Ultraconservative former nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili, left, and a reformist, Masoud Pezeshkian, right, will face a runoff vote in Iran's election to select a new president, according to authorities. Iran’s snap election for a new president is going to a runoff between a reformist and conservative after no candidate secured a majority, according to an announcement from the Ministry of Interior broadcast on state television Saturday.
Of about 60 million eligible voters in Iran, 24 million people cast their ballot Friday, putting turnout at around 40 percent — a historic low. Iran’s parliamentary speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf came in third place with about 3 million votes.. Iran’s influential Guardian Council, an unelected body of jurists and theologians, will review the results before the top two candidates start campaigning again.
Many predicted that the vote would go to a runoff. But some analysts said Iran’s supreme leader Ali Khamenei probably wanted to avoid such an eventuality, due to concerns that a second round of voting could inject additional uncertainty into the process.For Iran’s ruling clerics, a smooth, predictable electoral process with high voter turnout is important for the regime’s stability and legitimacy.Summary is AI-generated, newsroom-reviewed.
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