In its first plenary session held on Thursday (April 6), the members of the Popular Front of Islamic Revolution Forces (PFIRF) selected 5 of the 21 conservative figures who sought to run for May 19 presidential election, through voting.
According to a Farsi report by Alef news website, the 21 preliminary applicants were, themselves, selected from 53 individuals who were suggested to the PFIRF’s Founding Board by the PFIRF members based on a number of indices following a two-week process. After holding face-to-face talks with these 53 applicants, the Founding Board had chosen 21 of them based on a number of indices and approved regulations and submitted a list of their names to the PFIRF members.
10 candidates were later elected including the current Chief Custodian of Astan Quds Razavi Ebrahim Raeesi, who resigned from Iran’s High Supervisory Board of [presidential] Elections and sent his representative to the PFIRF plenum to officially announce his candidacy for the presidential elections, the current President of Imam Khomeini Relief Foundation Parviz Fattah Qarabaghi, the Mayor of Tehran Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, former MP Alireza Zakani, current lawmaker Hamid-Reza Haji Babaei, former IRIB chief Ezzatollah Zarghami, former nuclear negotiator Saeid Jalili, former MP Mehrdad Bazrpash, former roads minister Ali Nikzad, and former oil minister Rostam Qassemi.
Raeesi won the majority of the votes, followed by Fattah, Qalibaf, Zakani, Haji Babaei, Zarghami, Jalili, Bazrpash, Nikzad, and Qassemi.
Secretary of Iran’s Expediency Council Mohsen Rezaei and Mohammad Mehdi Zahedi – Iranian politician and former minister of science, research and technology – were also among the initial 21 applicants.
Later on Thursday, the conservative party members selected their final 5 by putting the 10 candidates into vote. Raeesi, Zakani, Bazrpash, Qalibaf, and Fattah received the highest number of votes.
PFIRF is an Iranian political organization founded in late 2016 by 10 figures from different spectrum of the conservative party.
The group is the main rival for Iran’s incumbent President Hassan Rouhani in the 2017 presidential election, intending to introduce a single candidate from the conservative party.
Meanwhile, certain right-wing figures like Jalili and Ahmadinejad’s ally Baqaei will probably independently run for presidency.