“282 more candidates were qualified,” was a report trumpeted last week by publications close to conservatives and hardliners.
Iran will witness its eight Parliamentary elections on March 14, 2008. This time, an unusually large number of candidates for the elections have been disqualified by the state. Yet, government and election authorities are doing their best to portray the elections to be ‘competitive’. There are no reporting of any standards that are normally held for holding free, fair and just elections. As such, government publications are trumpeting the meager increase in the number of candidates as a definitive sign of the competitiveness of the elections, without ever mentioning the composition or affiliation of those that have already been disqualified to run. The greater number of candidates alone is equated with “healthier” elections.
But a look at the names of the candidates who have been allowed to run in the elections, some of which names have appeared on websites and the press, reveals the following:
1 – As was expected, no candidate from the Liberation Front or other opposition groups have been allowed to run.
2 – As was expected, none of the prominent figures associated with the two main reformist parties, Hezb-e Mosharekat (Participation Front) and Mojahedin-e Enghelab (Mojahedin of the Revolution) are allowed to run for office.
3 – Although the head of the reformist Etemad Melli party, Mehdi Karoubi, is approved, no other prominent figure from that party has been allowed to run in the upcoming elections. As was expected, Mr. Karoubi’s party (which began criticizing “radical” reformists some time ago) has been allowed to have more candidates than other reformist parties.
4 – In the last list of 282 qualified candidates, nothing is more interesting than the qualification of Mostafa Kavakebian and Ebrahim Asgharzadeh; individuals who consider themselves belonging to the reformist camp but who strongly oppose the existing reformist parties. This will certainly benefit the hardliners in their clash with reformists.
As such, the new wave of qualifications will not affect the elections in any considerable way, as they did not entail anything surprising.
In reality, the election strategy of hardliners is to allow weaker and lesser known reformists to run against them, and at most allow a weak bloc of 60-70 reformists to have an ineffective faction in the Majlis that can pose no danger to hardliners’ rule.





