Iran's new president gives hope to some women and younger voters

Iranian women casts their votes at a polling station in Tehran during the presidential election.
Voters hope president-elect Masoud Pezeshkian will prioritise women's rights [EPA]
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A relatively moderate member of the Iranian parliament, Masoud Pezeshkian, has been declared the next president of Iran after beating his hardline conservative rival by a decisive margin in Friday’s run-off presidential elections.

The 69-year-old will replace Ebrahim Raisi, who died in a helicopter crash last month.

Mr Pezeshkian’s mostly young supporters took to the streets of the capital, Tehran, and other cities to celebrate - even before the final results were declared, singing, dancing and waving his campaign's signature green flags.

He has given some of the nation's younger generation hope at a time when many were despondent about their future. Some were even planning to leave the country to seek a better life elsewhere.

Representing the city of Tabriz in the Iranian parliament since 2008, he has previously served as the country's heath minister.

In the 1990s, he lost his wife and one of his children in a car accident. He never remarried and raised his other three children - two sons and a daughter - alone.

His win has upset the plans of the Islamic hardliners, who hoped to install another conservative to replace Raisi and - alongside supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei - control all of Iran's levers of power.

At a polling station in Tehran, 48-year-old Fatemeh told the AFP news agency she had voted for the moderate as his "priorities include women and young people's rights".

Afarin, 37, who owns a beauty salon in Isfahan, told Reuters: "I know Pezeshkian will be a lame-duck president, but still he is better than a hardliner."

Many voters boycotted the first round of voting last week, angry at repression at home and international confrontation which have brought Iran increased sanctions and expanding poverty.

They were also frustrated by the lack of choice in the elections. Of the six candidates who were allowed to run, five were hardline Islamists.

And there was a sense of despair that - with Ayatollah Khamenei having final say over government policy - there is little chance of real change.

One of those who refused to cast a ballot was Azad, a 35-year-old HR manager and activist in Tehran who has been jailed twice for criticising the Iranian government.

Azad, whose name has been changed for her own safety, says she is still traumatised from being kept in solitary confinement and enduring exhausting interrogations.

She told the BBC that regardless of Mr Pezeshkian's win, the supreme leader remains the "puppeteer" in Iran.

“The reformists have had 45 years and they have made no effort to reform the political structure,” she said, referring to the time since the Islamic Revolution.

Iranian reformist candidate Masoud Pezeshkian reacts after casting his ballot during the presidential runoff elections in Shareh Qods, west of Tehran on July 5, 2024.
Masoud Pezeshkian's win has given hope to voters who wanted to avoid a hardline president, but he is still bound by the final say of supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei [Getty Images]

But in the run-off election on Friday, some seem to have changed their mind and turned out at polling stations, many voting tactically for Mr Pezeshkian in order to block victory for Mr Jalili.

He would have reaffirmed many policies that have been the subject of both domestic and international discontent, such as Iran's controversial morality police patrols.

Mr Jalili took an anti-Western stance during his campaign and criticised the 2015 deal that saw Iran curb its nuclear programme in exchange for eased sanctions. Voters were concerned that if he won, his presidency could have antagonised the US and its regional allies - and worsened Iran's economic situation.

By comparison, Mr Pezeshkian has called for "constructive relations" with Western nations, and to revive the nuclear deal to "get Iran out of its isolation". He has said that Iran’s economy cannot function with the crippling sanctions currently placed on it.

A win for Mr Jalili would have also signalled a shift to a potentially harsher domestic policy, reinforcing the requirement for women to wear a headscarf.

Mr Pezeshkian is against using force to impose the compulsory hijab rule - a major issue in the past few years.

He has previously lamented the death in police custody of Mahsa Amini, a young woman who had been arrested for an alleged violation of the law. Her death sparked massive nationwide protests, unlike any the country had ever seen.

The president-elect is expected to take the reins of power in a matter of days to fill the void in government left by Raisi's sudden death.

As well as pushing to revive the nuclear deal and ease sanctions, Mr Pezeshkian has promised to see Iran join international banking conventions. Conservatives have been reluctant to do so, depriving Iran of normal banking relations with other nations.

He has also said he will remove Iran's extensive internet censors.

But it is unclear how much political freedom he will be given to bring about meaningful change.

He will have to "work across the conservative-dominated Iranian system to try and build support" for his more moderate agenda, said Dr Sanam Vakil, director of the Middle East & North Africa Programme at Chatham House in London.

"He won’t have too much independent room for manoeuvre except on the economic portfolio that sits squarely with the president," Dr Vakil told the BBC, adding that even there, "meaningful progress can only be achieved through negotiations with the US to obtain sanctions relief".