Iranian reformists

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Iranian reform movement
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Reformists
Spiritual leader
Tabriz
1 / 13 (8%)
Yazd
0 / 11 (0%)
Zahedan
0 / 11 (0%)
Rasht
0 / 9 (0%)

The Reformists (

a political faction in Iran. Iran's "reform era" is sometimes said to have lasted from 1997 to 2005—the length of President Mohammad Khatami's two terms in office.[8] The Council for Coordinating the Reforms Front is the main umbrella organization and coalition within the movement; however, there are reformist groups not aligned with the council, such as the Reformists Front
.

Background

Organizations

The 2nd of Khordad Movement usually refers not only to the coalition of 18 groups and political parties of the reforms front[9] but to anyone else who was a supporter of the 1997 reform programs of Khatami. The ideology of Khatami and the movement is based on Islamic democracy.

The reforms front consists of several political parties, some of the most famous including the following:

Ideas

Many

Khatami
's camp.

The movement has been described as changing the key terms in public discourse: emperialism (

shahed (martyrdom), khish (roots), enqelab (revolution) and Gharbzadegi (Western intoxication), to some modern terms and concepts like: demokrasi (democracy), moderniyat (modernity), azadi (liberty), barabari (equality), jam'eh-e madani (civil society), hoquq-e beshar (human rights), mosharekat-e siyasi (political participation), Shahrvandi (citizenship), etc.[12]

Supporters

The core of the reform movement is said to be made up of Islamic leftists disqualified for running for office as they were purged and generally disempowered by Islamic conservatives following the death of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini in 1989.

student groups.

Many institutions support the movement of reformation such as organizations like Organization of the Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution (OMIR) and the Majma’a Rohaneeyoon Mobarez or the Forum of the Militant Clergy, or Office for Fostering Unity and Freedom Movement of Iran. There were also many media outlets in support like the Iran-e-farda and kian magazinez.[14]

Khatami's support is said to have cut across regions and class lines with even some members of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Qom seminarians[12] and Basij members voting for him.[15] The core of his electoral support, however, came from the modern middle class, college students, women, and urban workers.[12] For example, by 1995, about half of Iran's 60.5 million people were too young to be alive at the time of the Islamic Revolution.[16]

Major events

1997 presidential election

The movement began with the May 23, 1997, surprise victory of Mohammad Khatami, "a little known cleric",[17] to the presidency on with almost 70% of the vote. Khatami's win was credited largely to the votes of women and youth who voted for him because he promised to improve the status of women and respond to the demands of the younger generation in Iran. Another reflection of the enthusiasm for reform was that voter turnout was 80%, compared to 50% in the last presidential election in which there had been no reformist candidate.

Khatami is regarded as Iran's first

reformist president, since the focus of his campaign was on the rule of law, democracy
and the inclusion of all Iranians in the political decision-making process.

Assassination attempt on Saeed Hajjarian

Very soon after the rise of the 2nd of Khordad movement, there was an attempted assassination of Saeed Hajjarian the main strategist of the reformist camp. In March, 2000, he was shot in the face on the doorstep of Tehran's city council by a gunman who fled on a motor-cycle with an accomplice. The bullet entered through his left cheek and lodged in his neck. He was not killed but was "badly paralyzed"[18] for some time. During his coma, groups of young Iranians kept a vigil outside Sina hospital, where he was being treated. Due to this injury, Hajjarian now uses a walking frame, and his voice is distorted.[19][20]

His convicted assailant Saeed Asgar, a young man who was reported to be a member of the Basij militia, served only a small part of his 15-year jail sentence.[18][19]

Ganji and Red Eminence and Grey Eminences

Red Eminence and

Rafsanjani as the "Red Eminence" and the intelligence officers in his government, such as Ali Fallahian as the "Grey Eminences". His subsequent prosecution and conviction for "anti-Islamic activities" for his role in the publication of the book and articles cost Akbar Ganji six years of imprisonment.[21]

1999 local elections

Reformist candidates did remarkably well in the 1999 local elections and received 75% of the vote.[22]

18th of Tir crisis (1999)

The 18th of Tir (July 9) crisis, refers to a demonstration in Tehran University dormitory in reaction to closing Salam newspaper by the government. Demonstrations continued for a few days in most cities in Iran and in more than ninety-five countries worldwide. The demonstration ended in violence and the death of a young Iranian citizen along with many casualties. At the time, it was Iran's biggest antigovernment demonstrations since the 1979 Islamic revolution. After attacking of the students of Tehran University by hardline vigilante group, Khatami delivered a speech three months later while defending of his reform programme and at the same time he insisted on the foundations of his government. He referred to the reformation of system from within with holding two elements of Islamic and republic.[14]

18th of Tir national day of protest (2003)

In 2003, Iran's leading pro-democracy student group, the Daftar-e Tahkim-e-Vahdat called for a national day of protest on the 18th of Tir to commemorate the original 1999 protest. At least one observer believes it was the failure of this protest that "delivered a fatal blow to the reform movement."[23]

According to journalist

UN,- to assist it against the government.[24]

6th Parliament (2000)

In the

Iranian parliamentary elections, 2000 to elect the 6th parliament, reformist enjoyed a majority (69.25%), or 26.8 million, of the 38.7 million voters who cast ballots in the February 18, 2000 first round. Ultimately reformists won 195 of the 290 Majlis seats in that election.[22]

7th Parliament (2004)

In January 2004, shortly before the

Council of Guardians ended Iranian voters' continued support for reformists by taking the unprecedented step of banning about 2500 candidates, nearly half of the total, including 80 sitting Parliament deputies. More than 100 MPs resigned in protest and critics complained the move "shattered any pretense of Iranian democracy".[25]

27 Khordad presidential election (2005)

In the

were the main candidates of the 2nd of Khordad movement. However, neither made it to the second round of the election (the final runoff): Moin came in fifth and Karroubi third in the first round. As a result, many supporters of the reform movement lost hope and did not participate in the election.

2009 Iranian presidential election

Mohammad Khatami

The two leading reformist candidates in the

2009 presidential election were Mir-Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi. Mousavi supporters disbelieved the election results and initiated a series of protests that lasted several days. After many days of protesting against the election results, the protests eventually turned violent as the Basij (loyal militia to the Islamic Republic) started attacking the protesters and vice versa. Some protesters turned their anger to the government itself and tried to overthrow the Islamic Republic. The protests, in general, lasted up to several months.[11]

Aftermath

The ultimate lack of success of the movement is described by The Economist magazine:

Dozens of newspapers opened during the Khatami period, only for many to be shut down on one pretext or another by the judiciary. Clerics who took advantage of the new atmosphere to question the doctrine of

Council of Guardians, a committee of clerics appointed by the supreme leader to ensure that laws conform with Islamic precepts.[26]

Saeed Hajjarian, the main theorist behind the movement, declared in 2003 that "the reform movement is dead. Long live the reform movement".[27]

The victory of conservatives in the 2005 presidential election and the 2004 Majlis election can be explained "not so much" by an expansion of "their limited core base as by [their] dividing of the reformers and [their] discouraging them from voting," according to political historian Ervand Abrahamian:

The conservatives won in part because they retained their 25% base; in part because they recruited war veterans to run as their candidates; in part because they wooed independents on the issue of national security; but in most part because large numbers of women, college students, and other members of the salaried middle class stayed home. Turnout in the Majles elections fell below 51% - one of the worst since the revolution. In Tehran, it fell to 28%.[28]

Limitations

The reform movement has been lamented as "too divided to establish its own political authority, too naïve about the tenacity of the authoritarian elite around Khamenei, and too inflexible to circumvent the ban on political parties in Iran by creating and sustaining alternative forms of mobilisation."[29] In addition, leaders of the reform movement lacked a clear and coherent strategy of establishing durable and extensive linkages with the public.

Ironically, they became a victim of their electoral successes. The reform movement's "control of both the presidency and parliament from 2000 to 2004 made it look inept and a part of the corrupt system in the eyes of many Iranians."[30]

Secularism

BBC journalist Jonathan Beale reports that since secularism is banned in Iran, it is an ideology that is mostly followed by political organizations among the

Iranian Revolutionary Guards, Mohsen Sazegara (also one of its founders), as saying, "Don't interfere. Leave these affairs to the Iranian people". Sazegara believes the US should call for democracy and freedom, and let Iranian opposition groups inside Iran, which are Reformists, take the lead, instead of attempting to create an opposition in exile.[31]

Referendum movement

The Referendum movement calls in effect for a rerun of the 1979 referendum that established the Islamic Republic in Iran: "a 'yes or no' vote on whether today's Iranians still want the authoritarian Islamic Republic that another generation's revolution brought them." It is said to have been born out of "the ashes of the failures of Khatami's Islamic democracy movement" and reflected in one-word graffiti on walls in Tehran saying "no".[32] It has been criticized as calling for complete system change without "building the political and organisational network to back it up" and inviting a brutal crackdown, with "no means on the ground to resist it".[33]

Election results

President

President of Iran
Date Candidate Supported % Votes Rank Notes
1997
Mohammad Khatami 69.6% 20,078,187 1st Supported by Combatant Clerics and Executives
2001
77.1% 21,659,053 1st Supported by Participation Front, Mojahedin, Combatant Clerics and Executives
2005/1
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani
21.13% 6,211,937 1st Supported by Executives
Mehdi Karroubi 17.24% 5,070,114 3rd Supported by Combatant Clerics
Mostafa Moeen 13.89% 4,083,951 5th Supported by Participation Front and Mojahedin
Mohsen Mehralizadeh 4.38% 1,288,640 7th No major party support
2005/2
Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani
35.93% 10,046,701 2nd
Tactical voting
2009
Mir-Hossein Mousavi 33.75% 13,338,121 2nd Supported by Participation Front, Mojahedin, Executives and Combatant Clerics
Mehdi Karroubi 0.85% 333,635 4th National Trust Party Candidate
2013
Hassan Rouhani 50.88% 18,692,500 1st
Council for coordinating the Reforms Front
2017
Hassan Rouhani 57.13% 23,549,616 1st Unanimous reformist support
2021
Abdolnaser Hemmati
9.81% 2,443,387 3rd Executives Candidate

Coalition organizations

Reformists' Supreme Council for Policymaking

On 8 November 2015, the establishment of the council was announced.[34] It oversees the Council for Coordinating the Reforms Front, which its rotating head serves as the deputy head of the council for policymaking.[35] Moderation and Development Party joined the council in April 2017.[36] Some members of the council include:

Council for Coordinating the Reforms Front

Reformists Front

Parliamentary leaders

# Name Tenure Fraction Ref
From To
1 Abdollah Nouri 1996 1997 Hezbollah Assembly [41]
2 Majid Ansari 1997 2000 [42]
3 Ali Akbar Mohtashamipur 2000 2004 2nd of Khordad
4 Hossein Hashemian 2004 2008 Imam's Line
5 Mohammad Reza Tabesh 2008 2012
No reformist parliamentary group between 2012 and 2016
6 Mohammad Reza Aref 2016 Present Hope

Parties

Organizations

Media

See also

References

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  2. .
  3. ^ Mohseni, Payam (2016). "Factionalism, Privatization, and the Political economy of regime transformation". In Brumberg, Daniel; Farhi, Farideh (eds.). Power and Change in Iran: Politics of Contention and Conciliation. Indiana Series in Middle East Studies. Indiana University Press. pp. 201–204.
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  13. ^ Molavi, Afshin, The Soul of Iran, Norton, (2005), p.98
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  16. ^ Brumberg, Daniel, Reinventing Khomeini : The Struggle for Reform in Iran, University of Chicago Press, 2001, p.188
  17. ^ "BBC News - MIDDLE EAST - Profile: Mohammad Khatami". 2001-06-06. Retrieved 28 May 2016.
  18. ^ a b "BBC News | MIDDLE EAST | Iran jails Hajjarian gunman". news.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2022-11-29.
  19. ^ a b "Iran's reformists warn of dictatorship". 2002-07-17. Retrieved 2022-11-29.
  20. ^ "Fighting fit | guardian.co.uk". www.theguardian.com. Retrieved 2022-11-29.
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  23. ^ Molavi, The Soul of Iran, (2005), p.315-9
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