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Next Supreme Leader of Iran election
Upcoming election for third Supreme Leader From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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An election for the third supreme leader of Iran will be held following the end of the current tenure of Ali Khamenei. As of July 2025, no person has been officially declared as the heir to Khamenei nor as a nominee, though various sources such as Reuters and BBC News have reported on potential candidates.[1][2]
In 2014, it was reported that the succession of Khamenei is deemed to have been decided but not disclosed publicly.[1][3] Constitutionally, the Assembly of Experts is tasked to select the next leader. Its sixth and current session began after it was elected in 2024 and is scheduled to sit until 2032.
Khamenei has not discussed his replacement. He has said the selection must be made without shame or regard for expediency, rather based on the three principles of "truth, the need of the country and God".[4][5] As of 2024, a four-member council of the Assembly of Experts was examining possible candidates in secrecy while advising the current leader.[6][7] One of the members said that a successor had already been chosen but declined to disclose their identity for their safety.[8]
Prior to his death, President Ebrahim Raisi was often mentioned in the frontrunners for the position. Raisi's death in a helicopter crash in May 2024 cut short his potential candidacy.[9][10][11] Currently, the four potential candidates to succeed Khamenei include his son Mojtaba Khamenei, his close aides Sadiq Larijani and Mohsen Araki, as well as Hassan Khomeini, the grandson of the Islamic Republic's founder Ruhollah Khomeini.
In June 2025, in the wake of the Iran–Israel war, the New York Times reported that Khamenei picked "three senior clerics" for his successorship if he is assassinated.[12]
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Electoral system
The Supreme Leader of Iran is selected by members of the Assembly of Experts to serve a life tenure. According to Article 111 of Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran, if the incumbent Supreme Leader dies in office or is dismissed, the Assembly of Experts should immediately hold a session and appoint a successor.[13] A Provisional Leadership Council consisting of the President, the Chief Justice and one of the clerics of the Guardian Council who is selected by the Expediency Discernment Council, is mandated to carry out the interim duties of the supreme leader until a permanent successor is selected.[13]
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Alleged plans and official plan
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Perspective
In December 2015, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani said a committee in the Assembly of Experts "is examining potential candidates to be the next Supreme Leader". He also said the Assembly would be open to choosing "a council of leaders if needed" instead of a single leader.[1]
During his presidency, Hassan Rouhani was often considered by some as a potential successor.[3] Ahmad Khatami told press in 2016 that a committee made up of three Assembly members had given three names to the supreme leader "to seek his verdict", but later remarked what he said was "hypothetical" and blamed media for misreporting his words.[14] Mohsen Araki, commented in June 2019 that the committee has drafted a "top secret list of prospective supreme leaders" and will present three names to the Assembly "when it is necessary."[14] Hashem Hashemzadeh Herisi confirmed that such a committee exists, adding that the names on the list will not be disclosed. He also stated that the decisions made by the committee will not be fateful because the next leader must be voted by a majority of all members in the assembly.[14] Prior to that, in February 2019 Mohsen Mojtahed Shabestari had categorically dismissed allegations that Ebrahim Raisi and Ahmad Khatami were considered as candidates for the next leader by the assembly, stating that the question "has never been debated at the assembly".[15]
As of 2023, the Assembly of Experts was discussing a potential program to reestablish the post of Vice Supreme Leader, which was last held by Hussein-Ali Montazeri from 1985 to 1989.[16]
In November 2024, government leaker Abbas Palizdar said that Mojtaba Khamenei had quit the seminary to succeed his father.[17] It was later reported by Al Arabiya that according to Assembly of Experts three people had been nominated to replace Khamenei.[18] On 16 November it was reported by Israeli newspaper Ynet that Khamenei picked his son Mojtaba,[19] which was later denied by the pro-government Tehran Times newspaper in January 2025.[20]
Shortly before the Iran-Israel war, Khamenei requested the Assembly of Experts to prepare for the selection of his successor.[21] However, after the United States Air Force and Navy struck nuclear enrichment sites at Fordow, Isfahan, and Natanz during the Iran-Israel war, Khamenei named three individuals who could succeed him,[22] being advised by a three-man committee derived from the Assembly of Experts. While not included amongst the three individuals who Khamenei named as his successor, Mojtaba Khamenei was considered a front-runner alongside Hassan Khomeini.[23]
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Analysis
In 2023, Israeli military intelligence had assessed President Ebrahim Raisi would succeed Khamenei.[24] John Bolton argued the regime would be vulnerable in the event of Khamenei's death.[25] In the aftermath of Raisi's death, Mojtaba Khamenei's status as a potential successor to his father became more plausible, although Ali Khamenei had reportedly opposed this.[26][27][28][29] The Middle East Institute opined that Khamenei appointing his own son as successor would cause conflict within the Iranian political and religious leadership.[30]
Following the 2024 election, 92-year-old Ayatollah Mohammad-Ali Movahedi Kermani became the new chairman of the Assembly of Experts.[31][32]
Ruhollah Khomeini's grandson Hassan Khomeini is also considered a possible successor, however, Iran International asserted he is unlikely due to his "exclusion from the regime's upper echelon" and that was "sidelined after being barred from running for the Assembly of Experts" in 2016.[33]
Potential successors
The persons listed in this section are, according to analyses and comments made by various sources, potential candidates (the names are sorted by age):
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Further reading
- Nader, Alireza; Bohandy, S. R. (2011). The Next Supreme Leader: Succession in the Islamic Republic of Iran (PDF). Santa Monica, California: Rand Corporation. ISBN 9780833051998.
- Opinion Poll: Who Will Be Iran's Next Leader? (in Persian), BBC Persian, 22 February 2016
References
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