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Analysis

Iran’s presidential contest is a selection, not an election

It matters as a window into the opaque thinking of the supreme leader

June 7, 2024 15:33
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei GettyImages-2151707615
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei arrives to cast his ballot during the parliamentary runoff elections in Tehran on May 10, 2024. (Photo by ATTA KENARE / AFP) (Photo by ATTA KENARE/AFP via Getty Images)
4 min read

Calling Iran’s presidential contest on 28 June an “election” warps the reality in the Islamic Republic. Instead of an “election,” it is best described as a heavily censored “selection” by the Office of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and his allies throughout the Islamic Republic. It is a competition among kleptocratic factions vying for power. Nevertheless, who becomes president matters as it offers a window into the opaque thinking of the supreme leader and the direction he wants to take the system over the next few years.

With candidate registration having closed on 3 June, attention will now turn to the Guardian Council, which vets the presidential hopefuls. In the end, it will likely disqualify all but a handful of registrants. However, this presidential contest is unlike all other presidential contests since Khamenei ascended to power in 1989. This is because it is likely the next president— who will be serving a full four-year term — will be the supreme leader’s last as he is 85 years old.

The assumption underlying President Ebrahim Raisi’s swift rise through the Islamic Republic’s hierarchy — particularly his anointment as president — was that Khamenei was grooming him as his successor. But after his death last month, the logic that the path to the supreme leadership ran through Iran’s presidency, as it did for Khamenei, no longer holds.

This is because the majority of the leading presidential candidates this month are ineligible to succeed Khamenei as they are not clerics. That means Khamenei will be focused on ensuring the presidency is occupied by a safe pair of hands to preserve his legacy and interests upon his incapacitation or death. After all, constitutionally, the president holds membership on an interim leadership council should the need arise.

Topics:

Iran