Forthcoming Parliamentary Elections in Iran
Boycott or Conditional Participation? - 2008.01.26

Issa Saharkhiz
Only a day is left for candidates to register for the upcoming parliamentary elections, to be held on March 14, while about ten weeks remain to the event. But the question on the minds of many citizens still is: Should I participate or should I boycott the elections? A general look at the news, and a quick analysis of the political declarations or the speeches of the groups and individuals seems to indicate that boycotting the elections does not seem to be the main debate. At least not until today. In comparison to 4 years ago, the call for boycotting the elections seems to be lost or at the least very diminished.
The media’s preoccupation is with the call for participation in the elections. But the call has a caveat, with some calling for conditional participation, while others calling for an unconditional one. About half of the 43 million eligible voters believe in conditional participation. Members of this group either do not generally believe in political participation altogether, or have chosen not to participate in this specific election. The exact break down of these two views is almost impossible, but it depends on whether the elections are “free, clean, and just.”
One of the features of the forthcoming elections is call for ‘conditional participation” while the other is that view that this is “the final test” that will decisively impact everything. Which way will the voters turn is determined by the registration rules for the candidates, acceptance or disqualifications of the candidates by the authorities, or the absence of interference in the event by state operatives.
Whether this is really the “final test” or not is a subject that requires a separate analysis and discussion that can be undertaken at another time. But the issue of whether participation is to be conditional or not is an important immediate question which can make a difference on which way voters sway. In addition to the domestic and foreign environment at the time of the forthcoming elections, this issue is shaped, on one hand by the political leadership and the way it views such issues as “republicanism”, the role of the elections, the degree to which the elections are to be “free, clean and just,” and, on the other hand, by the interpretations of political parties, groups, the elite, and civil society activists have of the same.
Perhaps if it was possible to independently and with confidence monitor the twin pillars of the elections - i.e. ayatollah Janati and general Afshar – and the government machinery below it would be possible and easy to pass a judgment on to whether the elections were in fact “free, clean and just’. Some efforts have already been made to make such independent oversight possible. One is through the creation of the Committee for the Defense of Free, Clean and Just Elections, initiated by some prominent political, social, legal, religious and academic personalities. The other is the call for “international monitoring” of the elections made by a long-standing and tested political party.
The first effort has been made by individuals with varying, and even opposing, views and ideology, but who share the same concerns about the elections. Others have thrown in their support for the group and have applauded the 23 rules that have been formulated by the group, and its two subcommittees that have been created for this purpose. And even though these rules resemble principles and ideals, which are more appropriate for more advanced countries with little practical relevance to Iran, but its underlying commitment about non interference in the elections process or the promotion of the importance of participating, or not, in the elections, is the right step for the 100-year long historic aspiration of this nation, which will gain even greater support if implemented.
The initiator of the second effort is Iran’s Freedom Movement which recently published a critical analysis on the role of the Guardians Council (which supervises the elections process and the candidates) and its supervision through appointees, and whose views echo those of many political activists.
Both of these efforts are constructive steps for the country, but if under the current circumstances they are not widely supported, they will not bear fruit. And if this happens, then everything concerning the elections will once again be ambiguous until the last minutes.
Perhaps the best stand to take at the moment is to advance the idea of “conditional participation,” subject to a “free, clean and just” process. And the best way to accomplish this is to register to participate in the elections at different levels and layers and at the same time press for “independent and reliable” monitoring of the process, for the purpose of materializing the remaining goals of the 1979 revolution, which were “freedom and republicanism.”
