Iran president on US candidates: 'Should I prefer bad to worse or worse to bad?'

Hassan Rouhani criticized Clinton and Trump’s ‘accusing and mocking’ behavior during presidential debates, in his first public comment on the US elections

iran hassan rouhani
Iranian president Hassan Rouhani speaks to supporters in Arak, where he spoke out about the US presidential election. Photograph: Presidential Official Website/Handout/EPA

Iranian president Hassan Rouhani on Sunday criticized the US presidential candidates’ behavior during their recent debates.

“Did you see the debate and the way of their speaking, accusing and mocking each other? Do we want such a democracy in our country? Do we want such elections in our country?” Rouhani said, speaking to a crowd in the Iranian city of Arak.

“You see the United States that claims it has had democracy for more than 200 years,” he said in comments broadcast live by state TV. “Look at the country, what the situation is where morality has no place.”

Rouhani said that during his September visit to the United Nations general assembly in New York, he was asked which of the candidates he preferred.

“I said, ‘What? Should I prefer bad to worse or worse to bad?’”

Iranian state TV has broadcast two of the debates between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton in full. It has closely followed the campaign, often highlighting economic and social problems in the US and the most confrontational debate segments.

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Rouhani’s speech was first public comment on the US election. Iran will hold its own presidential election in May 2017, and Rouhani is eligible to seek a second term.

Last month, the hardline former president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said he would not run in the election. Opposition to his candidacy exposed the still-lingering wounds from the widespread unrest that followed his contested 2009 re-election.

Despite a landmark nuclear deal with the US and world powers that went into effect in January, Tehran and Washington have not restored diplomatic ties that were cut after the 1979 Islamic Revolution and US embassy takeover.

The deal capped Iran’s disputed nuclear activities in return for lifting international nuclear-related sanctions.