavakoli ran for president in 2001 and in 1993,
according to the agency.
Prospective candidates do not actually register until some five weeks before the
election, and an actual election date has not been determined yet due to a
dispute between the Interior Ministry and Guardians Council. The conservatives
can bide their time, therefore, until they throw their weight behind a
candidate. This may explain Islamic Coalition Party Secretary-General Mohammad
Nabi Habibi's 2 December statement in Tabriz, when he said his organization will
not back a candidate other than the one backed by the overall "fundamentalist
trend," IRNA reported.
There is little question, however, that the possible candidacy of Hashemi-Rafsanjani
is foremost in the minds of political observers. Some Iranians seem enthusiastic
about this prospect.
"We support Hashemi-Rafsanjani in the presidential elections," Saber Mir-Atai,
deputy secretary-general of the Islamic Homeland Party (Hizb-i Mihan-i Islami),
said on 6 December, according to ILNA. Mir-Atai said the party's support depends
on the candidate's continuation of President Khatami's reforms, the inclusion of
reformists in the cabinet and government, and "moderation of economic programs."
Mir-Atai did not explain what this means.
Mohammad Baqer Nobakht, secretary-general of the politically pragmatic
Moderation and Development Party (Hizb-i Ettedal va Toseh), said on 3 December
that his party backs Hashemi-Rafsanjani, Mehr News Agency reported.
"Opinion polls show that [Ayatollah Ali-Akbar] Hashemi-Rafsanjani is ahead of
Velayati, Ahmadinejad, and Larijani, and he can win the presidential election if
he decides to enter the election race," Hojatoleslam Ali-Akbar
Fallahian-Khuzestani said during a question-and-answer session at the Al-Hadi
seminary in Qom on 2 December, Fars News Agency reported. Fallahian said Tehran
Mayor Ahmadinejad is a competent official who is viewed more favorably than
Velayati or Larijani, but the conservatives have not decided whether to back or
reject his candidacy. If Hashemi-Rafsanjani decides against being a candidate,
Fallahian speculated, the conservatives probably will back Velayati.
Other Iranians are reluctant to see Hashemi-Rafsanjani as a candidate.
Conservative Mashhad representative Teimur Ali Asgar said Hashemi-Rafsanjani
could be a strategist, but "the people have become modernist and would like Mr.
Hashemi to leave the field to younger people," "Aftab-i Yazd" reported on 7
December. Asgari predicted that Velayati would withdraw his candidacy to support
Hashemi-Rafsanjani's candidacy, Mehr News Agency reported on 6 December. Mustafa
Kavakebian, secretary-general of the reformist Mardom Salari party, said on 4
December that Hashemi-Rafsanjani is one of the country's leading figures, ILNA
reported, but it is better for somebody who has completed two presidential terms
to let a new candidate fill the slot. Kabutar-Ahang representative Reza
Talai-Nik predicted that Hashemi-Rafsanjani's candidacy would reduce the overall
number of candidates by 70-80 percent, "Farhang-i Ashti" reported on 25
November.
Robin Wright did a very useful classification of the conservative groupings in
the 29 November "The Washington Post." The most puritanical group is the
"ideological conservatives," or Kayhanis, whose views appear in the "Kayhan"
newspaper. The most influential group is the "new right," or neoconservatives,
who dominated the February 2004 parliamentary polls and whose platform mixes
theocracy and modernism. The "pragmatic conservatives" are connected with the
Moderation and Development Party and the Executives of Construction Party.
"Traditional conservatives," Wright noted, tend to be less involved in political
affairs.
The controversy over candidates goes beyond the 2005 presidential election and
it will have a direct impact on Iran's political future. The country's
reformists find themselves on their back foot, trying to regain the momentum
they lost after the February 2004 parliamentary election. If the conservatives
seem unsure of their preferred candidates, the reformists are in even worse
shape. Nobody has come forward yet as a serious candidate and the initial first
choice, Mir Hussein Musavi, said he was not interested.