The 69-year-old cardiac surgeon and former lawmaker Masoud Pezeshkian is Iranâs new president and the first non-cleric to assume executive power since 2013.
He was elected to office in a controversial presidential runoff on 5 July after none of the six candidates secured a majority in a lukewarm first round held a week earlier on 28 June.
Pezeshkian will replace Ebrahim Raisi, the ultra-conservative seminarian who was speculated to be the successor to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as the Supreme Leader. Raisiâs ambitions were cut short when he was killed in a helicopter crash on 19 May, prompting snap elections.
This electoral cycle was characterised by unprecedented voter apathy to the extent that even the unflappable Ali Khamenei voiced his dismay at the low turnout in the first round, which stood at 39.93%. In the legislative elections earlier this year, numbers were similarly alarming, but the ruling elite didnât acknowledge that it had noticed any popular discontent.
Millions of Iranians rejected the presidential election because they were convinced the gap between the establishment and the people after the violent crackdown on the 'Woman, Life, Freedom' protests in 2022 had become too great to be bridged through gradual transitions.
Furthermore, the economic chaos wrought by the Raisi administration was so significant that many felt no president could reverse the inflation rate of 40% or the intimidating depreciation of the rial, now valued at 0.000024 US dollars.
When Masoud Pezeshkian was approved to stand for presidency by the all-powerful constitutional watchdog, the Guardian Council, almost everyone, including the hibernating camp of reformists, was caught off-guard. Sympathisers of the conservative frontrunner Saeed Jalili are now criticising the council for greenlighting Pezeshkian to run in the first place.
The ensemble of geriatric jurists handpicked by the leader to represent his interests on matters of election and lawmaking often pre-emptively engineer electoral competitions by eliminating pro-reform or centrist figures. This time around, its strategy was a departure from the norm.
In the absence of transparent criteria about who is eligible for the presidential nomination, the vetting process has remained largely arbitrary and amorphous since 1979. In effect, the short-term fate of the nation boils down to the whims of an unelected body made of 12 clerics and lawmakers, resented by most Iranians.
Pezeshkian pulling off an upset at a time when it seemed unthinkable that his potential supporters, namely millennials, middle-class Iranians, and residents of large cities, would even show up at the polls, was by some accounts motivated by the gloomy spectre of his ultra-conservative rival becoming president.
âPeople were pushed, even those very sceptical about the elections, to face the frightening prospect of a Jalili presidency,â said Alex Vatanka, director of the Iran Program at the Washington-based Middle East Institute.
âThat's why more voters likely did come out in second round, but itâs impossible to know the true figure,â he told °źÂț”ș.
The former secretary of Supreme National Security Council, Saeed Jalili inconclusively negotiated with six world powers between 2007 and 2013 to resolve the crisis over Iranâs nuclear program. He failed to strike an agreement, and while he was in charge of the talks, six UN Security Council resolutions were passed slapping economic sanctions on Iran, including an arms embargo.
Jaliliâs perspectives on major foreign policy and domestic issues have proven problematic. His espousal of economic austerity, resistance to compromise on diplomatic fault lines, and his willingness to perpetuate the morality police are the crowning features of his ideological politics.
Itâs conceivable that many Iranians were terrified at the sight of such an orthodox ideologue representing them on the world stage while overseeing their day-to-day life. These anxieties persuaded more Pezeshkian supporters to go to polls in the runoff.
During the unusually brief campaign season, president-elect Pezeshkian refused to make specific commitments on economic or foreign policy matters. Instead, he made it clear that he would rely on qualified experts in decision-making.
Former foreign minister Javad Zarif was his primary campaign speaker, traveling from town to town delivering fiery speeches in support of the former minister of health. US and European diplomats remember their experience of working with Zarif as the Iranian mastermind of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) fondly.
Still, it is not difficult to foresee what sort of policies Pezeshkian will pursue. Driven by his reformist portfolio, he will expectedly renew the negotiations to resolve the grinding nuclear impasse and have the economic sanctions lifted so that strangled Iranians can experience some relief.
He is also projected to take action to dismantle or restrain the morality police. The entity is so widely loathed that even some regime loyalists believe its aggression against women has been too excessive to justify. On the hustings, none of the four conservative hopefuls ventured to explicitly defend the âGuidance Patrolâ.
Pezeshkianâs supporters have demanded that one of his day-one action items must be dissolving the vice squad. With the continued dominance of hidebound and militant elements in Iranâs complicated political hierarchy, he wonât have an easy job in ending the cultural war started by his predecessor or revamping the countryâs impaired global image.
âThough reformists have taken the presidency, hardliners continue to dominate other areas of government, while the Supreme Leader exercises an effective check on the presidentâs authority,â said Gregory Brew, an Iran analyst at Eurasia Group.
Brew believes Pezeshkianâs foreign policy choreography will mostly be limited to the nuclear dossier, but on domestic matters, he will have greater leeway.
âOn womenâs rights, hijab, and the economy, heâll face significant but slightly less insurmountable challenges, not least because there is a clear sense that the economy needs better management, while a tactical retreat on hijab may be necessary to avoid further social discontent,â he told °źÂț”ș.
What most observers of the 2024 race admit about Pezeshkian is that he doesnât fit into the stereotypical frameworks of the Islamic Republic white collars. He doesnât speak using the obsolete jargon that government officials invoke to rationalise themselves and is much more prone to see himself as one among the disillusioned masses.
In a televised debate after the first round, he told his competitor, âHe and I have been yelling at each other, and only 40% of people showed up to vote for us - 60% of them donât accept us now. They have a problem with usâ.
In Iran, nothing has changed radically, and the theocracy hasnât indicated that it is going to be less repressive. One day after Masoud Pezeshkianâs victory, a prominent legal scholar supporting him was arrested by the judiciary.
A professor of law at the University of Tehran, Mohsen Borhani emerged as an outspoken critic of the morality police after the killing of Mahsa âJinaâ Amini and had been giving talks during the campaign, encouraging people to vote for Pezeshkian.
While those close to the president-elect are manoeuvring to manage expectations, and while his supporters understand what has happened isnât a miracle, the general mood in Iran is one of cautious optimism. A jaded society is bracing itself for a transition away from the uneasy years of Ebrahim Raisi.
Kourosh Ziabari is a journalist and media studies researcher. A contributor to New Lines Magazine, he has a master's in political journalism from Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. In 2022, he received the Professional Excellence Award from the Foreign Press Correspondents Association
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