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In a first, women outnumber clerics in Iran's new Parliament

For the first time in the history of Iran’s politics, the country’s new parliament will have more women than clerics when its members are sworn in later this month.

India TV News Desk India TV News Desk Published on: May 02, 2016 10:53 IST
In a first, women outnumber clerics in Iran's new Parliament
In a first, women outnumber clerics in Iran's new Parliament

Tehran: For the first time in the history of Iran’s politics, the country’s new parliament will have more women than clerics when its members are sworn in later this month.

Official results declared on Saturday showed that a total of 17 women will become members of the 290-seat Parliament compared to clerics who only won 16 seats. Although the clerics fall just one seat behind women, their overall number has reached an all-time low.

 
The outcome saw them outnumber their conservative rivals -- many hardliners lost seats -- for the first time since 2004 and capped a remarkable comeback for reformists after years of isolation.

In the first Parliament that followed the Islamic revolution in 1979 there were 164 clerics elected.

Some of the country's most prominent politicians are clerics and have previously been lawmakers including Rouhani who was an MP between 1980 and 2000. Two earlier Presidents, Ayatollah Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mohammad Khatami, are also past members of Parliament.

However clerical numbers have steadily fallen since 1980 with 153 elected in the second parliament, 85 in the third, 67 in the fourth and 52 in the fifth.

The outgoing legislature had only 27 men of the cloth. Of the 16 who will enter parliament next month 13 have conservative political leanings and three are reformists.

Although the 17 women, nearly all reformists, elected represent only nine percent of the total it is a high for the Islamic republic and almost double the nine conservative women in the outgoing chamber. The previous high for female MPs was 14.

Results show there will be 133 reformists in the new parliament, 13 shy of a majority but more than the conservatives' 125 MPs. The remaining seats went to independents and minorities.

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