Rouhani Says he Asked Khamenei for Greater 'Competition' in Elections
Iran's President Hassan Rouhani said Wednesday he had asked Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei to ensure greater "competition" in the June elections after many prominent hopefuls were barred from running.
"The heart of elections is
competition. If you take that away it becomes a corpse," Rouhani said at a
televised cabinet meeting, adding that "I sent a letter to the supreme
leader yesterday on what I had in mind and on whether he can help with this.”
Only
seven candidates have been approved by the country's constitutional watchdog to
run for president, drastically narrowing the field of hopefuls for who will
replace Rouhani.
On
Tuesday, 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 Khamenei.
The elections come as Iran is engaged in talks with world powers aimed at reviving a nuclear deal that has been on life support since former US president Donald Trump's unilateral withdrawal from it in 2018.