Iran’s conservatives are leading in an initial vote count in the capital Tehran, state media reported Sunday, following a record-low turnout in the parliamentary election.
Officials have not yet released turnout figures. However, state news agency Irna said it was 41 per cent based on unofficial reports.
In the last parliamentary election in 2019, only 42 per cent of eligible voters cast a ballot in what was considered to be the lowest turnout since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
Early results show that conservatives have won Tehran’s 30 seats but with votes tallied manually, Iran’s ballot takes time to count.
Under Iranian law, Parliament has a variety of roles, including overseeing the executive branch and voting on treaties. In practice, absolute power in Iran rests with its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
Participation in Iran’s elections on Friday drew a low turnout despite extended voting hours.
About 61 million Iranians are eligible to vote, including 3.5 million first-time voters, according to Irna.
However, only about 25 million people voted, meaning a turnout of about 40 per cent, the Tasnim news agency said, citing reports in unnamed unofficial media.
Iranians wait in line to vote at a polling station during parliamentary elections in Tehran, Iran. Reuters
Mr Khamenei casts his ballot during the parliamentary and Assembly of Experts elections in Tehran. AP
Former Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps commander Mohsen Rezaei casts his ballot at a polling station in Tehran. AP
A cleric casts his ballot at a polling station in Tehran. AP
Mr Khamenei speaks to the media after casting his vote in Tehran. EPA
A voter fills out her ballot at a polling station in Tehran. AP
President Ebrahim Raisi casts his vote in Tehran. AP
Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei meets young people who can vote for the first time, before Friday’s parliamentary election, in Tehran. FP
Men put posters on a wall during the last day of election campaigning, in Tehran. Reuters
Hamid Rasaee, centre, an Iranian Shiite Muslim cleric and former member of the Islamic Consultative Assembly, attends an electoral campaign rally at a sports stadium, in Tehran. AFP
Candidates’ posters during the last day of election campaigning, in Tehran. Reuters
Friday’s vote is being seen as a test of the popularity of the country’s hardline clerical rulers, with mounting public dissent over economic problems and restrictions on political and social freedoms. Reuters
People chant slogans as they attend a rally at a sports stadium, in Tehran. AFP
With heavyweight moderates and conservatives staying out of the race and reformists calling it an ‘unfree and unfair election’, the vote will pit hardliners and low-key conservatives against each other. AP
The vote will be the first formal measure of public opinion after anti-government protests in 2022 and 2023 spiralled into some of the worst political turmoil since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. EPA
An Iranian woman symbolically treads on the Israeli flag during a campaign for the parliamentary election in Tehran, Iran. Reuters
A number of reformists boycotted the election.
Authorities twice extended voting hours on Friday to keep polling centres open until midnight in the first national election since mass anti-government protests followed the death in morality police custody of Mahsa Amini in September 2022.
Leaders had called on Iranians to vote in large numbers, with Mr Khamenei warning that the world was watching the election.
“Onlookers from all over observe the affairs of our country; make friends happy and ill-wishers disappointed,” he said while casting his vote in Tehran.
The vote is being held as Iranians struggle with soaring inflation and amid heightened regional tensions linked to the Israel-Gaza war.
Iranians were also voting for the Assembly of Experts, which elects the supreme leader.
Several winners of parliamentary and assembly seats emerged on Saturday morning from early counts, Tasnim said.
Candidates for parliament are vetted by the Guardian Council, whose members are appointed or approved by the supreme leader.
They approved 15,200 candidates out of nearly 49,000 applicants to run for seats in the 290-member chamber.
Analysts had expected conservatives and ultra-conservatives, who won 232 out 290 seats in the 2020 election after reformist and moderate candidates were disqualified, to dominate.
Conservatives are also expected to maintain a firm grip on the Assembly of Experts, an 88-member body exclusively made up of male Islamic scholars.
News Related-
AWS and Clarity AI to use generative AI to boost sustainable investments
-
Ref Watch: 'Enough' of a foul to disallow Man City goal vs Liverpool
-
Day in the Life: Ex-England rugby star on organising this year's Emirates Dubai Sevens
-
Pandya returns to MI, Green goes to RCB
-
Snowstorm kills eight in Ukraine and Moldova, hundreds of towns lose power
-
‘This is why fewer Sikhs visiting gurdwaras abroad’: BJP after Indian envoy heckled in Long Island
-
Inside a Dubai home with upcycled furniture and zero waste
-
Captain Turner aims for Pitch 1 return as JESS bid to retain Dubai Sevens U19 crown
-
No Antoine Dupont but Dubai still set to launch new era for sevens
-
Why ESG investors are concerned about AI
-
Your campsite can harm the environment
-
Mubadala, Saudi Fund deals on US radar for potential China angle
-
Abu Dhabi T10 season seven to kick off with thrilling double-header
-
Eight climate fiction, or cli-fi, books to consider before Cop28