As Iranian voters prepare to head to the polls Friday, there's one thing the high-stakes presidential election certainly will not decide: the country's commander in chief.
That post, at least, is already filled by Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader for nearly three decades. As long as he maintains control over the highest seat in the land, Khamenei enjoys wide-ranging authority over the security forces and effective veto power over matters both diplomatic and domestic — including the council that vets and approves presidential candidates.
Still, the presidency offers significant power of its own. Whichever candidate emerges with the electoral victory will be handed a four-year term and the helm of an economy at a crossroads.
The approaching election presents a stark choice for Iranians: Re-elect the moderate incumbent, President Hassan Rouhani, or reject his relatively open-facing policies and turn to the conservative hard-liners hoping to replace him, such as his biggest challenger, Ibrahim Raisi.
Here is what's at stake in Iran on Friday — from the big names to the way they'll be selected — and what it means for the rest of the world.
Who are the candidates?
How will Iran decide?
What does this mean for the West?
Who are the candidates?
President Hassan Rouhani has been in power since 2013, when he surprised many observers with a commanding electoral victory. Described at the time as
"the lone voice of moderation"
Those talks resulted in a landmark
2015 agreement
(For more on what the election could spell for the nuclear deal in the U.S., click here or scroll below .)
Yet the agreement has
delivered mixed results
"A lot of middle-class people here are struggling to make ends meet,"
NPR's Steve Inskeep
Rouhani blames hard-liners for trying to sabotage the agreement and its benefits, but many of those frustrated voters aren't convinced. They're turning instead to Rouhani's hard-line challengers, most notably Ebrahim Raisi.
A conservative cleric, Raisi hews closely to Khamenei's policy line — so much so, in fact, he's occasionally mentioned as the supreme leader's possible successor. Currently, he helms the charitable foundation for the
Imam Reza shrine
"They executed more than 3,000 political prisoners," Iranian journalist Behdad Bordbar
tells NPR's Peter Kenyon
Members of that committee have never faced charges for their role in the presumed killings — but human rights activists aren't prepared to forget.
"A man who should be on trial for the most heinous crime in contemporary Iranian history, is instead seeking the presidency," said Hadi Ghaemi, executive director of the Center for Human Rights in Iran,
said in a statement
"Allowing him to run for president is yet another grievous wound for the families who unjustly lost their loved ones in 1988."
Yet Raisi's electoral position was buttressed this week, as one of his rivals — Tehran Mayor Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf, another hard-liner — dropped out of the race and endorsed him. The pair, who accuse Rouhani of anemic economic progress and weakness in negotiations with the West, even campaigned together on Tuesday.
Rouhani, for his part, recently received the backing of another dropout, reformist candidate Eshaq Jahangiri.
Mostafa Hashemitaba, also a reformer, and conservative Mostafa Mirsalim round out the list of six presidential candidates approved by
the Guardian Council
Then again, Iran's elections are often unpredictable (as the
section directly below
How will Iran decide?
Voters head to the polls Friday, though if past elections are any indication, it's unlikely we'll know the results before Saturday.
Even then, those results might be less than decisive: By Iran's electoral rules, a candidate must earn more than 50 percent of the vote to seal a win in the first round. Otherwise, the top two candidates from the first vote will take part in a runoff one week later, set for May 26.
Iran's leaders are bullish about prospective turnout, with the country's interior minister predicting that more than 70 percent — or some 56.4 million people — will vote,
according to The Associated Press
But Iranian elections are famous for their surprising results.
Not only did Rouhani's victory come as a shock to some, the 1997 election of reformer Mohammad Khatami defied many predictions, as well. But by 2005, voters had grown so dissatisfied with Khatami's perceived failure to deliver on his promises that they surprised observers again — electing a then-relative unknown in hard-line conservative Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
In 2009, even the final official results didn't spell an end to that year's election, which turned into a full-blown crisis and crackdown after Ahmadinejad won again. Hundreds of thousands of Iranians marched and protested, claiming the vote was rigged — but security forces eventually
crushed the demonstrations
What does this mean for the West?
With the Middle East in turmoil and traditional alliances in question, the decision Iranians make on Friday could have an impact well beyond their country's borders.
Iran's current theocracy, which was born in the 1979 Islamic Revolution, often backs militants around the Middle East — from the Lebanon-based Shiite group Hezbollah to
Yemeni rebels
And Iran's supreme leader is well aware that his country's election has captured the world's attention.
"From the U.S. state apparatuses to European powers and regional countries aligned with America, to the pathetic prime minister of the Zionist regime, all are closely watching [the vote] and how and in what spirit" the Iranians will vote, Khamenei said in a televised speech Wednesday, according to the AP.
While Khamenei controls Iran's foreign policy, the president can help sculpt broader global opinion about the country's actions on the world stage.
That includes the U.S., where Iran-watchers — including members of Congress — are sharply split over how to deal with the country. Although Rouhani won the backing of the ayatollah on the deal to limit Iran's nuclear program, hard-liners in the U.S. tend to distrust Rouhani as the deceptively friendly face of a rogue nation.
Others have been won over by Rouhani's willingness to talk to the West, believing Iran might slowly become more moderate if the U.S. and European powers engage with the country economically.
For now, President Trump's administration has said it will continue to uphold its end of the nuclear bargain, announcing Wednesday that it would
continue to waive some sanctions
Should Raisi win, however, hawks in the West are likely to increase their calls for tighter sanctions until Iran ends its support for militant groups and its longtime enmity toward Israel.
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