Conservative Ebrahim Raisi tops Iran’s presidential candidates | Sunday Observer

Conservative Ebrahim Raisi tops Iran’s presidential candidates

14 May, 2021

TEHRAN, May 15. (Aljazeera) - Top candidates to become Iran’s next president signed up on the last day of registration on Saturday and the overwhelming majority were conservatives, drawing a backlash from the moderate government.

Ebrahim Raisi, the current conservative head of the judiciary, is considered by analysts most likely to become Iran’s eighth president in the June 18 elections.

In a statement hours before coming to the interior ministry to sign up, 60-year-old Raisi said he wants to form a “People’s government for a strong Iran” that would fight corruption and improve the country’s economy – which has taken a big hit from United States sanctions and the Covid-19 pandemic.

“God, you are witness that I have never been after position or power, and even at this stage I have entered the field despite personal will and interests, and only to serve my duty to answer the people and elites and create hope,” wrote the man who is often cited as the next supreme leader when Ali Khamenei passes away.

Raisi, a former attorney general and custodian of the significant Astan Quds Razavi in Mashhad who was sanctioned by the US in 2019 for human rights violations, enjoys strong backing from a wide range of conservatives and hardliners.

Parliament speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and former foreign minister Saeed Jalili did not register in support of Raisi. Both Raisi and Ghalibaf unsuccessfully ran against outgoing President Hassan Rouhani in 2017, but Raisi managed to garner 38 percent of the votes, or just under 16 million.

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