Iranian Assembly of Experts election, 2006

Iranian Assembly of Experts election, 2006
Iran
15 December 2006

All 88 seats to the Assembly of Experts
 
Alliance Principlists Reformists
Seats won 59 29

Speaker before election

Ali Meshkini
Principlists

Elected Speaker

Ali Meshkini
Principlists

The Iranian Assembly of Experts election of 2006 was held on 15 December 2006. The Assembly of Experts is a Council of 86 mujtahids that elect the Supreme Leader, and oversee his actions. The members of the Assembly are elected every eight years directly by the people of Iran.

The elections took place the same day as the City and Village Councils elections.

Candidates

The credentials of being a Mujtahid were approved for all candidates by the Guardian Council using written and oral (interview) examinations. Some members of the Guardian Council also ran for the Assembly of Experts. Although there were a few female ayatollahs (Mujtahidehs) applying for candidacy, they could not pass the examination. The number of candidates which passed the examination was so low that the council had to lower the passing mark several times. There were initially 144 candidates for the 86 available seats.[1][2] This was later increased, and according to Islamic Republic News Agency there were 181 qualified candidates.[3][2] However, the number of candidates on the day of election was 165, and for the first time there were two non-cleric doctor of Islam candidate, although they were not elected.[4][5][6][7][8]

Outcome

The Ministry of Interior reported an estimated 60% turnout of the 46.5 million eligible voters,[9] reporting "more than 28 million people" as the number of voters who had voted.[10] Different parties had several candidates in common, but Baztab News reported that the candidate list announced by the Combatant Clergy Association captured most of the seats (68 of 86 seats, while introducing 81 candidates). Reformists backed by Mahdi Karroubi and conservative associates of Mesbah Yazdi failed to live up to their expectations.[11][4]

The top 16 candidates in Tehran were announced as:

Candidate Electoral lists Votes
CCA/SSTQ SDIR ESU CPE R NTP MDP
Tehran Akbar Hashemi Bahramani (Rafsanjani)YesYes YesYesYesYes1,564,197
Mohammad Agha-Emami (Emami-Kashani)YesYes YesYes1,027,767
Ali-Akbar Feyz (Ali Meshkini)YesYesYesYesYesYes1,015,500
Mohammad Yazdi YesYesYesYes 970,192
Ahmad Jannati YesYesYesYes Yes929,403
Mohammad Taqi Mesbah-Yazdi YesYesYesYes 879,883
Hassan RouhaniYes YesYesYesYes844,190
Qorbanali Dorri-Najafabadi YesYes YesYesYes736,387
Mohsen Kazeroun (Kazerouni)YesYes YesYes716,828
Seyyed Mohsen AqaMir Mohammad-Ali (Kharrazi) YesYesYesYesYesYesYes688,212
Reza Ostadi-Moqaddam YesYesYesYesYesYes650,391
Abdolnabi Namazi YesYesYes 602,096
Mohammad Baqer Baqeri (Baqeri Kani) YesYes YesYes 598,352
Mohammad Mohammadi Davi-Saraei (Gilani)YesYesYes YesYes 574,688
Mohsen Qomi YesYesYesYes543,951
Seyyed Mohammad Hassan Marashi (Shoushtari) 518,129
Electoral lists:

ESU: Experts of Seminary and University

CPE: Coalition of Principalism and Effectiveness

Sources:

Votes (Assembly of Experts Official Website)

Votes (Iranian Students' News Agency

Electoral lists (Assembly of Experts Official Website)

Electoral lists (Fars News Agency)

Of particular note was the victory of the pragmatist list led by Ayatollah Rafsanjani, over hard-line candidates associated with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Rafsanjani had lost out to Ahmadinejad in the runoff of the 2005 election for President. Yet Ayatollah Rafsanjani won nearly twice as many votes as President Ahmadinejad's mentor, hard-liner Ayatollah Mohammad Taqi Mesbah Yazdi. Final results for the Assembly of Experts showed that more than 65 candidates close to Rafsanjani were elected. At 60 percent, voter turnout was much higher than in previous years.

The Assembly was convened on 19 February 2007 and Ali Meshkini was re-elected as chairman. The changes in the presiding board from the 3rd assembly was the replacement of Mohammad Yazdi with Ebrahim Amini, who has retired, as the 2nd deputy chairman; and election of Hassan Rohani as a provisionist.[12]

After the disputed results of the June 2009 Iranian presidential election were certified by Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, Chairman Rafsanjani was reported to have called a meeting of the Assembly of Experts, as the Assembly has the constitutional power to hire and fire the Supreme Leader.[13] On 8 March 2011, Ayatollah Mohammad-Reza Mahdavi Kani replaced Ayatollah Rafsanjani as chairman.

The term begun in 2007 shall allegedly last ten years (rather than the regular eight) due to the "election aggregation" plan of the government, put in place to allow the government to run elections simultaneously for the Assembly of Experts and the Parliament, thereby economizing election administration costs.

References

External links

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