#Photo #IranElections2017 🇮🇷 Presidential candidate #HashemiTaba stands in queue like any other citizen waiting to cast his vote pic.twitter.com/xYmH2QfIlM
— Iran (@Iran) May 19, 2017
The candidates
Rouhani and Raisi were two of five candidates approved out of the 1,636 who registered to run in the May 19 election. Rouhani was elected in 2013 and his administration is made of a mix of moderates and reformist party politicians. Raisi represents the Islamic Revolution Forces Popular Front (Jebha-ye Mardomi-ye Niruha-ye Enqelab-e Eslami), a new umbrella group of Principlists, the country’s mainstream conservatives.Both Rouhani & Raisi say #IranElections2017 results needs be respected, in effect echoing #Iran Khamenei's call for law & order
— Ladane Nasseri (@LadaneNasseri) May 19, 2017
4pm in Tehran and I'm in line to cast my vote; at least 200 people are ahead of me ✌️ #IranElections2017
— Mahdi Taghizadeh (@mahdi) May 19, 2017
One of my favorite photos of the #IranElections2017 so far pic.twitter.com/0afQDGljfK
— Feri فری (@FeriFilter) May 19, 2017
The longest lines I have ever seen in 15 years of reporting here. This is Husseiniye Ershad where most foreign reporters and state tv are. pic.twitter.com/2W3BfgIdSJ
— Thomas Erdbrink (@ThomasErdbrink) May 19, 2017
Ebrahim Raisi
Raisi, who is running for the first time, is a member of the Assembly of Experts (Majles-e Khobregan-e Rahbari), the body who will choose Iran’s next Supreme Leader after Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. There are some who believe the political hardliner could be in the running himself to replace Khamenei. Raisi has accused Rouhani of undermining Iran’s interests in the 2015 nuclear deal, for which some see little economic return domestically. Raisi promised to create 6 million jobs in his first term. He said in a presidential debate he represents the labor class and “those who have a lot to say but have no microphone.”This billboard along Tehran's Hemmat highway says "the president should be popular and workaholic." pic.twitter.com/G4UIDiBqSY
— Thomas Erdbrink (@ThomasErdbrink) May 19, 2017
Hassan Rouhani
Rouhani ran on a moderate reformist platform in the 2013 election, following Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s two terms that saw Iran become more isolated and less tolerant of dissent. Ahmadinejad’s 2009 re-election was seen by many as fraudulent his announced victory sparked large protests in Iran and around the world. During Rouhani’s first term, his foreign minister Javad Zarif secured a deal with the “E3+3” or “P5+1” (the five permanent members of the UN Security Council and Germany) that saw a rollback of western-imposed sanctions in exchange for assurances that the country’s nuclear program will not be weaponized. Rouhani’s administration has manged to curb economic inflation, which was over 40 percent when he took office, but unemployment remains high – especially for young people who are likely his biggest supporters. He can also count on supporters of other reformist candidates, if he can get them to turn out. Historically, reformist politicans have won with a higher voter turnout, and Rouhani won only 50.7 percent of the vote in 2013 when turnout topped 70 percent.Media cant publish about Mohammad Khatami,the popular former president,but this is how 100s of cameras capture him voting #IranElections2017 pic.twitter.com/xrCWzEjztD
— Tara Sepehri Far (@sepehrifar) May 19, 2017
"Grandpa, who are u voting for?"
— Sidewalk Goats (@pedestrian) May 18, 2017
"Khatami."
"But Khatami isnt on the ballot."
"I'm writing Rouhani, but I mean Khatami."#IranElections2017
Mousavi's daughter confirms that her parents have voted. #IranElection2017 https://t.co/L3GmXvbJLJ
— Danial Omidvar (@dmidvar) May 19, 2017
Above 100 nabbed in #Tehran province for election-related offenseshttps://t.co/cKP4Vj3vdK#IranElections#IranElections2017 pic.twitter.com/KJhE8eHQl7
— Iran (@Iran) May 19, 2017
Karroubi, an opposition leader under house arrest since 2011, just voted in #IranElections2017, his son told me. pic.twitter.com/B7Gwmt3Ler
— Bozorgmehr Sharafedin (@bozorgmehr) May 19, 2017
An Iranian voter in Cambridge MA, one of 55 places where Iranians can vote in the US today. #iranelections2017 pic.twitter.com/a2FzXSMA9U
— Jason Rezaian (@jrezaian) May 19, 2017