
According to the official voting results issued on Saturday, 17 women will become members of the 290-seat parliament compared to clerics who only won 16 seats, AFP reports. Although the clerics fall just one seat behind women, their overall number has reached an all-time low.
What is more, female politicians have beaten their previous record as the highest number of seats they managed to get in the past was just 14. Compared to the previous election, the number of women almost doubled.
"As a young woman, I ran to inspire women and give them courage to fight for their rights. I ran to play my role in the destiny of the country and stop extremists from capturing seats in parliament," Fatemeh Hosseini, one of the "winners", said as reported by AP.
Women were not the only ones to celebrate the victory. Election results also showed that reformist and moderate politicians, who are supporters of President Hassan Rouhani, had made an astounding comeback outnumbering their conservative rivals for the first time since 2004. There will be 133 reformists in the new parliament and 123 conservative MPs.
The general trend for clerics has been negative since 1979 with 164 of them being elected in the first elections and 52 in previous ones.
A number of Iran's key politicians are clerics and were MPs in the past including two former presidents and Hassan Rouhani, who served in the parliament from 1980 to 2000.
On Friday, Iran held a second ballot since no candidate won the minimum 25 percent required to pass during the first round of voting on February 26.
The new parliament will begin its session on May 27. Although it has no direct influence on foreign policy, it can back the open policies of Iranian president who seeks to boost his country's economy since the lifting of the sanctions in exchange for the signing of the nuclear deal last year.



the usual pattern, if allowed to come into play... perhaps a little sooner if the people were informed of how their founder was helped by NATO when in exile and allowed to return so freely... as if assisted in setting up the new regime... another 'changing of the guards' pattern... keep the sheeple busy with economic and social distress and they will never ask questions.. 'if they know what's good for them.'