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With Khamenei dead, who will be Iran’s next supreme leader?
South China Morning Post
Published 35 minutes ago

With Khamenei dead, who will be Iran’s next supreme leader?

South China Morning Post · Mar 1, 2026 · Collected from RSS

Summary

The death of Iran’s Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei raises paramount questions about the country’s future. And while a clerical panel is tasked with replacing him, succession is a complex matter in Iran’s theocracy. Here is what to know: A clerical council selects a new supreme leader An 88-member panel called the Assembly of Experts appoints the supreme leader. The panel can remove one as well, although that has never happened. The panel consists entirely of Shiite clerics who are...

Full Article

The death of Iran’s Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei raises paramount questions about the country’s future. And while a clerical panel is tasked with replacing him, succession is a complex matter in Iran’s theocracy.Here is what to know:A clerical council selects a new supreme leaderAn 88-member panel called the Assembly of Experts appoints the supreme leader. The panel can remove one as well, although that has never happened.The panel consists entirely of Shiite clerics who are popularly elected every eight years and whose candidacies are approved by the Guardian Council, Iran’s constitutional watchdog. That body is known for disqualifying candidates in various elections in Iran and the Assembly of Experts is no different. The Guardian Council barred former Iranian president Hassan Rowhani, a relative moderate whose administration struck the 2015 nuclear deal with world powers, from election for the Assembly of Experts in March 2024.A temporary leadership council may assume duties in case of delayIranian law says the Assembly of Experts “must, as soon as possible” pick a new supreme leader. But until then, a leadership council can step in and “temporarily assume all the duties of leadership”.The assembly is made up of Iran’s sitting president, the head of the country’s judiciary and a member of the Guardian Council chosen by Iran’s Expediency Council, which advises the supreme leader and settles disputes with parliament. If that were to happen now, Iran’s reformist President Masoud Pezeshkian and hardline judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei would be on that leadership council.


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