With only weeks left until Iran’s June 18 Presidential elections, campaigning will begin in earnest the last week of May. Elections in the Islamic Republic are neither free nor fair, but they are consequential. The Rouhani government put all of its eggs in the idea that reaching a nuclear deal with the West would pave the way for the country’s political and economic reintegration with the broader global community. Donald Trump’s exit from the Iran nuclear deal and imposition of “maximum pressure” effectively upended that strategy. Today, opinion polls indicate that the Iranian public’s enthusiasm for the elections is at an all-time low. Yet, the elections will likely have a profound impact on Iran’s future engagement – or lack thereof – with the United States and the West, on the durability of the nuclear deal, as well as on the internal struggle to move Iran into a more open and democratic direction.
Will Iran’s next President be a conservative or can the centrists and reformists unite once more to retain the presidency? What implications will a conservative victory have for US-Iran relations, nascent regional diplomacy with Saudi Arabia and the UAE, and Iran’s embattled civil society?
**Note: This event has been rescheduled from its original date of Monday, May 17**
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