Informed Comment

Thoughts on the Middle East, History, and Religion

Juan Cole is President of the Global Americana Institute

Monday, June 22, 2009

Chatham House Study Definitively Shows Massive Ballot Fraud in Iran's Reported Results

An authoritative study from Chatham House (pdf) , the renowned UK think tank, finds that with regard to the official statistics on the recent presidential election in Iran released by the Interior Ministry, something is rotten in Tehran. The authors compared the provincial returns in the 2005 and 2009 elections against the 2006 census and found:

' · In two Conservative provinces, Mazandaran and Yazd, a turnout of
more than 100% was recorded.

· At a provincial level, there is no correlation between the increased
turnout, and the swing to Ahmadinejad. This challenges the notion
that his victory was due to the massive participation of a previously
silent Conservative majority.

· In a third of all provinces, the official results would require that
Ahmadinejad took not only all former conservative voters, and all
former centrist voters, and all new voters, but also up to 44% of former
Reformist voters, despite a decade of conflict between these two
groups.

· In 2005, as in 2001 and 1997, conservative candidates, and
Ahmadinejad in particular, were markedly unpopular in rural areas.
That the countryside always votes conservative is a myth. The claim
that this year Ahmadinejad swept the board in more rural provinces
flies in the face of these trends.'


Note that many reformists did not vote in 2005, because they had become discouraged by the way the hard liners had blocked all their programs. Some 10.5 million persons who did not vote in 2005 did vote in 2009. It is highly unlikely that most of these non-voters in 2005 were conservatives who now came out for Ahmadinejad in 2009. But to do as well as the regime claimed, Ahmadinejad would have needed to attract substantial numbers of these voters to himself.

Former President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani got 6.2 million votes in 2005. He is a centrist, pragmatic conservative. How likely is it that his constituency abandoned pragmatic conservatism for Ahmadinejad's quirky hard line? Over 10 million voted in 2005 for reformist candidates.

Ahmadinejad got 13 million more votes this time than the combined total for all conservatives in 2005. The authors of this study concede that Ahmadinejad could have held on to all the 11.5 million hard line voters from 2005. But how likely is that, really? Some of those who voted hard line surely found Ahmadinejad's style abrasive and his policies, such as provoking high inflation through pumping too much oil money into the economy as a reward to his constituents, annoying.

So over all, let's say he captured Rafsanjani's entire faction in the face of Rafsanjani's own dislike of him. That would have give him less than half of his new votes. So he would have had to convinced over half of the voters who sat 2005 out to vote for him; but those were the ones most disgusted with the hardliners. Or he would have needed to win over substantial amounts of the old Khatami reformist vote. Not likely.

And in 10 of 30 provinces, the hard liners did poorly enough in 2005 that Ahmadinejad would have had to gain the votes of all those who did not vote that year but did vote in 2009, of all the Rafsanjani pragmatic conservatives, and of nearly half the reformist vote.

Even in East Azerbaijan, here were the numbers in 2005

Ahmadinejad: 198,417
Hard Liners 232,043
Non-voters: 684,745
Rafsanjani (pragmatic conservatives): 268,954
Reformists: 690,784

and the result in 2009:

Ahmadinejad: 1,131,111

We could say that a little over 400,000 of these votes are not surprising, since that is the number that was hard line in 2005. But Ahmadinejad picked up over 700,000 votes after 4 years. The non-voters may probably mostly be counted as reformists. So again, Ahmadinejad needed all the non-voters in 2005 to switch to him in 2009 plus a large proportion of the Rafsanjani voters. It makes not sense. And this outcome requires us to believe he picked up all those votes among people who deeply disliked him 4 years ago despite running against a favorite son from Azerbaijan! (And no, that Ahmadinejad speaks broken Azeri would not make Azeris vote for him any more than Latinos voted in 2008 for all those Republicans who speak good Spanish.)

As I had noted earlier, the official results ask us to believe that rural ethnic minorities (some of them Sunni!) who had long voted reformist or for candidates of their ethnicity or region, had switched over to Ahmadinejad. We have to believe that Mehdi Karroubi's support fell from over 6 million to 330,000 over all, and that he, an ethnic Lur, was defeated in Luristan by a hard line Persian Shiite. Or that Ahmadinejad went from having 22,000 votes in largely Sunni Kurdistan to about half a million! What, is there a new organization, "Naqshbandi Sunni Sufis for Hard Line Shiism?" It never made any sense. People who said it did make sense did not know what a Naqshbandi is. (Quick, ask them before they can look it up at wikipedia).

I was careful in my initial discussion of why I thought the numbers looked phony to say that catching history on the run is tough; and I later characterized myself as a mere social historian (i.e. not a pollster or statistician). But this study bears out most of my analysis with the exception that the authors dispute any rural bias toward Ahmadinejad. I think they are too categorical in this regard, however. When people, including myself, said that rural people liked Ahmadinejad, we meant Shiites living in Persian-speaking villages on the Iranian plateau, in fair proximity to cities such as Isfahan, Tehran and Shiraz. We weren't talking about Turkmen or Kurds (both Sunnis), or about Lurs (everyone suspected Karroubi would get that vote). I suspect that some of those to whom we referred as rural are being categorized as living in 'small towns' by the Chatham House authors. But field workers even in the Shiite, Persian-speaking villages point out that they often encounter anti-Ahmadinejad sentiments there, as well.

But that is neither here nor there. The numbers do not add up. You can't have more voters than there are people. You can't have a complete liberal and pragmatic-conservative swing behind hard liners who make their lives miserable.

The election was stolen. It is there in black and white. Those of us who know Iran, could see it plain as the nose on our faces, even if we could not quantify our reasons as elegantly as Chatham House.

The Nation will soon have a fine piece by Robert Dreyfuss on this study.

End/ (Not Continued)

21 Comments:

At 12:52 AM, Blogger Carl Nyberg said...

Comparing the recent election to past elections doesn't necessarily prove the establishment cheated in the recent election.

It's possible the reformists cheated in the previous elections, but were foiled cheating in the most recent election.

 
At 12:54 AM, Anonymous JamesL said...

The Chatam House report is a sweeping condemnation. Khamenei is now on record as having confirmed a rigged election.

 
At 12:57 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Guardian Council admits over-voting occurred, to some degree.

http://www.presstv.ir/detail/98711.htm?sectionid=351020101

 
At 1:01 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I am reminded of one of LBJ's early runs for office [the first?], in which not only did residents of the graveyard vote for him, they did so in alphabetical order! With that kind of support, he naturally won.

 
At 1:01 AM, Anonymous Dan said...

Thank you for your analyses, Juan. I admittedly do have much knowledge of Iranian politics, so it is refreshing to get some insight from you (as well as additional article recommendations).

 
At 2:22 AM, Blogger Robin said...

Juan,

Tremendous article. Those of us who know Iran could tell these results were phony straight away - but you and Chatham House and some others have backed this up with some very cogent analysis. Still many ill-informed observers are parroting the notion that there is 'no hard evidence of fraud'. More votes than people seems like good evidence, even acknowledging the impossibility for the Moussavi camp of producing really hard evidence when there is no independent oversight of the election process. "What, is there a new organization, "Naqshbandi Sunni Sufis for Hard Line Shiism?" - great comment.

 
At 5:21 AM, Anonymous Kayvon said...

Mazandaran province is where many people travel to during the summer. So, that probably explains the numbers.

 
At 10:59 AM, Blogger profmarcus said...

if you're going to steal an election, best do it in such a way as to make it at least somewhat believable...

would that when our presidential election was stolen in 2000 and 2004, we would have had the stones to kick up a fuss the way the iranians are doing...

http://takeitpersonally.blogspot.com/

 
At 11:45 AM, Anonymous tim said...

Considering results,motivations, and methods:

A) The numbers released by the Interior Ministry are substantially an honest reflection of true ballots cast despite some local manipulation. Ahmadinejad won the election by a substantial majority.
B) Ahmadinejad won (barely) a simple majority and numbers were manipulated to indicate a much larger mandate investing him with greater "political capital."
C) Ahmadinejad won a plurality of the vote and the numbers were manipulated to prevent the required run-off election which may well have gone to Mousavi as he would pick up most if not all Reformist votes while Ahmadinejad would gain little.
D) Mousavi won with either a majority or a plurality of the vote. This could not stand.

Note that the use of the term "won" implies that Mousavi/the Reformists was/were seen to have gotten too many votes (or Ahmadinejad too few) and vote rigging was done reactively through "ballot box dumping" and replacement with counterfeit ballots or by the simple manipulation of the totals, which would require the stonewalling of any attempt at a physical ballot recount. Alternatively, in anticipation of a Reformist win (or substantial, and threatening, near-miss), the rigging was proactive (ballot box stuffing). Quite possibly a combination of the two.

Given the informed analysis of Chatham House, Professor Cole, and other knowledgable sources it would appear that A) has left the building and B) is searching for its car keys. Absent a full and honest recount both C) and D) remain plausible. The point being made here is that despite strong, if not overwhelming, evidence of vote rigging it can't be taken as a given that Ahmadinejad (would have) lost the election or Mousavi (would have) won it. Cautious skepticism is still appropriate as to outcome.

 
At 1:05 PM, Blogger Cpt. Robespierre said...

@Carl
You wrote @12:52 AM: "It's possible the reformists cheated in the previous elections, but were foiled cheating in the most recent election."

I sincerely hope you are joking. The improbability of that scenario eliminates that idea. You have to be in control to rig that much. Reformists are most certainly not in control of Iran, nor have they been in the past. Merely controlling the presidency is not enough. If they were capable of cheating that much in 2005, they would not have lost the presidency.

 
At 1:07 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

A well reasoned article arguing the opposite case is to be found at

http://www.counterpunch.org/amin06222009.html

It's not black and white like Cole is calling it.

 
At 1:12 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"You can't have more voters than there are people"

Explain then why YAZD went to Mousavi? So he was rigging too? Seriously I think you know very little about Iran. This is a very NORMAL PHENONEMON. IT ALWAYS happens. People VOTE often OUTSIDE of the provinces they live. How is that hard for you to understand? And in may provinces 95% of the people participated. And so 10% more visiting voted lets say so it went over that.

 
At 1:31 PM, Blogger -bwg said...

Apart from the election and the ongoing power struggle, the Iranian regime's actions and Khamenei's statements regarding the election demonstrate clearly that they will say and do whatever they feel they need to maintain their power. Their actions and statements about the election leave them discredited and their words devalued about more that the election. I think it will now be very difficult for those outside the regime to cite its protestations that Iran has no desire for or intention of producing nuclear weapons as providing any evidence that they have no such desires or intentions.

 
At 2:01 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm finding the term "conservative" used for the current leader somewhat misleading. He has allied himself with Venezuela and Hugo Chavez, Putin and the militants in Lebanon. Also, American conservatives appear to fear and hate him. He has re-distributed wealth to the poorest Iranians. He has been consistently opposed to the American empire and argues for a stronger role of Iran in world affairs. America is truly the most conservative nation on earth in terms of wealth consolidation and ruling class power. So, since he opposes that, how is he a conservative?

Sometimes political labels don't work so well.

It is also somewhat amusing to hear Americans talk about stolen elections. If we substituted "Supreme Court" for "Guardian Council", we would see that our own election in 2000 was pretty similar. I applaud the Iranian people for at least rising up. The American sheeple let our own election theft go on with no protest at all.

 
At 3:34 PM, Blogger matt in dc said...

carl Nyberg -- you can't be serious, can you?

 
At 4:01 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

Manipulación electoral

 
At 4:39 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Didn't large numbers and groups of people who "weren't supposed to" vote for Obama end up voting for him in 2008?

As for "those of us who know Iran," while I tend to believe that there was fraud, to say that this has been categorically "proven" is simply untrue. We need to maintain our standards, even when discussing causes close to our hearts or we become hypocrites.

 
At 5:45 PM, Blogger Maggie said...

@Carl, I disagree with your comment. Anyone who follows election results compares results to previous elections. It is how we look for swings by voters. Duh!

This is an excellent article. It supports what I have believed as soon as I heard the results. Chatham House have provided more evidence of the election fraud that has taken place.

As for hardliners, I would suggest that many of them voted for Rezai the hardliner candidate rather than Ahmadinejad.

I am just an observer and I am not an expert.

 
At 6:05 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

I find it truly sad, that a respected historian could say "The election was stolen. It is there in black and white.", based on one preliminary study, which has probably not had time for proper peer review. Furthermore, the authors of this preliminary study never write that the election was stolen. That is your conclusion, not theirs.

I'm not expert at anything, never claimed to be. But I do see, rather obviously, that for one, the authors of the study chose, without explanation, to only look at the 2005 first round election. They totally ignore the 2005 runoff election. They ignore the fact that no incumbent Iranian president has lost an election, and how incumbency could have influenced the electorate. I wonder, what other facts did they choose to ignore?

 
At 2:28 AM, Anonymous Bill Stearns said...

Seems like most of the regime's apologists have disappeared from your "comments" boards, Juan.

 
At 4:07 PM, Anonymous Doug Edwards said...

I looked at this articles numbers and fraud is not indicated. one percent of 'over vote' is not surprising. and 44% of the reformers voting the other way this time may mean they weren't reformers in 2005, it was just the Bush supporters needed those numbers in 2005 and were lying to us then. These guys are trying to start a war and should be investigated by a bipartisan congress for doing this before someone gets killed!

 

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