Yes and no, because the concept I just tried to mention here, engineering elections, from time to time this goes differently, because first the regime wants to use the election to show the world that we are a democratic regime. We have elections. We have elected people. On the other hand, it wants to make sure those who are loyal to the regime can go through this election.
Sometimes things don't happen the way they want. For instance, they disqualified Hashemi Rafsanjani, a very powerful man in the country, but they qualified Mr. Rouhani, who seems to carry the same agenda for having a better relation with the international community, and actually having a better domestic policy, and who is concerned about human rights issues, although the judiciary is independent from government.
Sometimes even though an election is manufactured, as you say—I say engineered; it doesn't matter which word is used—you find that people can navigate through the system. That is our hope, and we think if the international community puts pressure on Iran's government and resumes this pressure for the next two years, we may have competitive elections. It's not a free election, but still you can feel that people have representatives inside the government.