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Iran votes in snap poll for new president after hard-liner’s death amid rising tensions in Mideast

A woman fills out her ballot during the Iranian presidential election.
A woman fills out her ballot during the Iranian presidential election at a polling station in Tehran on Friday. As has been the case since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, women were barred from running for office.
(Vahid Salemi / Associated Press)
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Iranians voted Friday in a snap election to replace the late hard-line President Ebrahim Raisi, with the race’s sole reformist candidate vowing to seek “friendly relations” with the West in an effort to energize supporters in a vote beset by apathy.

Voters faced a choice between hard-line candidates and the little-known reformist Masoud Pezeshkian, a heart surgeon. As has been the case since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, women and those calling for radical change have been barred from running for office, while the vote itself will have no oversight from internationally recognized monitors. The 63-year-old Raisi died in a May 19 helicopter crash that also killed the country’s foreign minister and others.

The voting came as wider tensions have gripped the Middle East over the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip. In April, Iran launched its first-ever direct attack on Israel over the war in Gaza, while militia groups that Tehran arms in the region — such as Lebanon’s Hezbollah and Yemen’s Houthi rebels — are engaged in the fighting and have escalated their attacks.

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Meanwhile, Iran continues to enrich uranium at near weapons-grade levels and maintains a stockpile large enough to build — should it choose to do so — several nuclear weapons.

The escalating war between Hezbollah and Israel — coupled with scorching heat — has sparked fires that are destroying forests and farmland.

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While Iran’s 85-year-old supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has the final say on all matters of state, presidents can bend the country’s policies toward confrontation or negotiation with the West.

Pezeshkian, who voted at a hospital near the capital, Tehran, appeared to have that in mind as he responded to a journalist’s question about how Iran would interact with the West if he were president.

“God willing, we will try to have friendly relations with all countries except Israel,” the 69-year-old candidate said. Israel, long Iran’s regional archenemy, faces intense criticism across the Mideast over its grinding war in Gaza.

He also responded to a question about a renewed crackdown on women over the mandatory headscarf, or hijab, less than two years after the 2022 death of Mahsa Amini, which sparked nationwide demonstrations and a violent security force response.

“No inhuman or invasive behavior should be made against our girls, daughters and mothers,” he said.

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The helicopter that crashed Sunday in a remote, mountainous region was carrying Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian.

May 19, 2024

Pezeshkian’s comments came after he and his allies were targeted with a warning from Khamenei over their outreach to the United States.

The candidate’s remarks appeared to be aimed at boosting turnout as public apathy has grown pervasive in the Islamic Republic after years of economic woes and mass protests. He seemed to hope that invoking the possibility of Iran emerging from its isolation would motivate people otherwise disillusioned with Iranian politics. A higher turnout typically aids those like Pezeshkian in the reformist movement that seeks to change its Shiite theocracy from within.

He may have been counting on social media to spread his remarks, as all television broadcasters in the country are state-controlled and run by hard-liners. But it remains unclear if he can gain the momentum needed to draw voters to the ballot, especially given the record-low turnout in recent elections.

There had been calls for a boycott, including from imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize laureate Narges Mohammadi. Mir Hossein Mousavi, one of the leaders of the 2009 Green Movement protests who remains under house arrest, also has refused to vote, along with his wife, his daughter said.

There’s also been criticism that Pezeshkian represents just another government-approved candidate. One woman in a documentary on Pezeshkian aired by state TV said her generation was “moving toward the same level” of animosity with the government that Pezeshkian’s generation had in the 1979 revolution.

Analysts broadly describe the race as a three-way contest. There are two hard-liners, former nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili and the parliament speaker, Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf. A Shiite cleric, Mostafa Pourmohammadi, also remained in the race despite polling poorly.

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Pezeshkian has aligned himself with figures such as former President Hassan Rouhani, under whose administration Tehran struck the landmark 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

The voting began just after President Biden and former President Trump concluded their first televised debate of the 2024 election, during which Iran came up.

Trump described Iran as “broke” under his administration and highlighted his decision to launch a 2020 drone strike that killed Revolutionary Guard Gen. Qassem Suleimani. That attack was part of a spiral of escalating tensions between the U.S. and Iran since Trump unilaterally withdrew the U.S. in 2018 from Tehran’s nuclear deal with world powers.

Iranian state media made a point to publish images of voters lined up in the city of Kerman near Suleimani’s grave. State television later broadcast images of polling places across the country with modest lines. Onlookers did not see significant lines at many polling centers in Tehran, reminiscent of the low turnout seen in Iran’s parliamentary election in March.

Khamenei cast one of the election’s first votes. “People’s turnout with enthusiasm, and higher number of voters — this is a definite need for the Islamic Republic,” Khamenei said.

More than 61 million Iranians were eligible to vote, with about 18 million of them between 18 and 30. Polls closed shortly after midnight, following two extensions of voting hours. Iranian state media said those who were still waiting at the polling stations would be allowed to cast their ballots. Counting was to begin immediately, with initial results expected Saturday.

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As the weather cooled off a little in the evening hours, more people headed to vote and long lines formed outside polling stations in Tehran.

Iranian law requires that a winner get more than 50% of all votes cast. If that doesn’t happen, the race’s top two candidates will advance to a runoff a week later.

Raisi, the late president, was seen as a protege of Khamenei and a potential successor as supreme leader. Still, many knew him for his involvement in the mass executions that Iran conducted in 1988, and for his role in the bloody crackdowns on dissent that followed protests over the death of Amini, a young woman detained by police over allegedly improperly wearing the hijab.

Associated Press writer Gambrell reported from Dubai and Karimi from Tehran. Amir Vahdat and Mehdi Fattahi in Tehran contributed to this report.

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