Iran parliament in balance in poll run-offs

epa05181630 Iranian women cast their votes in the parliamentary and Experts Assembly election at a polling station at Ershad Mosque in Tehran, Iran, 26 February 2016. Voting began in Iran's parliamentary elections, which mark the first test of the political mood since Iran's nuclear deal with major powers reached in July. More than 4,800 candidates are running for 290 seats. Voters were also electing the 88 members of the Assembly of Experts, the body that selects a supreme leader, who is Iran's head of state, and monitors his work. Almost 55 million people are eligible to vote including 8.5 million in the capital Tehran.  EPA/ABEDIN TAHERKENAREH

 

Tehran / AFP

Nearly a quarter of Iran’s parliamentary seats are at stake on Friday in an election in which reformists want to consolidate their recent comeback and minimise the clout of hardline lawmakers. The second round run-offs were triggered because no candidate in 68 constituencies managed to win 25 percent of votes cast in the initial nationwide ballot on February 26.
Reformists who backed the country’s moderate President Hassan Rouhani made big gains in the first round following Iran’s implementation of a nuclear deal with world powers, which lifted sanctions blamed for long hobbling the economy.
Conservative MPs, including vehement opponents of the West who openly criticised the landmark agreement that reined in Iran’s atomic programme, lost dozens of seats.
In the capital, even the head of the conservative coalition was ejected, in a wipeout that saw the reformist faction—known as the List of Hope—win all 30 seats.
Despite that loss, the conservatives held on nationally, winning 103 seats against 95 for their reformist and moderate rivals in the 290-member parliament. But the split result—other seats were won by nominally independent candidates and minorities—meant no faction won a majority.
Friday’s contest, which sees the top two candidates in initial voting stand for the remaining seats in cities such as Tabriz and Shiraz, as well as dozens of smaller towns, could change that. A run-off in the city of Isfahan has been postponed to a later date.
Mohammad Reza Aref, leader of the pro-Rouhani List of Hope, has set a target of at least another 40 seats, reiterating that February’s poll showed Iranians want change and greater influence in parliament would make reforms more likely. Unlike the vote two months ago, there has been little attention on Friday’s election, which has been overshadowed by concern in Tehran that no benefits are being generated by the nuclear deal.
The agreement between Iran and six powers—Britain, China, France, Russia and the United States, plus Germany—became possible because supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei backed Rouhani’s government.

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