Follow us on social

Reflections on post-election Iran: An elegy for the voting non-voter

Reflections on post-election Iran: An elegy for the voting non-voter

With the lowest turnout in its history, the Islamic Republic is moving further away from any sense of democracy.

Analysis | Middle East

SpongeBob SquarePants showed up on the boulevard halfway to midnight, almost two hours after state officials confirmed Hassan Rouhani as the seventh president of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The delighted and celebratory crowd quickly converged on the costumed fan, tipping him over, over and over again into an instant mosh pit in the center of Tehran before a swell of arms and hands carried him away. 

Eight years and two presidential elections later the crowds stayed home, driven inside by months of official violence, an unrelenting pandemic, and the vetting process of a Guardian Council determined to get their man into office. As expected, Ebrahim Raisi became president-elect on June 18, 2021, winning with 18 million votes, more than half a million votes fewer than Rouhani received in his first run, and eight million fewer than the second. Four million write-in and spoiled ballots came in second to Raisi, which, depending on who you believe, were carried by former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad or current Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan (no word on how many votes came in for SpongeBob). 

Thirty million Iranians chose not to vote in 2021, resulting in a participation rate of 48 percent, reduced to a dreary 42 percent if voided ballots are included. Either figure counts as the lowest ever recorded in the 42-year history of the Islamic Republic, a regime that has long prided itself on its ability to mobilize the population at election time. Al Jazeera correspondent Fereshteh Sadeghi likened the electorate’s mood in the days leading up to the ballot to that of family members refusing to speak to one another, of ghar kardan. “You [the government] don’t care about us?” Sadeghi explained, “We don’t care about you.” 

A surprise in every ballot box

A history of participation makes their silence especially meaningful. It is fashionable to say that elections in Iran don’t matter, but for more than two decades these same non-voters turned out to vote when no one, including themselves, expected them to do so. With the exception of 2005, participation in presidential elections between 1997 and 2017 ranged between 70 to 85 percent, fueling a string of unanticipated victories by reformists and moderates. As Naghmeh Sohrabi and Arang Keshavarzian documented in 2017, the power of high turnout has been to render Iran’s presidential elections genuinely competitive and thus unpredictable. Mousavi wasn’t supposed to catch fire in 2009, nobody expected Rouhani in 2013 or Khatami in 1997 to win. The faithless voter proved to be decisive in every instance, the millions of Iranians who made the calculation, very often at the last possible moment, that no matter how much they disliked their available choices, not voting was worse than staying home. They cast their vote, then joined the celebrations that followed. 

What stands out now is how much anger they carried with their joy. Each election was a variation on defiance, a way to give the nezam the proverbial finger (or in the Iranian version, the thumb), whether it was to deny Ahmadinejad a second term or Raisi his first. Voting for Rouhani in 2013 wasn’t a mistake; it was revenge, redemption for the lives and votes lost in 2009. This year, with the results of the June ballot already a fait accompli in May, the biggest finger of all was to stay home, ghose khordan exchanged for laj kardan

Millions chose to be obstinate. The protesting citizen, the savvy non-voter, once again found a way to disrupt a dishonest game from the inside out, the endgame of a 20-year effort to punish the Islamic state for its false witness. 

Learning from losing

If nothing else, 2021 invites us to see politics in Iran as an unfolding process, propelled by memory and the electorate’s constant learning. The sophistication of the Iranian voter comes from her engagement with a competitive authoritarian regime, the resilience and willful creativity gained as a result will surely carry over into whatever comes next. This too is the legacy of a faltering system. 

While there wasn’t much effort behind turning out the vote, Esfandyar Batmanghelidj argues that there was a great deal of energy by the opposition “devoted to conversations among families, friends, social networks about what it will take to create conditions for meaningful political reform [and] representation in Iran.” The outsized focus on non-participation at the national level, led by the boycott of this year’s presidential contest, risks missing out on the extraordinary engagement with democracy at the local and regional levels by bottom-up forces, most notably through local council elections

The learninggoes both ways. Goldsmiths political theorist Eskandar Sadeghi took to Twitter the day after Raisi’s win to remind us that the institutions of the authoritarian state also evolve and improve: “They’ve certainly improved since [the 2009] Green Movement how to effectively engineer elections in their favour.” Less dramatically, Iran’s hapless conservatives also became better at politics, finally adopting many of the basic campaign techniques employed to great effect by their rivals. That it took well over a decade for Iran’s “deep state” to sufficiently “improve” against the mobilization of civil society gives hope even as it speaks to the difficult work that lies ahead.

With the electoral path seemingly at a dead end and voter turnout, long the Achilles’ heel of the nezam, no longer a factor for either the public or the system, it remains to be seen whether Iran’s newly empowered hardliners will pursue a new social contract to replace the tentative détente that emerged between state and society following the suppression of the 2009 Green Movement. 

The forced elevation of Raisi to the presidency may turn out to be less a permanent turn against an already limited electoral politics than a pause in the game, a trusted placeholder between faqihs so that the system can get its house in order. Authoritarian regimes have an especially hard time transitioning power to the next leader, supreme or otherwise, a phenomenon well-documented by historians and political scientists. Mehrzad Bouroujerdi and Kouroush Rahimkhani have shown that Ali Khamanei, now into his eighties and in ill health, is aware of the challenges if not the literature, and has planned his succession accordingly to ensure the least amount of disruption to an already fragmented polity.

That there is a constituency for what Raisi has to offer is undeniable, a reality that many who want instant change in Iran must come to terms with. What is to be done with the 18 million who voted for Raisi? Disengagement and laj kardan won’t be enough, and hasn’t been enough.  Unable to quit or escape one another without the risk of uncapped violence, the current impasse between state and society will once again require a reimagining of what Bernard Crick described as the political method of rule, a devoted war of position not unlike what occurred in the years preceding the breakthrough of the reform movement (whose leaders, Mohammad Ayatollahi Tabaar reminds us, were once as hidebound and illiberal as today’s hardliners). 

Two days after Rouhani’s 2013 win, the men’s national soccer team qualified for the World Cup. The crowds came out once again, this time drawing non-Rouhani supporters and non-voters, easily surpassing the celebrations from a few nights before. Politics being a source of division to the point of exhaustion, the success of Iran’s beloved Team Melli offered a reprieve from unrelenting conflict. Every Iranian citizen that late afternoon knew that the chances of the national team making it to the second round that year, much less winning the tournament, were almost zero. None of that mattered. For a few hours in the remaining light of a disappearing day they danced, they dreamed. Kenar amadand

Tehran, Iran - June 17, 2021: Ebrahim Raisi Poster on a wall on a street in Tehran. (Farzad Frames/Shutterstock)|New York, NY - February 28, 2019: US envoy on Venezuela Elliott Abrams speaks to media after UN Security Council meeting on situation in Venezuela at UN Headquarters (Photo: lev radin via shutterstock.com)
Analysis | Middle East
ukraine war
Diplomacy Watch: A peace summit without Russia
Diplomacy Watch: Moscow bails on limited ceasefire talks

Diplomacy Watch: Russia capitalizing on battlefield surge

QiOSK

Russian President Vladimir Putin wants to increase the size of Russia’s military even while it’s seeing regular successes on the battlefield. These developments are leading some in the Ukrainian military and civilians alike to become more open to the idea of talks aimed at ending the war.

The Kremlin is currently negotiating a new military budget proposal of upwards of $145 billion which would mean that, if signed into law, Russia’s 2025 defense spending would grow to 32.5% of the budget, a 4.2% increase from this year’s spending.

keep readingShow less
|
DF-ST-87-06962 The Pentagon, headquarters of the Department of Defense. DoD photo by Master Sgt. Ken Hammond, U.S. Air Force.|

The military showers universities with hundreds of millions of dollars

Military Industrial Complex

The divestment campaigns launched last spring by students protesting Israel’s mass slaughter in Gaza brought the issue of the militarization of American higher education back into the spotlight.

Of course, financial ties between the Pentagon and American universities are nothing new. As Stuart Leslie has pointed out in his seminal book on the topic, The Cold War and American Science, “In the decade following World War II, the Department of Defense (DOD) became the biggest patron of American science.” Admittedly, as civilian institutions like the National Institutes of Health grew larger, the Pentagon’s share of federal research and development did decline, but it still remained a source of billions of dollars in funding for university research.

keep readingShow less
Iran bombs Israel, but buck stops with Biden

Israel's Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepts rockets after Iran fired a salvo of ballistic missiles, as seen from Ashkelon, Israel, October 1, 2024 REUTERS/Amir Cohen TPX

Iran bombs Israel, but buck stops with Biden

Middle East

Today, Iran launched a massive missile attack against Israel, which Tehran billed as a response to Israel’s recent assassinations of leaders of the IRGC, Hezbollah and Hamas. Israel now appears to be mulling a retaliation in turn that could push the sides into all-out war.

When Israel and Iran narrowly avoided a full-blown conflict in April, I warned that we shouldn’t let Biden’s help in averting escalation overshadow his broader, strategic failure to prevent such a dangerous moment from ever arising. Had the U.S. used its considerable leverage with Israel to end its war in Gaza, the region would not have found itself on the edge of a disastrous war in April; six months later, the Middle East is back at the brink of disaster.

keep readingShow less

Election 2024

Latest

Newsletter

Subscribe now to our weekly round-up and don't miss a beat with your favorite RS contributors and reporters, as well as staff analysis, opinion, and news promoting a positive, non-partisan vision of U.S. foreign policy.