Algeria Iran History of political systems Historically Iranians were ruled by an
absolute monarchy for
several thousand years, at least since the time of the
Achaemenid Empire (550 B.C.E.) until the
Constitutional Revolution in the early 20th century. The Constitutional Revolution in 1906 replaced the
absolute monarchy with a
constitutional monarchy. The
constitution went under several revisions during the following decades. During
World War II Iran stayed neutral but in 1941 the
Allies (the
USSR and
Great Britain)
invaded Iran and replaced Iran's Shah
Reza Pahlavi (who was perceived as being pro-German) with his son
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi to protect their access to Iranian oil, and to secure routes to ship western military aid to the Soviet Union.
Iran's parliamentary government led by Prime Minister
Mohammed Mosaddeq was toppled in a
1953 coup d'état by royalist forces supported and funded by
CIA and
MI6 after
Mohammed Mosaddeq nationalized Iranian oil. Shah
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi became the preeminent leader in Iran, and instated
Fazlollah Zahedi from the military as the new Prime Minister.
United States has considered the Shah as a close ally and Iran as its main base in the
Middle East. The Shah also tried to modernize Iran's economy and westernize Iran's culture. These and other policies contributed to alienating nationalists, leftists, and religious groups. The monarchy was overthrown in 1979 by the
Iranian Revolution. In the same year a referendum was held by
Ruhollah Khomeini, that asked whether there should be an 'Islamic Republic' or not. The
1979 referendum (in favor of an Islamic Republic) got 98% support of those who voted. The constitution was modeled on the 1958 constitution of the
French Fifth Republic by the
Assembly of Experts for Constitution (who were elected by direct popular vote) and Khomeini made himself the new Supreme Leader of Iran. The constitution received above 99% support in another
1979 referendum. After Khomeini's death, the
Assembly of Experts (which is made of Islamic scholars elected by direct vote) appointed
Ali Khamenei as the new Supreme Leader. The constitution was also amended through a
referendum in 1989 with 97% support a few months before
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini died increasing the powers of
Supreme Leader. Iran holds regular national elections by universal suffrage for all citizens (regardless of race, religion, or sex, who are of voting age) for electing the
President, members of
Parliament,
Assembly of Experts,
City and Village Councils where political parties support candidates.
Issues with the current political system and
Hassan Rouhani with Swedish Prime Minister
Stefan Löfven, Tehran, 2017 The current political system in Iran was designed to allow Iranians to decide their future by themselves without being oppressed by authorities, but in practice only allows a limited democracy. One of the main problems of
Iran's system is the consolidation of too much power in the hands of the
Supreme Leader of Iran who is elected by the
Assembly of Experts with no
term limit (unless the Assembly of Experts decides to remove him, which has never happened). The power of the Supreme Leader under
Iran's constitution is almost unlimited and unrestricted in practice. This combined with the view that he is the representative of God held by some religious groups, being the head of the security and armed forces, and controlling the official state media (the radio and television are restricted to state radio and television) makes him immune from any kind of criticism and unchallengeable. Critics of the system or the Supreme Leader are punished severely. Critical newspapers and political parties are closed, social and political activists like writers, journalists, human right activists, university students, union leaders, lawyers, and politicians are jailed for unreasonably long periods for making simple criticism against the Supreme Leader, the Islamic Republic system,
Islam and
Shia doctrines, the government, and other officials. They have been even threatened by death sentence (though all such verdict in recent years have been dropped in higher courts in recent years) and some have been assassinated by the
Ministry of Intelligence and militias in the past (no such case has been reported in recent years). Another main problem is the closed loop in the electoral system, the elected
Assembly of Experts elects the
Supreme Leader, so in theory he is elected
indirectly by popular vote, but in practice the system does not satisfy the criteria for a free election since the
Supreme Leader appoints the members of the
Guardian Council who in turn vet the candidates for all elections including the elections for
Assembly of Experts. This loop limits the possible candidates to those agreeing with the views held by
Supreme Leader and he has the final say over all important issues. Several articles of the
constitution of Iran about political freedoms and minority rights (e.g. education in mother language for language minorities) have not been applied at all. The fourth unchangeable article of constitution states that all other articles of the constitution and all other laws are void if they violate Islamic rules, and the
Guardian Council is given the duty of interpreting the constitution and verifying that all laws passed the parliament are not against Islamic laws (
censorship in Islamic societies). Other problems include the issues with the
rights of racial and religious minorities, influence and involvement of armed forces especially the
Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and
Basij in political activities,
censorship in Iran,
corruption in Iran, problems with security forces like police and militias like
Ansar-e Hezbollah.
Public opinion of Iranians regarding the political system of 2011–2012 Polls in 2011 and 2012 in Iran by a number of respected Western polling organizations showed that a considerable majority of Iranians supported the system, including the religious institutions, and trusted the system's handling of elections (including the disputed
presidential elections in 2009). Some Iranians and political activists dispute the results of these polls arguing that the results of these polls cannot be trusted because people fear to express their real opinion and the limitations on the follow of information allows the state to control the opinion of people living in more traditional parts of the country. Some of these polling organizations have responded to these claims and defended their results as correctly showing the current opinion of Iranians. The polls also showed a divide between the population living in large modern cities like
Tehran and people living in other more traditional and conservative parts of the country like rural areas and smaller cities.
Iraq Israel Israel is a parliamentary democracy represented by a large number of parties, with universal suffrage for all citizens, regardless of race, religion, sex, or sexual orientation, who are of voting age. Often recognized as the only functional democracy in the Middle East, Israel has been a
Jewish and democratic state since its establishment in 1948, with an elected government led by a
prime minister. However, the application of democracy to
Israel's Palestinian citizens and the selective application of Israeli democracy in the
Israeli-occupied Palestinian territories have been criticized. The claim that Israel's policies for Palestinians
amount to apartheid has been affirmed by the Israeli human rights organizations
B'tselem and
Yesh Din, and international human rights organizations such as Amnesty International and
Human Rights Watch.
Israeli-occupied territories Some scholars and commentators, including
Ilan Pappé,
Baruch Kimmerling, and
Meron Benvenisti, have characterized Israel as a
Herrenvolk democracy due to Israel's
de facto control of the occupied territories whose native inhabitants may not vote in Israeli elections.
Henry Siegman, a former national director of the
American Jewish Congress, has said that the network of
settlements in the West Bank has created an "irreversible colonial project" aimed to foreclose the possibility of a viable
Palestinian state. Accusations of Israel of apartheid were welcomed by Palestinians and the
Arab League. In 2022, Michael Lynk, a Canadian law professor
appointed by the UN Human Rights Council said that the situation met the legal definition of apartheid, and concluded: "Israel has imposed upon Palestine an apartheid reality in a post-apartheid world". Subsequent reports from his successor,
Francesca Albanese, and from
Permanent United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Israel Palestine conflict chair Navi Pillay echoed the opinion. In February 2024, the
ICJ held public hearings in regards to the legal consequences arising from the policies and practices of Israel in the occupied Palestinian territory including East Jerusalem. During the hearings, 24 states and three international organizations said that Israeli practices amount to a breach of the prohibition of apartheid and/or amount to prohibited acts of racial discrimination. The
International Court of Justice in its
2024 advisory opinion found that Israel's occupation of the Palestinian territories constitutes systemic discrimination and is in breach of Article 3 of the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination. The opinion is silent as to whether the discrimination amounts to apartheid; individual judges were split on the question. According to
Henry Siegman, Israel has "crossed the threshold from 'the only democracy in the Middle East' to the only apartheid regime in the Western world". He argues that denying Palestinians both self-determination and Israeli citizenship amounts to a "double disenfranchisement", which when based on ethnicity amounts to racism, and that reserving democracy for privileged citizens and keeping others "behind checkpoints and barbed wire fences" is the opposite of democracy. Amnesty's claim of apartheid in Israel was criticised by politicians and representatives from Israel and its closest allies such as, the US, the UK, the
European Commission, Australia, Netherlands and Germany.
Sammy Smooha, Ilan Peleg,
Nachman Ben-Yehuda,
Adi Ophir, have asserted that characterizing Israel as
Herrenvolk democracy is incorrect, variously describing Israel as a
liberal democracy,
ethnic democracy,
illiberal democracy or a
hybrid regime.
Palestine Following the establishment of
Mandatory Palestine, elections of the
Jewish community to the
Assembly of Representatives (Mandatory Palestine) started with the
1920 Assembly of Representatives election. Due to an Arab boycott of the
1923 Palestinian Legislative Council election by the fifth
Palestine Arab Congress the results of this election were annulled and an Advisory Council was appointed instead. The first
legislative and presidential elections by the
Palestinian National Authority were held in 1996 and the first
local elections were held in January–May 2005. Previous municipal elections were held in 1972 and 1976, organized by the
Israeli government. The most recent elections held in the
West Bank were the
2021–22 Palestinian local elections. The 2024 V-Dem Democracy indices ranked the
Gaza Strip and the West Bank separately, classifying the West Bank as an "electoral autocracy" and the Gaza Strip as a "closed autocracy."
Jordan Kuwait Lebanon Lebanon has traditionally enjoyed a
confessional democratic system, with certain high-profile positions in the government and seats in the parliament reserved for specified religions and confessions. A large number of political parties with very different ideologies are active in the
Parliament of Lebanon, but most of them form political alliances with other groups of similar interests.
Political fragmentation in Lebanon contributes to
political inefficiency. The 2024
V-Dem Democracy report stated that Lebanon is
autocratizing. Lebanon was ranked 112th electoral democracy in the world according to the
V-Dem Democracy Indices published in 2024.
Morocco Mauritania Tunisia The
V-Dem Democracy Report identified for the year 2023 U-Turn democratization in Tunisia. Turkey was democratizing in the 1960s, before experiencing a resurgence of authoritarianism following the
1980 Turkish coup d'état. After the
1983 Turkish general election, a period of democratization followed. Under
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and the
AK Party, Turkey has experienced increasing authoritarianism, democratic backsliding, and suppression of dissent. Scholars have characterized Turkey as an
ethnocracy, and some argue that it has never been a democracy due to its
lackluster human rights record and
history of coup attempts. ==Democratization==