Iran is slated to hold a run-off on July 5, 2024, as the presidential election held on Friday, June 28, 2024, failed to produce an ultimate winner.
This is only the second time since the 1979 revolution that a presidential election has gone to a second round.
Masoud Pezeshkian and Saeed Jalili emerged at the top but failed to secure a majority amid a record-low voter turnout.
Iranian law requires that a winner gets more than 50% of all votes cast. If not, the race’s top two candidates advance to a runoff a week later.
The final numbers from election headquarters at the ministry showed that the moderate Pezeshkian received more than 10.41 million votes from a total of more than 24.5 million ballots counted, trailed by former nuclear negotiator Saeed Jalili with 9.47 million votes.
Conservative Speaker of the Parliament Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, with 3.38 million votes, and conservative Islamic leader Mostafa Pourmohammadi, with 206,397 votes, were knocked out of the race.
Two other candidates, Tehran Mayor Alireza Zakani and government official Amir-Hossein Ghazizadeh Hashemi, dropped out.
Ghalibaf, Zakani and Ghazizadeh called on their supporters to vote for Jalili in the run-off next Friday in order to ensure victory for the “revolution front.”
The snap election on Friday came within the 50-day constitutionally mandated period to select a new president after Ebrahim Raisi and seven others, including Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian, died in a helicopter crash on May 19.
A new record of low voter turnout
Like all major elections in the past four years, the vote on Friday saw a low turnout, but the final number was much lower than the 45-53 percent suggested by polls.
Only 40 percent of more than 61 million eligible Iranians voted, the Ministry of Interior said on Saturday, a new low in presidential elections since the country’s 1979 revolution.
The turnout that got Raisi into office was 48.8 percent. At just below 41 percent, the parliamentary election in March and May previously had the lowest turnout of any major polls since Iran’s 1979 revolution.
Hamid Reza Gholamzadeh, an Iranian foreign policy expert, attributed the low turnout to what he said was the reformist camp’s failure to activate the sector of the electorate which usually votes for it and drives participation up.
Despite the endorsement of heavyweight reformists such as former President Mohammad Khatami and Hassan Rouhani, Pezeshkian “failed to awaken that part of the society which is usually when we have a turnout above 50 percent – that usually comes from the reformist side”, Gholamzadeh told a news agency.
“And I would interpret that as people saying they want change,” Gholamzadeh added.
A higher turnout appears likely when Iranians vote in the July 5 run-off since it would present a clearer choice between two opposing camps.
That would mostly benefit Pezeshkian, who would need more votes to defeat the combined forces of the conservative and hardliner camps.
READ ALSO: Ministry of Food and Agriculture Sets First Minimum Producer Price for Mangoes