Transaction

e748a7b21f4a40e85b8ee325ea44b164e5b867d3eeff3cfdbe0a8b376bfbd46d
Timestamp (utc)
2024-07-30 14:37:53
Fee Paid
0.00000012 BSV
(
0.00286791 BSV
-
0.00286779 BSV
)
Fee Rate
2.159 sat/KB
Version
1
Confirmations
78,720
Size Stats
5,558 B

3 Outputs

Total Output:
0.00286779 BSV
  • jmetaB02e73a67cf00c3cbbae49636ab7f8e50f7c764d7d1811ca2ee256bbc93846312cd@9faad615f6ea5fdee9d594dc657f354f1c749cbdf67d9b9233f02f2ca24bc02arss.item metarss.netM&<item><link>https://www.semafor.com/article/07/30/2024/iran-inaugurate-masoud-pezeshkian-new-president-opportunity-change</link><guid>https://www.semafor.com/article/07/30/2024/iran-inaugurate-masoud-pezeshkian-new-president-opportunity-change</guid><category>news</category><description>Masoud Pezeshkian is no radical, but he could offer a new path forward for the regime, both domestically and with the West.</description><title>Iran inaugurates new president, sparking ‘slim hope’ for change</title><dc:creator>Mizy Clifton</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 30 Jul 2024 12:52:22 +0000</pubDate><enclosure url="https://img.semafor.com/7b9dc9a72455d16a2f962c59a97db61f15bcb6f5-1280x854.png" length="1696475" type="image/png"/><media:thumbnail url="https://img.semafor.com/7b9dc9a72455d16a2f962c59a97db61f15bcb6f5-1280x854.png"/><media:credit> Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader/WANA/Handout via Reuters</media:credit><content:encoded> <![CDATA[ <section><p>Insights from Foreign Affairs, The Guardian, The Economist, and The National</p><h3>The News</h3><p>Iran’s new president Masoud Pezeshkian was inaugurated before parliament Tuesday, two days after Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei gave his official blessing to the doctor-turned-politician for the job, hailing him as “wise, honest, popular, and scholarly” at a ceremony in Tehran.</p><p>Widely seen as the most pro-reform candidate to run in the recent elections, Pezeshkian received nearly 3 million votes more than the other frontrunner, hardliner Saeed Jalil, in a run-off vote.</p><p><br/></p><h3>SIGNALS</h3><strong>Semafor Signals:</strong> Global insights on today's biggest stories.<h3>Pezeshkian may present small window of opportunity for change </h3>Source: Foreign Affairs<p>Although it is broadly true that as president, Pezeshkian is under Khamenei’s thumb, his election may nevertheless one day be remembered as the moment when the Islamic Republic “<a href="https://www.foreignaffairs.com/iran/more-normal-iran-masoud-pezeshkian">decisively shifted</a>” to become a regime governed by a coalition of moderates, Foreign Affairs wrote. Still, the significance of his victory shouldn’t be overstated — turnout was low, and he benefited from rifts splitting the right-wing vote. But despite the slim odds of any change coming to pass, activists believe it exists: “We do not expect the Islamic Republic to go anywhere…But we want to change the few things we can that will make our lives easier, and give us room to breathe,” one told the outlet.</p><h3>Pezeshkian’s plan for diverse cabinet has already stoked backlash </h3>Sources: The Economist, The National<p>An “<a href="https://www.economist.com/middle-east-and-africa/2024/07/11/irans-new-hope-a-cardiologist-president?irclickid=y6sy6QwC%3AxyKT4uwCTUtrX88UkC27nQ5kXnmX40&amp;irgwc=1&amp;utm_medium=affiliates.offer.pd&amp;utm_source=impact-apac&amp;utm_campaign=a.new_july_2024_apac_lp&amp;utm_content=conversion.direct-response.non-subscriber.apac_all_enfactum&amp;utm_term=10078&amp;channel=Impact">early test</a>” of Pezeshkian’s promise of more inclusivity will be his choice of cabinet, The Economist wrote; recruiting women and ethnic minorities would be a good sign. But early indications that Pezeshkian might keep his promise <a href="https://www.thenationalnews.com/opinion/comment/2024/07/25/pezeshkians-push-for-a-diverse-cabinet-has-exposed-divisions-in-iran/">have already stoked controversy</a>, columnist Arash Azizi noted in Emirati outlet The National: His hardline opponents leapt to criticize talk of affirmative action, and an Iranian news agency linked to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps carried the headline “Zero points for Shia.” If Pezeshkian succeeds, some of Iran’s more rebellious groups could be less distrustful of the country’s institutions, but ultimately “the path toward broad-based civic inclusion remains long” for minorities like the Baha’i, who are denied basic rights, Azizi argued.</p><h3> ‘Slim hope’ of improved relations with the West</h3>Sources: The Guardian, European Leadership Network<p>Pezeshkian’s inauguration also creates a “<a href="https://www.theguardian.com/world/article/2024/jul/28/iran-new-president-masoud-pezeshkian-rekindles-feint-hopes-of-rapprochement-with-west">slim hope</a>” of rapprochement with the West, given he was elected on a platform of seeking relief from US sanctions, The Guardian’s diplomatic editor wrote. The West should respond by creating viable pathways to that end, on the condition that Iran immediately rolls back its nuclear program, a Middle East expert told the outlet. But Pezeshkian’s tone toward the West may ultimately remain “<a href="https://europeanleadershipnetwork.org/commentary/can-pezeshkian-fix-irans-relations-with-the-west/">a familiar mix of warnings and historical grievances typical of Islamic Republic officials</a>,” criticizing the US while denying that Iran wants nuclear weapons, and insist that the US must take the first step to repair relations, an expert argued in the European Leadership Network.</p></section> ]]> </content:encoded></item>
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