Presidential election in Iran: Women and generals await Supreme Leader's decision
Eyes are awaiting the results of the presidential nominations that will emerge from the decision of Iran’s Guardian Council, after the election commission announced that 592 citizens' applications had been registered for the presidential elections.
The Guardian Council sorts the applications for candidacy
for the elections and selects a limited number to run in the presidential race
scheduled for June 18. The council consists of 12 members, half of whom are
chosen by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, and the other half are chosen by the
head of the judiciary, who is also appointed by Khamenei.
The list of nominated candidates for the elections includes
40 women, but they have almost no chance of running despite the absence of any
clear legal basis preventing them, according to Guardian Council spokesman
Abbas-Ali Kadkhodaei, as the council has not previously approved any woman’s
candidacy.
Among the most prominent applicants are Chief Justice
Ebrahim Raisi, former Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani, Expediency Discernment
Council Secretary Mohsen Rezaei, former Defense Minister Hossein Dehghan,
current Iranian Vice President Eshaq Jahangiri, Supreme National Security Council
Secretary Saeed Jalili, and former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, and Tehran
City Council Chairman Mayor Mohsen Hashemi Rafsanjani.
Registration for the elections opened on Tuesday, May 11,
and ended on Saturday, May 15. According to the election schedule announced by
the Iranian Ministry of Interior, the names of the candidates for the elections
will be announced on May 26 and 27, after their eligibility is confirmed by the
Guardian Council.
The campaigns will run for a period of 20 days from May 28
to June 16, and then the country will enter a period of electoral silence on
June 17.
These elections are witnessing a remarkable phenomenon of
Revolutionary Guard commanders’ candidacies following explicit recommendations
from Khamenei to elect a “young revolutionary government.”
The conditions for running for the presidency in Iran
include belief in the theory of Velayat-e Faqih (guardianship of the jurist),
which was invented by Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamist republic.
A candidate must also be of Iranian origin and nationality, have experience in
boards of directors and management, and have a good past.
However, the Guardian Council has imposed new conditions,
including the absence of a criminal record for the candidate, for him to have spent
at least four years in administrative positions, to be between 40 and 75 years
old, and to have a master's degree or equivalent. It is also now allowed for
the first time to nominate military leaders with the rank of at least major
general, as well as mayors in cities with more than two million inhabitants.