The Iranian People Play it Smart
A total of 225 Iran MPs were elected in the first round of voting, with 65 seats to be filled in the second round which is expected to take place in late April.
For both the Iranian leadership and the opposition, the most important thing about this election was not the candidates, or the slogans. It was all about turnout.
The opposition called on its supporters to stay at home on election day while the government used every means possible to encourage people to turn out to vote.
“Taking part in this election is more important than voting for the right candidate,” the country’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei told people in a pre-election address.
Billboards were even installed on Tehran’s main highways warning people in large letters that if the turnout was less than 50%, the US would attack Iran.
The opposition countered by saying it was boycotting the elections in protest at the continued house arrest of its leaders and what it called Iran’s “unfair electoral system”.
On election day, the tension between the two camps reached its peak.
Opposition supporters uploaded pictures of empty polling stations on their websites, while state TV showed long queues and reported that polling stations had stayed open late into the night to accommodate everyone who wanted to cast their vote.
The following day, Interior Minister Mostafa Mohammad Najjar was in jubilant mood as he announced that the turnout figures had hit 64%.
It was he said an “iron fist and a hard slap in the face for the arrogant powers that will keep them confused and perplexed for a long time”.
The opposition rejected the turnout figures as fiction, made up to defy international pressures over its nuclear programme.
Much more disappointing for the opposition was the decision of the country’s widely-respected reformist former president, Mohammad Khatami, to vote.
Angry opposition supporters took to the blogosphere to brand Mr Khatami a “traitor”.
He responded by saying he had voted for the sake of national interest and in the hope of promoting reform within Iran.
But people close to Mohammad Khatami told the BBC that the real reason he went to vote was because he was afraid that if he did not, he would be put under house arrest, thus ending any last hope of reforming the system from within.
So in terms of overall numbers it was a good result for the Supreme Leader. And Mr Khatami’s decision to vote caused much disappointment and division within the opposition.
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With the votes counted the next question was who exactly had won the majority of seats in parliament - was it President Ahmadinejad or his opponents?
In this respect President Ahmadinejad is clearly the loser.
He failed to gain the majority of parliament as he had hoped. Many of his allies were disqualified by the Guardian Council before the race began, and many of those who were allowed to run for election failed to win a seat.
Even the president’s sister, Parvin Ahmadinejad, could not secure enough votes to enter the parliament. She says she’s planning to file a complaint against the irregularities she says lead to her defeat.
Ahmadinejad is getting fired, for a series of failures (losing satellite countries, having the nuclear weapons programmed regularly sabotaged, causing great disruption among the fodder common people), and forcing the government to get very close to having to shut down internet and social media, which will not be good for the rulers.