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Iran Conflict 2026
19APR

Eight clerics to boycott succession vote

3 min read
11:05UTC

At least eight Assembly of Experts members will boycott the emergency session to install Mojtaba Khamenei, accusing the IRGC of coercing the institution that exists to confer religious legitimacy on Iran's highest office.

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Key takeaway

IRGC coercion of a religious body to ratify a theologically under-qualified candidate structurally transforms the Supreme Leader from a religious authority into a military client — potentially severing the theological legitimacy that has underpinned the Islamic Republic since 1979.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Eight members of the 88-person religious council that chooses Iran's supreme leader are refusing to participate, saying they are being coerced by the military (IRGC) and that the candidate lacks the Islamic scholarly credentials the job requires. In a system whose entire claim to authority rests on governance by qualified religious scholars, this is constitutionally serious — analogous to a papal conclave where cardinals boycott because the candidate has not been ordained. The boycotters cannot stop the outcome, but they have placed a permanent asterisk on the new leader's authority.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

For the first time in the Islamic Republic's history, a Supreme Leader appointment may simultaneously lack popular legitimacy and clerical consensus — leaving raw military power as the sole basis of authority. This represents a qualitative transformation of the Iranian system: from a theocratic republic with genuine clerical governance to a military state with theocratic branding.

Root Causes

The IRGC's willingness to coerce the Assembly reflects that the Guards have become the dominant institutional power in Iran — a shift driven by their economic entrenchment (controlling an estimated 20–30% of the economy through affiliated conglomerates) and their operational control of the country's most capable military forces. The theological rationale for the system has progressively become a legitimating narrative for IRGC power rather than a genuine constraint on it.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    The Islamic Republic's theological legitimacy — its foundational claim that governance derives from qualified Islamic jurisprudence — has been functionally replaced by military appointment, a change that cannot be reversed without admitting the coercion occurred.

    Long term · Assessed
  • Risk

    Senior marājiʿ in Najaf and independent Qom clerics who were not coerced may issue counter-rulings or declare the appointment invalid, creating a competing religious authority structure that could mobilise internal dissent.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Consequence

    The eight boycotting members and their clerical networks become the nucleus of a legitimacy-based opposition that the IRGC will need to manage through continued coercion — a sustained internal cost that compounds the regime's wartime governance burden.

    Short term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #22 · IRGC drones hit Azerbaijan; CIA link cut

Iran International· 5 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Eight clerics to boycott succession vote
The boycott documents a fracture inside the institution constitutionally charged with legitimising Iran's Supreme Leader, at the moment that institution is being used under IRGC pressure during wartime to install a candidate who lacks the theological credentials the constitution requires.
Different Perspectives
Global South governments (Indonesia, Brazil, South Africa)
Global South governments (Indonesia, Brazil, South Africa)
Neutrality was possible when the targets were military. 148 dead schoolgirls made it impossible — no government can explain that away to its own citizens.
Trump administration
Trump administration
Oscillating between claiming diplomatic progress and threatening escalation, while deploying additional ground forces to the Gulf.
Israeli security establishment
Israeli security establishment
Fears a rapid, vague US-Iran agreement that freezes military operations before the IDF achieves what it considers full strategic objectives. A senior military official assessed the campaign is 'halfway there' and needs several more weeks.
Iraqi government
Iraqi government
Iraq's force majeure is the position of a non-belligerent whose entire petroleum economy has been paralysed by a war between others — storage full, exports blocked, production being cut with no timeline for resumption.
Russia — Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia
Russia — Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia
Moscow calibrated its position between Gulf states and Iran: abstaining on Resolution 2817 rather than vetoing it, signalling it would not block protection for Gulf states, while refusing to endorse a text that ignores the US-Israeli campaign it regards as the conflict's proximate cause. Russia proposed its own ceasefire text — which failed 4-2-9 — allowing Moscow to claim the peacemaker role while providing Iran with satellite targeting intelligence, a duality consistent with its approach in Syria.
France — President Macron
France — President Macron
France absorbed its first combat death in a conflict it has publicly declined to join. The killing of Chief Warrant Officer Frion in Erbil forces Macron to choose between escalating involvement and accepting casualties from the margins.