Iran’s Conservatives Support Raisi for Presidential Candidacy

Head of Iranian judiciary Ebrahim Raisi during the presidential election in Tehran, Iran (File photo: Reuters)
Head of Iranian judiciary Ebrahim Raisi during the presidential election in Tehran, Iran (File photo: Reuters)
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Iran’s Conservatives Support Raisi for Presidential Candidacy

Head of Iranian judiciary Ebrahim Raisi during the presidential election in Tehran, Iran (File photo: Reuters)
Head of Iranian judiciary Ebrahim Raisi during the presidential election in Tehran, Iran (File photo: Reuters)

Iran's head of the judiciary, Ibrahim Raisi, is currently the conservatives’ leading candidate, even though he has not officially announced his nomination for the presidential elections scheduled for next June.

Last week, the election committee announced it will receive candidacy applications between May 11 and 15, before the Guardian Council announces the final selection for the presidential race at the end of May.

The Combatant Clergy Association, Iran’s leading conservative clerical association, supports the candidacy of Raisi for the 2021 presidential election, announced its spokesman.

Spokesman Gholam Reza Mesbahi Moghadam indicated the association was launching the “Supreme Unity Committee” initiative between conservative parties to exchange proposals and reach a consensus on a candidate.

Over the past five years, Raisi was suggested as a possible candidate for the position of Supreme Leader, following Ali Khamenei, before running for the 2017 presidential elections against the current president, Hassan Rouhani.

A year after the elections, Khamenei issued a decree appointing Raisi as head of the judiciary.

ISNA agency reported that Mesbahi Moghadam also warned conservatives about Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's behavior, indicating that he is an independent candidate.

The spokesman implicitly denied reports that the association supports the candidacy of the former parliament speaker, Ali Larijani, stressing that there are no discussions on the matter.

Larijani's candidacy is expected to divide his conservative allies, especially since the reformist and moderate coalition, which supports Rouhani, may back the former speaker because of his support for the 2015 nuclear agreement.

Mesbahi Moghadam said that the government's performance in the nuclear deal “does not enjoy our support.”

Asked about the US President Joe Biden’s policy towards Iran, Mesbahi Moghadam said there was no difference between Biden and his opponents because the US had its own system.

"I don’t think the US approach to Iran has changed over 42 years."

Regarding the revival of the nuclear deal, he underlined that if Washington wants to rejoin the nuclear deal, as the Leader said, it needs to lift all sanctions on Iran.

Earlier, conservative politician Mohammad Javad Larijani said that the competition in the upcoming presidential elections includes his younger brother Ali Larijani, Speaker Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, and Raisi.

Tasnim Agency asked him about the possibility of a shared presidency between the former speaker and the Foreign Minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif, and Larijani responded that there is no basis for that.

He downplayed the possibility of his brother receiving the support of the reformists.

Raisi was the judiciary's deputy chief and the Iranian public prosecutor, and he was one of the four Iranian officials who played a key role in the executions of thousands of political prisoners in the summer of 1988.



One Person Found Dead, 2 Missing in Switzerland Floods

This aerial photograph shows a view of the hamlet of Sorte, south of Lostallo in the Moesa Region in the Swiss canton of Graubunden (Grisons) after violent downpours caused floods and landslides on June 23, 2024. (Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP)
This aerial photograph shows a view of the hamlet of Sorte, south of Lostallo in the Moesa Region in the Swiss canton of Graubunden (Grisons) after violent downpours caused floods and landslides on June 23, 2024. (Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP)
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One Person Found Dead, 2 Missing in Switzerland Floods

This aerial photograph shows a view of the hamlet of Sorte, south of Lostallo in the Moesa Region in the Swiss canton of Graubunden (Grisons) after violent downpours caused floods and landslides on June 23, 2024. (Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP)
This aerial photograph shows a view of the hamlet of Sorte, south of Lostallo in the Moesa Region in the Swiss canton of Graubunden (Grisons) after violent downpours caused floods and landslides on June 23, 2024. (Photo by Piero CRUCIATTI / AFP)

Rescuers in Switzerland have found the body of one of three people who had gone missing on Saturday after massive thunderstorms and rainfall in the southeast of the country caused a rockslide, Swiss authorities say. The other two are still missing.
One woman was pulled out alive from the rubble earlier on Saturday morning, The Associated Press reported.
“Today is a sad day,” said Ignazio Cassis, member of the Swiss Federal Council, who addressed reporters Sunday after traveling to the region to show solidarity with the victims on behalf of the Swiss Federal Government.
A team of 200 rescuers has been searching for the missing people since Saturday with excavators, specially-trained search dogs, drones and army helicopters. But the likelihood of finding them alive is low, William Kloter from the Swiss police, who is heading the rescue operations, told reporters Sunday.
Search operations had to be halted during the night due to heavy rain.
The rockslide hit a group of three houses in the municipality of Lostallo in the Alpine valley of Misox in Graubünden.
Swiss authorities also said that a segment of the Swiss motorway A13 leading towards Italy had been completely submerged and destroyed by flooding. The major transit route between the key San Bernardino Pass and Roveredo in Graubünden will likely remain closed for several months.