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Date: July 06, 2024 at 10:27:37
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: ZETEO: 10 Things You Should Know About Iran’s New President

URL: https://zeteo.com/p/10-things-you-should-know-about-irans


10 Things You Should Know About Iran’s New President

Who is reformist Masoud Pezeshkian? An introduction from Zeteo.

TEAM ZETEO
JUL 06, 2024

(Photo by Hossein Sepahvand/Office of the Iranian President via Getty
Images)
The Islamic Republic of Iran has a new president.

After Ebrahim Raisi, an arch-conservative elected to the presidency in 2021,
was killed in a helicopter crash in May, Iran had to call a snap election.

The winner? Sixty-nine-year-old reformist candidate Masoud Pezeshkian.

So, as tensions continue increase across the Middle East, and with Iran-U.S.
relations at a low point, here are 10 things you should know about the Islamic
Republic’s new president.

1. Pezeshkian was one of only six candidates approved to run for president
by Iran’s Guardian Council, which supervises the country’s elections, and the
only reformist candidate among them. In Friday’s run-off, he defeated
conservative hardliner Saeed Jalili, 53.7% to 44.3%. (Eighty people had tried
to run for president but almost all of them were blocked by the Council,
including former Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.)

2. While his late predecessor Raisi was a trained cleric, Pezeshkian is a
medical doctor - a heart surgeon, in fact. His political career began when he
was appointed deputy health minister (1997-2001) and then health minister
(2001-2005) in the government of the last reformist Iranian president
Mohammad Khatami. He went on to become a five-term member of Iran’s
parliament and a deputy speaker.

3. The new president takes a more liberal line on the enforcement of the
compulsory headscarf in Iran. “If we want to ‘force’ hijab in the country,” he
has said, “I don't think we will get anywhere.” After the death of Mahsa Amini
in 2022, Pezeshkian wrote that it was “unacceptable in the Islamic Republic
to arrest a girl for her hijab and then hand over her dead body to her family.”

4. Pezeshkian’s campaign slogan is “For Iran,” which is believed to be a not-
so-subtle reference to the popular anthem supporting the 2022 Mahsa Amini
protests called “Baraye”, or “For.” Shervin Hajipour, the Grammy Awarding-
winning Iranian singer-songwriter behind “Baraye,” was sentenced to more
than three years in prison in March for “propaganda against the system” and
“encouraging people to protest.”

5. The new president says he wants better relations with the West and the
United States, in particular, and seems to also want a return to the nuclear
deal that Barack Obama signed, Donald Trump tore up, and Joe Biden has
refused to resurrect. Pezeshkian even deployed former Iranian foreign
minister Javad Zarif, one of the architects of the deal, as a surrogate on the
campaign trail.


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6. Pezeshkian, nevertheless, like most Iranian politicians, has a long history of
denouncing the United States (aka “The Great Satan”). In 2019, when Iran
shot down an American drone, Pezeshkian said “the real terrorist is America”
and described the targeting of the drone as "a strong punch in the mouths of
the leaders of criminal America.”

7. Pezeshkian, a reformist, isn’t shy about defending the Islamic
Revolutionary Guard Corps, or IRGC, which has huge power and influence
inside of Iran (and was controversially designated a foreign terrorist
organization by the Trump administration). The Iran-Iraq War veteran even
once wore an IRGC military uniform in parliament as a show of support for
the organization, which he says is “different” to what it was in the past.

8. Persians are the ethnic majority in Iran, but Pezeshkian is the son of an
Azeri father and a Kurdish mother, and fluent in both Azeri and Kurdish. "I am
not voting for Dr Pezeshkian because I am a Turk,” one Azeri voter told
IranWire, “but because if he is elected, he will be the president of the
oppressed and discriminated minority of this country.”

9. Like President Joe Biden, who lost his wife and young daughter in a car
crash in 1972, the new Iranian president also lost his wife and young
daughter in a car crash in 1994. Unlike Biden, however, Pezeshkian “never
remarried and raised his remaining two sons and a daughter alone.”

10. Pezeshkian may have won his race thanks to a late surge in voter turnout.
The first round of the election saw the lowest turnout in the history of the
Islamic Republic, just 40%. But on Friday, in the run-off, it bumped up to
around 50%. For some Iranians, reported the Washington Post, “refusing to
vote is an act of opposition in a country that quells political protests with
violent force.” Others have embraced political apathy because of the failure
of multiple presidents from across the political spectrum to effect social or
economic change.

Pezeshkian has acknowledged the challenge ahead. “I will do everything
possible to look at those who were not seen by the powerful and whose
voices are not heard,” he told supporters earlier this week.

But what does “everything possible” look like for an elected Iranian president
inside of a political system where most of the power remains in the hands of
an unelected Supreme Leader, Ayatullah Ali Khamenei? Can the Islamic
Republic’s first reformist president for 19 years offer real hope or change to
almost 90 million Iranians, more than half of whom are under the age of 30?
That remains to be seen. And how will the United States respond to an
Iranian leader who wants to mend ties with the West?
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Responses:
[54911]


54911


Date: July 06, 2024 at 10:49:54
From: ryan, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: ZETEO: 10 Things You Should Know About Iran’s New President


seems maybe a little better than raisi...


Responses:
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