Anticipation has swept across Iran and observers wonder whom
Iranians will entrust with the presidency and the responsibility of leading the
country, 40 days after the passing of President Ebrahim Raisi in a helicopter
crash in northwestern Iran.
Western media outlets, which rejoiced at the decreased voter
turnout of around 50% in the 2021 presidential elections, appear poised for
disappointment this time around. Estimates indicate that a significantly larger
number of individuals will be casting their votes, despite the unprecedented
levels of propaganda from Western and Israeli sources urging a boycott of the
election.
“Channels
such as BBC and International are urging us not to vote. It's puzzling how
Iranians living abroad and receiving payment from Western governments or
Zionists have the audacity to dictate our actions. We are concerned about the
future of our country and want to elect the most suitable candidate. All these
traitors and lackeys of the West can say whatever they want, we don’t care
about them,” a man in his 20s told IRIB during a street interview.
Rather than deciding to boycott the elections, Iranians are
preoccupied with whom they should be voting for. "I feel a sense of duty
as an Iranian to participate in the election. While I haven't made a final
decision on my vote yet, I know I must make up my mind by Friday morning,"
shared an Iranian woman with IRIB reporters.
The
race is close between two conservative contenders and one reformist candidate.
Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, Saeed Jalili, and Masoud Pezeshkian are currently
leading the pack, and experts believe that if both conservative candidates
remain in the race, elections could head to a second round.
Reformist politicians have also shown great enthusiasm and
hope in supporting the sole reformist candidate, Pezeshkian, after largely
avoiding participation in election processes over the past three years, partly
due to bitterness stemming from the significant loss of clout following the end
of President Hassan Rouhani’s administration.
Rouhani, along with the influential figures Mohammad Khatami
and Mohammad Javad Zarif, were among the most notable reformists making a
return to the political scene by throwing their support behind Pezeshkian.
While
the election outcome remains uncertain, one thing is clear, the June 28 vote
will see Iranians rejecting external pressures from the West and Israel.
Iranians will demonstrate their resilience and independence, and show up to
choose their own path.
In this pursuit of independence, efforts by foreign forces
to create politicization, especially in the field of foreign policy will also
yield no results. Iranians now understand that every candidate’s purpose will
be to terminate the sanctions while attempting to neutralize them at the same
time.
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