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Iran votes in vital election after nuke deal with west

TEHRAN—Iranians began voting across the country Friday in elections billed by the moderate president as vital to curbing conservative dominance in parliament and speeding up domestic reforms after a nuclear deal with the world powers.

A pro-government coalition called “The List of Hope” is representing President Hassan Rouhani’s ambitions in the polls. Almost 55 million people are eligible to cast ballots that will ultimately elect 290 lawmakers.

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They will also vote in a second election to select the Assembly of Experts, a powerful committee of 88 clerics that monitors the work of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Elections. An Iranian woman casts her ballot in a box designated for the Assembly of Experts at a polling station in the holy city of Qom on February 26, 2016. Iranians will vote for both parliamentary elections and the Assembly of Experts in the elections billed by the moderate president as vital to curbing conservative dominance in parliament and speeding up reforms after a nuclear deal with the world powers. AFP

While MPs are elected for four years the assembly will be granted an eight-year term. Should Khamenei, who is 76, die during that time its members would pick his successor.

Voting started at 8am (0430 GMT) and will close at 6pm although officials say polling stations could stay open if there are queues and more time is needed to cast ballots.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei cast his vote early Friday morning in a televised ceremony and urged everyone to do so “quickly, as it’s both a duty and a right”.

“Everyone must vote, those who love Iran, those who like the Islamic Republic, those who love the grandeur and glory of Iran,” he told a state television reporter after casting his vote.

“We have enemies. Elections should be such that make the enemy disappointed. We must vote with insight and open eyes.”

As Iran’s ultimate authority, Khamenei’s powers outrank those of Rouhani, but the president is looking for gains in parliament to allow him to build on the nuclear deal by bringing improvements at home.

The economy has featured strongly during the election campaign as Iran faces a stubborn challenge to overcome the damage that almost a decade of sanctions caused.

The elections will be a crucial indicator of the future direction Iranians want for their country.

“I expect the situation of the country to improve through reforms,” Atefeh Yousefi, 38, told AFP while waiting in line at a polling station in Tehran, adding that she regretted boycotting elections in the past.

Rouhani has played up the potential for foreign investment which he says will bring jobs, particularly for Iran’s youth whose unemployment rate of 25 percent is two-and-a-half times the national average.

However, conservatives say strong economic growth will only be possible if an emphasis is placed on domestic production under a “resistance economy” model more in tune with the ideals of Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution.

Although he returned the economy to growth after inheriting a recession, the president remains vulnerable as the benefit of sanctions relief and a return of international business will take time.

If voters support the pro-Rouhani list, a coalition of moderate and reformist candidates, the president could swing the balance of power in parliament, creating an opening for social and political reforms on which he has so far been blocked by lawmakers.

But a one-week official campaign for the parliamentary election has been largely overshadowed by controversies over who was allowed to run for office. 

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