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Last update - 00:00 21/12/2006
Final results show Ahmadinejad opponents win Iran electionsBy Haaretz Service and Agencies TEHRAN - Final results showed Thursday that hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's opponents have won elections for local councils, an embarrassing blow to the hardline leader. Moderate conservatives opposed to Ahmadinejad have won a majority of the seats, followed by reformists who were suppressed by hard-liners in 2004, results released by the Interior Ministry showed. Results in the election race for Tehran City Council on Thursday showed allies of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had gained the fewest seats among the main political groups. The vote was widely seen as a sign of public discontent with Ahmadinejad's hard-line stance, which has fueled fights with the West and led Iran closer to United Nations sanctions. Although Friday's elections for local councils and a powerful clerical body known as the Assembly of Experts will not have a direct impact on policy, they may encourage moderate voices to challenge the president more forcefully. "What both political wings of the country have learned from the election is that the people prefer moderate policies to populist slogans and strategies," the pro-reform Etemad-e Melli daily wrote on Thursday. Ahmadinejad's anti-Israel rhetoric and staunch stand on Iran's nuclear program are believed to have divided the conservatives who voted him into power. Some conservatives feel Ahmadinejad has spent too much time confronting the West and failed to deal with Iran's struggling economy. In the Tehran race, moderate conservative backers of Tehran Mayor Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, a bitter rival of Ahmadinejad, secured a majority of the council's 15 seats, the official IRNA news agency said. Qalibaf, a former Revolutionary Guards commander who ran against Ahmadinejad in the 2005 presidential elections, is now almost certain to remain mayor of the capital, a position which Ahmadinejad used as a springboard to the presidency. Reformists, swept from elected positions in a series of votes since 2003, regained a toehold on power in Friday's polls. In Tehran reformists took four seats on the council where they previously held none. A political group closely identified with the president, calling itself the Pleasant Scent of Service, took just three Tehran seats. The highest placed vote getter on their list was a sister of Ahmadinejad in eighth place. Ahmadinejad has not commented on the election results, preferring to emphasise voter turnout of above 60 percent, well above previous similar elections. The voting also represented a partial comeback for reformists, who favor closer ties with the West and further loosening of social and political restrictions under the Islamic government. Reformists fared well in provincial races, claiming to have taken almost 40 percent of council seats outside Tehran. Women also did better than in previous years, forming almost half of those elected in several city councils. |
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