Iran election: Hassan Rouhani wins second term as president

Authored by bbc.com and submitted by dhruveishp
image for Iran election: Hassan Rouhani wins second term as president

Image copyright AFP/Getty Images Image caption Mr Rouhani (C) voted in the capital Tehran

Iran's President Hassan Rouhani has been re-elected with an emphatic victory, official results show.

Out of more than 40 million votes cast, he received 57%, defeating his main rival, a conservative cleric.

Mr Rouhani, a moderate who agreed a deal with world powers to limit Iran's nuclear programme, pledged to "remain true" to his promises.

The decisive victory gives him a strong mandate to seek reforms and revive Iran's ailing economy, analysts say.

The president received close to 23 million votes, Interior Minister Abdul Reza Rahmani Fazli said on state television, in an election that had an unexpectedly high turnout of about 70%.

In his first remarks after winning the poll, Mr Rouhani said on Twitter (in Persian): "Great people of Iran, you're the winners of the election."

His main challenger, former prosecutor Ebrahim Raisi received 38.5%, or 15.7 million votes, not enough to take the election to a second round.

Voting time had been extended by five hours on Friday, until midnight. Election officials said the extensions were due to "requests" and the "enthusiastic participation of people".

Image copyright Getty Images Image caption About 56 million people were eligible to vote

The economy seems to be the number one challenge. Mr Rouhani, 68, signed a nuclear deal between Iran, the US and other countries in 2015.

International sanctions were lifted as a result, but average Iranians say they do not feel the economic benefits in their daily lives.

While oil exports have rebounded and inflation is back at single-digits, unemployment remains high, especially among the young people.

'Revenge against hardliners': By Kasra Naji, BBC Persian

Iran's hardliners had pulled all the stops and mobilised all their resources to bring out as many people as possible to grab the last centre of power in Iran that was not under their control, namely the executive branch.

Sensing an effort by the hardliners, supporters of President Rouhani who back his promises to steer the country toward moderation came out in big numbers too. Turnout has been unprecedented. In Tehran, five million people turned out to vote - twice as many as in 2013.

This was a revenge of the people against the hardliners who intimidated them, jailed them, executed them, drove them to exile, pushed them out of their jobs, and discriminated against women.

President Rouhani will now have a bigger mandate to push through his reforms, to put an end to extremism, to build bridges with the outside world, to put the economy back on track.

Iranians have said a resounding Yes to President Rouhani who, in recent years and particularly during the last several weeks of campaigning, promised to expand individual and political freedoms and make all those centres of power, like the Revolutionary Guard, accountable.

He also promised a moderate vision and an outward-looking Iran and, at rallies, openly attacked the conservative-dominated judiciary and security services.

Another challenge, experts say, will come from abroad, and the relations with the new US government. President Donald Trump opposes the nuclear deal which eased sanctions on the Middle Eastern country, but his White House renewed it earlier this week.

mihnea100 on May 20th, 2017 at 14:15 UTC »

People arguing that the elections are pointless.... Tell that to the Iranian people after Rouhani dropped inflation from 40% which it was at the end of Ahmadinejads term to 7% now

He has the most resonable and normal economic policies, speaks of privatization and trading with the West. While Raisi wanted a ''resistance economy'' North Korea style.

Raisi wanted to drastically increase handouts and unemployment benefits so much Rouhani attacked him off lying saying ''we will need 20% economic growth for that, something no one has ever achieved or will need to print money, which will cause massive inflation''

Rouhani was, this time, the right choice.

Even socially he was by far the most moderate. You need to look at progressivness from the POV of Iran, not the US or Europe. Rouhani oppenly attacked Raisi for having gender-segregated crowds, bragging that at his rallies ''everyone sits where they please''

Look at how the women were dressed at Raisis rallies, almost all in black chadors, all though to be fair they where quit older on average. While at Rouhanis rallies they were dressed very casually with very bright hijabs and very loose and laid-back.

just watch some campaign adds on youtube.

Rouhani spoke against censorship, and used social-media quite a lot. Under him, for the first time the internet was not slowed down during the elections.

Rouhani was by far the most reformist and moderate candidate, and was endorsed by the reformist leaders under house arrest, Mousavi and Karrubi.

He's not a hippie leftist from California sure, but he was the most reformist candidate available and saying there is no difference between him and Raisi is ridiculous.

EDIT: Holy fuck this took off.... My most upvoted comment so far. Thanks! And study Iran if you are fascinated by the country. Read books they offer a better and more in-depth view of the country and it's history. And remember don't fall for the stereotypes and cliches!

EDIT2: Thanks for the gold!

incendiaryblizzard on May 20th, 2017 at 14:01 UTC »

This has been an unprecedented election cycle:

Rouhani: "How come crying a lot is halal and if we laugh it's haram." (Good fucking question)

http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSKBN1650F8

Rouhani threatened the IRGC to not interfere with the elections

https://www.yahoo.com/news/rouhani-warns-revolutionary-guards-not-meddle-iran-election-173928691.html

Rouhani attacked the Revolutionary Guards for writing threats to Israel in Hebrew on Iranian missiles and claimed they did it to undermine the nuclear deal:

http://www.timesofisrael.com/in-rare-criticism-of-irgc-rouhani-slams-anti-israel-slogans-on-test-missiles/

Rouhani criticizes anti-Israel slogans, saying that they do nothing but increase hostility towards Iran and increase support for Israel:

http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2017/05/iran-rouhani-change-tactics-presidential-election.html

DrDaniels on May 20th, 2017 at 12:46 UTC »

Rouhani was Iran's nuclear negotiator prior to becoming president and after he was able to get the Iranian nuclear agreement signed the Iranian people are supportive of him. Most Iranians wanted diplomacy to get rid of the sanctions and Rouhani was able to get many of the sanctions dropped through the JCPOA. Hopefully dialog between Iran and the West continues.