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Thread: Blow to Ahmadinejad

  1. #1
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    Blow to Ahmadinejad

    Opponents of Ahmadinejad Take Lead in Iran Elections
    Monday, December 18, 2006
    AP.


    TEHRAN, Iran — Opponents of hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad took an early lead in key races in Iran's local elections, according to partial results announced Monday, with moderate conservatives winning control of councils across the country.

    If the final results hold -- especially in the bellwether capital, Tehran -- it will be an embarrassment to Ahmadinejad, whose anti-Israeli rhetoric and unyielding position on Iran's nuclear program have provoked condemnation in the West and moves toward sanctions at the U.N. Security Council.

    A freelance Iranian journalist of reformist sympathies, Iraj Jamshidi, described the vote as "a blow to Ahmadinejad," who was elected in June 2005.

    "After a year, Iranians have seen the consequences of the extremist policies employed by Ahmadinejad. Now, they have said a big 'no' to him," said Jamshidi.




    IMO: Personally I have many Persian friends who feel its time for Iran to rejoin the civilised world. But I fear as long as the "supreme leader" is a religious zealot, elections of any kind are MUTE.

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    Yes..he is simply a mouthpiece for the "El Douche" and "Der Furher".

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    Seems that the Iranian people have had enough of him....


    http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/1....f7q9vk3x.html
    Ahmadinejad 'thwarted' in Iranian elections: US
    Dec 18 3:15 PM US/Eastern

    Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad looks to have been thwarted from keeping his ultra-conservative allies in control of key offices despite efforts to "cook the books" in weekend elections, the State Department said.
    The elections for municipal councils and a powerful religious assembly saw Ahmadinejad loyalists suffer setbacks at the hands of more moderate candidates in a number of key races, including for seats on the Tehran city council.

    "It would seem that they are not the results that President Ahmadinejad would have hoped for," State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said when asked to comment on the vote.

    "I think, despite the regime's efforts to cook the books in terms of an outcome, they seem to have been thwarted in that regard," he said.

    While noting the high voter turnout in Friday's election, McCormack said there had been "some fundamental flaws" in the polls, "in which there were numerous candidates that were excluded from even running."

    "So the people didn't have that choice to make," he said.

    The United States has declared Ahmadinejad's regime to be one of its principle international adversaries for its alleged plan to develop nuclear weapons and his frequent statements that Israel should be "wiped off the map".

    Washington also accuses Tehran of supporting Islamic militants responsible for unrest in Iraq, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories.

    The voting for Iran's municipal councils and the Assembly of Experts -- the body which chooses the country's supreme leader -- was seen as the first popularity test for Ahmadinejad since he swept to power in 2005.

    In one key race, centrist ex-president Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani overwhelmingly won a seat on the Assembly of Experts, thrashing a cleric seen as Ahmadinejad's spiritual mentor.

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bigen12
    Seems that the Iranian people have had enough of him....
    We can only hope his term of office is at an end. Perhaps he could go live with David Duke the KKK Jihadist.

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    edit
    Last edited by Ufa; 12-23-2006 at 09:03 AM.

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    It is comical that none of our muslim sympathizers here have posted in this thread...

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    Quote Originally Posted by Logan13
    It is comical that none of our muslim sympathizers here have posted in this thread...
    They are at the conference of "intellectuals", where the KKK is presenting its wisdom.
    Last edited by singern; 12-19-2006 at 04:17 PM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Logan13
    It is comical that none of our muslim sympathizers here have posted in this thread...
    wait, they are looking for a prefabricated answer in the Koran

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    Quote Originally Posted by Logan13
    It is comical that none of our muslim sympathizers here have posted in this thread...
    Did you type that with or without your hood on?

  10. #10
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    You have your slap on wrong Girl 8. Its the boys with the hoods that were at the Terrorhan Holocaust conference....or haven't you heard...you just start slapping while napping...

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    Quote Originally Posted by Logan13
    It is comical that none of our muslim sympathizers here have posted in this thread...
    maybe it's because all fo the muslim sympathizers have been saying all along that A) he has no authority and B) he does not represent persian public opinion.
    Last edited by J.S.N.; 12-19-2006 at 04:44 PM.

  12. #12
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    i heard this guy at the conference is a total jew-hater:


    Quote Originally Posted by Teabagger
    You have your slap on wrong Girl 8. Its the boys with the hoods that were at the Terrorhan Holocaust conference....or haven't you heard...you just start slapping while napping...

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    Quote Originally Posted by J.S.N.
    i heard this guy at the conference is a total jew-hater:


    The guy is obviously one of the extreme fringe called "Jews against Zionism", or whatever.

    Posts like this damage your credibility even further.

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    There has to be a change in order for Iran. The population is vastly oveweighted by young secularists. It's only a matter of time. The only question is what will happen in that time...

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    Quote Originally Posted by J.S.N.
    maybe it's because all fo the muslim sympathizers have been saying all along that A) he has no authority and B) he does not represent persian public opinion.

    So the persian public opinion is represented by the Ayatollah?

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    Quote Originally Posted by J.S.N.
    maybe it's because all fo the muslim sympathizers have been saying all along that A) he has no authority and B) he does not represent persian public opinion.
    perhaps, but they have been all too quick to defend him as well...........

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    Quote Originally Posted by SMYL_GR8
    Did you type that with or without your hood on?
    How's it going "vic"?

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    http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061221/...iran_elections
    Ahmadinejad opponents win elections By ALI AKBAR DAREINI, Associated Press Writer
    45 minutes agoTEHRAN, Iran - President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's opponents won local council elections in Iran, final results showed Thursday, in an embarrassing blow to the hard-line leader that could force him to change his staunch anti-Western stance and focus more on domestic issues.

    Last week's elections for local councils in towns and cities across Iran were widely seen as a referendum on Ahmadinejad's 18 months in office.

    Since taking power, Ahmadinejad has escalated Iran's confrontation with the United States and the West, drawing the threat of U.N. sanctions for pushing ahead with uranium enrichment in Iran's nuclear program. He has also provoked international outrage for his comments against Israel and casting doubt on the Nazi Holocaust.

    His hard-line stances are believed to have divided the conservatives who voted him into power last year, with some feeling Ahmadinejad has spent too much time confronting the West and has failed to deal with Iran's struggling economy.

    Moderate conservatives opposed to Ahmadinejad won a majority of the seats in Friday's elections followed by reformists who were suppressed by hard-liners in 2004, according to final results announced by the Interior Ministry.

    The final results also represented a partial comeback for reformists, who were crushed over the past five years by hard-liners who drove them out of the local councils, parliament and the presidency. The reformists favor closer ties with the West and further loosening of social and political restrictions under the Islamic government.

    In Tehran, the capital, candidates supporting Mayor Mohammed Bagher Qalibaf, a moderate conservative, won seven of the 15 council seats. Reformists won four, while Ahmadinejad's allies won three. The last seat went to wrestling champion Ali Reza Dabir, who won a gold medal in the 2000 Sydney Olympics and is considered an independent.

    Final results for the rest of the country also showed a heavy defeat for Ahmadinejad supporters, and analysts said his allies won less than 20 percent of local council seats nationwide. None of his candidates won seats on the councils in the cities of Shiraz, Bandar Abbas, Sari, Zanjan, Rasht, Ilam, Sanandaj and Kerman. Many councils in other cities were divided along similar proportions as Tehran's.

    Last week's election for local councils, which handle community matters in cities and towns, does not directly effect Ahmadinejad's administration and is not expected to bring immediate policy changes.

    But it was the first time the public has weighed in on Ahmadinejad's stormy presidency since he took office in June 2005. The results are expected to pressure him to change his populist anti-Western tone and focus more on Iran's high unemployment and economic problems at home.

    Leading reformist Saeed Shariati said the results of the election was a "big no" to Ahmadinejad and his allies.

    "People's vote means they don't support Ahmadinejad's policies and want change," Shariati, a leader of the Islamic Iran Participation Front, Iran's largest reformist party told The Associated Press on Thursday.

    Shariati accused Ahmadinejad of harming Iran's interests with his hard line.

    "We consider this government's policy to be against Iran's national interests and security. It is simply acting against Iran's interests," he said. His party seeks democratic changes within Iran's ruling Islamic establishment and supports relations with the United States.

    Similar anti-Ahmadinejad sentiment was visible in the final results of a parallel election held to select members of the Assembly of Experts, a conservative body of 86 senior clerics that monitors Iran's supreme leader and chooses his successor.

    A big boost for moderates within the ruling Islamic establishment was visible in the big number of votes for former President Hashemi Rafsanjani, who lost to Ahmadinejad in the 2005 presidential election runoff.

    Rafsanjani, who supports dialogue with the United States, received the most votes of any Tehran candidate to win re-election to the assembly. Also re-elected was Hasan Rowhani, Iran's former top nuclear negotiator whom Ahmadinejad has repeatedly accused of making too many concessions to the Europeans.

    Iran started having council elections after a reform introduced in 1999 by then President Mohammed Khatami.

    More than 233,000 candidates ran for more than 113,000 council seats in cities, towns and villages across the vast nation on Friday. All municipal council candidates, including some 5,000 women, were vetted by parliamentary committees dominated by hard-liners. The committees disqualified about 10,000 nominees, reports said.

  19. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Logan13
    How's it going "vic"?

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    Just in today

    Final Results of Iranian Elections Confirm Gains for Moderates
    Thursday, December 21, 2006


    TEHRAN, Iran — Opponents of Iran's ultra-conservative president won nationwide elections for local councils, final results confirmed Thursday, an embarrassing outcome for the hardline leader that could force him to change his anti-Western tone and focus more on problems at home.
    The vote was widely seen as a sign of public discontent with Ahmadinejad's stances, which have fueled fights with the West and led Iran closer to U.N. sanctions.

    ================================================== =====

    Revised Iran Sanctions Resolution Could Pass Friday
    Wednesday, December 20, 2006


    UNITED NATIONS — Britain and France circulated a revised U.N. resolution that would impose sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program and predicted approval Friday.

    ================================================== =====

    British Prime Minister Tony Blair Calls for Alliance Against Extremism
    Wednesday, December 20, 2006


    DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — British Prime Minister Tony Blair wrapped up a Middle East tour Wednesday with a blunt speech warning that the world faces a monumental struggle between moderates and extremists — and labeling Iran the main obstacle to hopes for peace.
    Last edited by singern; 12-21-2006 at 08:36 AM.

  21. #21
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    going to be nice to not have to hear about his stupid stuff anymore. He is probably the worst thing that has happened iran in a while.

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    Quote Originally Posted by johan
    going to be nice to not have to hear about his stupid stuff anymore. He is probably the worst thing that has happened iran in a while.
    On a personal postive note. Because of him, I have learned much about the country of Iran. I had a preconceived ideas about this country and it's people that have since been changed.

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