Majlis speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf told Tasnim on Monday 1 June that no memorandum of understanding will be ratified "until we are certain the rights of the Iranian people have been upheld" 1. The Majlis is Iran's 290-seat parliament; Ghalibaf, a former Revolutionary Guard commander, leads the bloc that voted 221-0 to suspend cooperation with the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the United Nations nuclear watchdog. His statement pre-commits the chamber to refusing a deal whose text it has not yet seen.
The refusal lands the same week Trump returned a revised text demanding Iran's enriched-uranium stockpile be destroyed, a draft Iran's own security council has framed as a 10-point victory that recognises its enrichment . Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi is negotiating that document, and a public pre-refusal from the speaker hands the Guard a domestic veto over whatever Araghchi brings home.
Much of that veto reads as theatre. Iran's war posture and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) budget run through The Supreme Leader's office, not the parliament, so a chamber that never controlled the instrument cannot bind the war by refusing to ratify it. What the refusal does change is the negotiating floor: every public condition Ghalibaf sets in advance becomes a line Araghchi cannot trade away without being seen to sell out the rights the speaker invoked.
