THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary-April 14, 2017- Topic 2
Ahmadinejad
bid for Presidency
Populist’s
return

He began as a favourite of the
ayatollahs, but during his second term he had a turbulent relationship with
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader, who asked him not to run for
President again. Mr. Ahmadinejad’s defiant return to the race shows the growing
significance of hard-line politics in a charged region. As successor to the
mild-mannered reformist Mohammad Khatami, he toed a strident line on Israel and
the U.S., refusing to meaningfully negotiate with the West over Iran’s nuclear
programme despite crippling economic sanctions. This election is crucial for
Iran as it is seen as a referendum on the nuclear deal it reached in 2015 with
global powers. President Hassan Rouhani, who championed the deal on the promise
that better ties with the West would help improve Iran’s economy, is expected
to seek re-election. He faces challenges from hardliners, who say Iran needs a
stronger leader who can stand up to Donald Trump’s America. The rising
anti-Iran rhetoric of the Trump administration, which imposed new sanctions on
Tehran over a missile test, has given the hardliners a fresh handle.
Iran’s
election is a complex process that is partially managed and partially reflects
the popular will. At least 120 people have registered as candidates. The
clerical Guardian Council will vet the candidates and publish the final list on
April 27, removing most dissidents. Thereafter the election is expected to be
free. It is not clear if Mr. Ahmadinejad intends to stay as a candidate or
plans to shape the election agenda in favour of the hardliners. As of now, the
most powerful conservative candidate is Ebrahim Raisi, a close ally of
Ayatollah Khamenei and a clear favourite of the clerical establishment. For the
conservatives, this is an opportunity to reclaim the presidency — one of the
three main pillars of the Iranian state, but the only one with a popular
mandate — and reclaim legitimacy for their hard-line agenda. For the moderates,
the challenge is to push back the strongman narrative of the conservatives and
shape the agenda around economic development and incremental freedoms, as
opposed to strengthening theocracy and a stand-off with the West. In 2013, Mr.
Rouhani had shown the political aptitude to stitch together an alliance with
moderates as well as conservatives who had fallen out with the clerical
establishment, while cashing in on popular impatience with the Ahmadinejad
government. It is time the political climate changed. It may take greater
political guile for Mr. Rouhani to withstand the hardliners’ campaign at a time
when economic troubles and regional challenges remain and the U.S. is again
taking a confrontationist stance towards Tehran.
Vocabulary
Sprang: move or
jump suddenly or rapidly upward or forward.
Example: I sprang
out of bed
Synonyms: leap, jump, bound, vault, hop; appear
suddenly
Firebrand: a person
who is passionate about a particular cause, typically inciting change and
taking radical action.
Example: A
political firebrand
Synonyms: radical, revolutionary, agitator, rabble-rouser, incendiary
Turbulent: characterized
by conflict, disorder, or confusion.
Example: The
country's turbulent 20-year history
Synonyms: tempestuous, stormy, unstable, unsettled, tumultuous
Defiant: showing
defiance.
Example: She was in
a defiant mood
Synonyms: intransigent, resistant, obstinate, uncooperative, noncompliant
Reformist: supporting
or advancing gradual reform rather than abolition or revolution.
Example: In the
past, the Democrats combined their anti-communism with liberal reformist
policies.
Toed: walk with
the toes pointed in
Example: He toes
out when he walks
Strident: loud and
harsh.
Example: His voice
had become increasingly sharp, almost strident
Synonyms: harsh, raucous, rough, grating, rasping, jarring, loud
Dissident: in
opposition to official policy.
Example: There is
only one explicitly dissident voice to be heard
Synonyms: dissenting, disagreeing, opposing, objecting, protesting
Conservative: a person
who is averse to change and holds to traditional values and attitudes,
typically in relation to politics.
Example: They saw
fascists as more patriotic and determined than traditional conservatives .
Synonyms: right-winger, reactionary, rightist, diehard, Republican
Reclaim: retrieve
or recover something previously lost, given, or paid); obtain the return of.
Example: He
returned three years later to reclaim his title as director of advertising
Synonyms: get back, recoup, claim
back, recover, regain, retrieve
Theocracy: a system
of government in which priests rule in the name of God or a god.
Example: Iran has made the transition
in the last twenty years from a nominal constitutional monarchy to a democratic
theocracy