Principlists Pervasive Coalition
- Persian: مردم، مجلس، مدرس "People, Parliament, Modarres"[1]
- Persian: مجلس هشتم، مجلس سرنوشت ملی "8th Parliament, The National Destiny Parliament"[1]
- Politics of Iran
- Political parties
- Elections
Principlists Pervasive Coalition (Persian: ائتلاف فراگیر اصولگرایان) was one of two main principlist coalitions for the 2008 Iranian legislative election, alongside the United Front of Principlists.[4] Candidates endorsed by the coalition were close to Ali Larijani, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf and Mohsen Rezaee.[4]
Beliefs
Iranian "Principalists", or conservatives, emphasize their loyalty to the system of "Guardianship", or rule, by Islamic Jurists established by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. They support Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei and want to preserve the power of the Islamic jurist Supreme Leader.[5] They split from the United Principalists Front in the run up to the Iranian legislative election of 2008 because they believed the pro-Ahmadinejad Sweet Scent of Service faction had been given too many top positions on the electoral lists. However, many candidates are endorsed by both the Broad Coalition and the United Principalists. They have also said that the Parliament of Iran should be more independent from the President of Iran.[6]
Backers
The coalition is believed to be backed by Mayor of Tehran Mohammad Baqer Qalibaf, the former head of the Revolutionary Guards Mohsen Rezaee and the former nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani.[7]
References
- ^ a b c "شعارهای انتخاباتی ائتلاف فراگیر اصولگرایان اعلام شد". Asr-e-Iran. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
- ^ "آرايش سياسي جناحها در مجلس هشتم". Jamejam Online. Archived from the original on September 16, 2016. Retrieved March 10, 2015.
- ^ "نتایج قطعی دور دوم انتخابات مجلس هشتم در 54 حوزه". Farda News. Retrieved March 10, 2015.
- ^ a b "نام خاتمی از عنوان ستاد اصلاح طلبان حذف شد". Radio Farda (in Persian). 12 April 2008. Retrieved 9 February 2016.
- ^ Anyone but Ahmadinejad, By Maziar Bahari NEWSWEEK, Published May 23, 2009, Issue June 1, 2009
- ^ Iran’s conservatives split for parliamentary elections, Daily Times (Pakistan), 2008-03-12, accessed on 2008-04-27
- ^ What's in a name? Iran's elections explained Archived 2011-09-20 at the Wayback Machine, Haaba, 2008-03-10, accessed on 2008-04-27
Preceded by | Principlists parliamentary coalition 2008 With: United Front of Principlists | Succeeded by |
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- Association for Defence of Revolution Values (1996)
- Front of Followers of the Line of the Imam and the Leader (1999)
- Coordination Council of Islamic Revolution Forces (2000)
- Alliance of Builders of Islamic Iran (2003)
- Coalition of Iran's Independent Volunteers (2004)
- Coalition of the Pleasant Scent of Servitude (2006)
- United Front of Principlists (2008)
- Principlists Pervasive Coalition (2008)
- Resistance Front of Islamic Iran (2011)
- Voice of Nation (2012)
- Insight and Islamic Awakening Front (2012)
- Monotheism and Justice Front (2012)
- Supporters of Justice Discourse of Islamic Revolution (2012)
- Principlists Grand Coalition (2016)
- Popular Front of Islamic Revolution Forces (2016)
- Service list (2017)
- Coalition Council of Islamic Revolution Forces (2019)
- Campaign for Justice-seeking Parliament (2020)
- Coalition of the Oppressed and Deprived (1988)
- Coalition of Imam's Line groups (1990s)
- 2nd of Khordad Front (1999)
- Coalition For Iran (2004)
- Reformists Front (2005)
- Reformists Coalition (2006)
- Reformists Coalition (2008)
- Reformists Coalition (2013)
- List of Hope (2016)
- People's Experts (2016)
- Front of Prudence and Development (2016)
- Friends of Hashemi (2020)
- Coalition of Eight Reformist Parties (2020)
- Political parties
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