Iran’s future after victor of Conservatives in parliamentary polls
The first
round of Iran’s parliamentary polls, which were held on February 21, will have
a great impact due to the deteriorating situation with the United States, especially
after the killing of Qasem Soleimani, head of the Quds Force of the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps, earlier this year.
Moreover,
the Iranian parliamentary elections coincided with an escalating tension in the
region, especially Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. The
Iranian-backed Houthi militias claimed responsibility for an attack on two
Saudi oil facilities in September 2019.
The
elections were held amid growing domestic tensions and public discontent,
following downing a Ukrainian passenger plane by an Iranian missile, killing many
Iranian university students.
Iran’s
first round of the parliamentary elections had witnessed the weakest turnout
and participation since the Islamic Revolution in 1979. Iranian Interior
Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli said the turnout was 42.6% as the Guardian
Council of the Iranian Constitution has excluded many reformist candidates.
The parliamentary
polls will result in a number of repercussions if the conservatives win the
elections.
1.
Escalation
with the United States and its Europe
The
victory of Iranian conservatives will lead to an escalation with the United
States and its European allies. There are a number of pending issues between
Tehran and Washington, especially after the US withdrew from a nuclear deal
with Iran in May of 2018.
Iran
also has been disrupting navigation in the Arab Gulf. The US considers that a
major threat to its interests in the Middle East.
Moreover,
Tehran has threatened to target US military bases in the region after the
killing of Soleimani, head of the Quds Force of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard
Corps.
2.
Tensions
in the region will continue
The
victory of Iranian conservatives in the country’s parliamentary elections will
also escalate the tensions in the Middle East between Iran and its neighboring
countries, especially Saudi Arabia.
Earlier,
the Iranian-backed Houthi militias claimed responsibility for an attack on two
oil facilities of Saudi Aramco in September 2019.
3.
Growing
domestic anger
Iran’s
public anger is expected to continue with the victory of conservatives in the
2020 parliamentary elections. Iran’s economy has been worsening since the US
withdrew from the nuclear deal in May 2018. The economic sanctions have
impacted Iran’s economy.
On the
political level, the conservatives think relying on repressive methods is
necessary to deal with Iranian citizens’ claim to civil rights and public
demands to improve the deteriorating living standards. They totally approve the
use police and Basij forces, which are affiliated with the Iranian
Revolutionary Guards Corps, in handling protests.
Regarding
the external level, the conservatives believe in the necessity of exporting the
Iranian Islamic revolution and interfere in the internal affairs of neighboring
countries.
The Iranian conservatives also seek to more
engagement with these neighboring countries through political, economic, and
military collaborations via a number of militias.
That
explains why the political participation in the Iranian parliamentary polls was
weak. The weak participation is a sign that a hardline president would be
elected in Iran’s presidential election in 2021.