At least eight members of Iran's Assembly of Experts plan to boycott the emergency online session scheduled for 5 March to formally announce Mojtaba Khamenei as Supreme Leader. The dissenters cited "heavy pressure" from the IRGC and argued that Mojtaba "does not have an established, public clerical and jurisprudential standing." The Assembly confirmed his appointment on 2 March , but the formal public announcement was first delayed — reportedly because Ali Khamenei's burial had been postponed and Iran traditionally does not announce a successor before interment — then abruptly accelerated to an emergency online session held from a location near the Fatima Masumeh Shrine in Qom. The site was chosen for religious symbolism and lower targeting risk after Israel struck the Assembly's Qom headquarters during the succession vote , killing or wounding multiple members.
The dissenters' objection is constitutional. Iran's governing framework requires The Supreme Leader to hold senior jurisprudential credentials — ideally the rank of marja-e taqlid, a status earned through decades of published religious scholarship and recognition by clerical peers. Mojtaba Khamenei, 56, built his career managing his father's intelligence networks and cultivating the IRGC's senior command, not publishing theological treatises. The 1989 succession offers a partial precedent: when Ali Khamenei was selected after Ruhollah Khomeini's death, he too lacked full marja credentials, and the Assembly amended the constitutional requirement to permit a non-marja to serve — an institutional workaround engineered partly by Ahmad Khomeini, Ruhollah's son. But the 1989 transition occurred during peacetime, in a physical assembly, with a functioning state apparatus and a clerical establishment that drove the process.
Mojtaba's installation inverts every element of that precedent. It is conducted via video call from an undisclosed location, under active bombardment, with the IRGC — not the clerical hierarchy — as the driving force. Eight boycotting members from an 88-seat body cannot block the appointment. What they have done is ensure the fracture is on the record: the institution designed to confer religious authority on Iran's highest office acted under military coercion, during the Islamic Republic's most serious external conflict in its 47-year history, to install a candidate whose qualifications it could not unanimously endorse. A Supreme Leader who enters office over documented dissent from the selecting body, announced via video link from a location chosen because the previous venue was bombed, carries a thinner institutional mandate than any predecessor.
