Iran State TV: 7 Approved for June 18 Presidential Election
Iranian state television announced Tuesday that only seven candidates have been approved by the country's constitutional watchdog to run for president next month, drastically narrowing the field of hopefuls for who will replace outgoing President Hassan Rouhani.
The
report did not name those selected, though rumors have circulated that
reformists and moderates vying for the spot may have been barred from running
by the Guardian Council.
State
TV quoted Abbas Ali Kadkhodaei, the spokesman of the Guardian Council, as
saying “only seven” had been approved out of some 590 who registered by the
panel of clerics and jurists overseen by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei.
Kadkhodaei
did not name those selected.
Iran's
Interior Ministry, which oversees its police and elections, typically announces
the candidates. In 2017, 1,630 hopefuls registered to run.
Iran’s
judiciary chief Ebrahim Raisi, a hardline cleric who ran against Rouhani in
2017, is considered among analysts to be the strongest candidate in the
upcoming June 18 vote.
Many
in Iran have grown frustrated with Rouhani, whose signature achievement was the
2015 nuclear deal that's now in tatters after then-President Donald Trump
unilaterally withdrew Washington from the accord.