In 2006, two elections were held simultaneously:
Assembly of Experts and
local elections. The council reached a joint electoral list; however, newly founded reformist
National Trust Party led by
Mehdi Karroubi decided to issue its own list and endorsed some principlist candidates for
Assembly of Experts. In the
2008 parliamentary election, despite many reformists being disqualified, the front compromised to support a shared list of candidates, named "Reformists Coalition". The
National Trust Party endorsed its own candidates. Reformists were defeated in all three elections.
Green movement In the
2009 Iranian presidential election, the council released a statement announcing its support for
Mir Hossein Mousavi. Amidst
protests against the election results the council called for nonviolent protests against the government. On the anniversary of the 1979
Iranian revolution, they issued a statement, saying "We will show all of the small-minded people who sit on the thrones as rulers, and label any opposition as tools of foreign enemies, the fate of single-voiced [autocratic] systems and establishments ... We come to scream on behalf of the political prisoners, most of whom were present in the 1357 [1979] revolution and tell them [the authorities] that in lieu of imprisonments and violence against the people, you must return to the fundamentals and the original values". In September 2010, a court declared that two leading parties of the coalition, the Islamic Iran Participation Front and the Mojahedin of the Islamic Revolution Organization, were to be banned. The two parties, alongside the
Office for Strengthening Unity, have not attended the council sessions since due to pressures. Despite the decision, members of the council, including the
Democracy Party, the
Islamic Labour Party and
Worker House decided to run for the elections outside the council. While the council's position was interpreted as an "election boycott" by some, Khatami unexpectedly cast his vote in the rural
Damavand County, despite the fact he lives in Tehran, to "keep the windows to reformism open." In the
2013 Iranian presidential election, the council endorsed
Hassan Rouhani after Khatami convinced
Mohammad Reza Aref to withdraw from the race. With Rouhani taking the office, the appointment of some reformist figures in his cabinet offered the reformist camp a lifeline. In the
2013 local elections, the council made up the "Reformists Coalition" list, including moderate reformists and some 'not-so-familiar names' for the City Council of Tehran. The results showed a swing towards reformist candidates nationwide, and in Tehran they won 13 seats out of 31. == Membership ==