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The Islamic Consultative Assembly (Persian: مجلس شورای اسلامی, romanizedMajles-e Shurâ-ye Eslâmi), also called the Iranian Parliament, the Iranian Majles (Arabicised spelling Majlis) or ICA, is the unicameral national legislative body of Iran. The parliament currently consists of 290 representatives, an increase from the previous 270 seats since the 18 February 2000 election.[citation needed]

History

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Islamic Republic of Iran

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Following the Iranian Revolution of 1979, the Senate of Iran was abolished and effectively succeeded by the Guardian Council, maintaining the bicameral structure of the Iranian legislature.[citation needed] In the 1989 constitutional revision, the National Consultative Assembly was renamed the Islamic Consultative Assembly.[citation needed]

Since the Iranian Revolution, the Parliament of Iran has been led by six chairmen. Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani served as the inaugural chairman from 1980 to 1989. Subsequently, Mehdi Karroubi held the position in two separate terms (1989–1992 and 2000–2004), followed by Ali Akbar Nategh-Nouri (1992–2000), Gholam-Ali Haddad-Adel (2004–2008), Ali Larijani (2008–2020), and, since 2020, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf.[citation needed]

Throughout its history, the parliament's character has evolved from being a "debating chamber for notables" to a "club for the shah's placemen" during the Pahlavi era. In the era of the Islamic Republic, it has shifted to being a body primarily influenced by members of the "propertied middle class."[2][3]

2017 attack

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On 7 June 2017, there were shootings at the Iranian parliament and at the shrine of Ayatollah Khomeini.[4] Gunmen opened fire at the Iranian Parliament and the mausoleum of religious leader Ayatollah Khomeini in Tehran. The attack on the mausoleum reportedly left 17 persons dead and more than 30 people injured. The parliament was attacked by four gunmen which left seven to eight people injured. Both attacks took place around the same time and appear to have been coordinated.

Functions

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The Islamic Consultative Assembly holds the authority to legislate laws on all matters within the boundaries defined by the Constitution.[5] Nevertheless, it is restricted from enacting laws that contradict the fundamental principles of the official religion of the nation (Islam) or the Constitution itself.[6]

Government bills are submitted to the Islamic Consultative Assembly only after obtaining the approval of the Council of Ministers.[7]

The Islamic Consultative Assembly possesses the prerogative to investigate and scrutinize all matters concerning the country.[8]

International treaties, protocols, contracts, and agreements necessitate approval from the Islamic Consultative Assembly.[9]

Sanctioning and obtaining national or international loans or grants by the government requires ratification from the Islamic Consultative Assembly.[10]

The President must secure a vote of confidence from the Assembly, through a Council of Ministers approval, upon forming the government and prior to conducting any other business.[11]

In the event that at least one-fourth of the total members of the Islamic Consultative Assembly raise a question to the President, or if any Assembly member poses a question to a minister regarding their duties, the President or the minister is obligated to attend the Assembly and address the query.[12]

All legislation endorsed by the Islamic Consultative Assembly must be submitted to the Guardian Council. Within a maximum of ten days from its receipt, the Guardian Council must review the legislation to ensure its compatibility with Islamic criteria and the Constitution. If any incompatibility is identified, the legislation is returned to the Assembly for further review. Otherwise, the legislation is deemed enforceable.[13]

The Mellat Polling Center is an affiliated institution of the Research Center of the Islamic Consultative Assembly. It provides public opinion research to support evidence-based legislation and policymaking.[14]

Eligibility

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People need to sign up online and upload their university degree document. Candidates need to be 30 at least and 75 years maximum, have a master's degree or equal Level 3 Islamic seminary, and be Iranian born.[15]

Membership

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Composition of the parliament by province (excluding seats reserved for religious minority groups).
Yellow cartouche
Red cartouche
Iranian members of parliament taking selfies with Federica Mogherini, 2017

Currently, there are 290 members of Parliament, elected for a four-year term.[citation needed] There are five seats reserved for religious minorities (1.7% of the total members), with two for the Armenians and one each for the Assyrians, Jews and Zoroastrians.[citation needed] About 8% of the parliament are women, while the global average is 13%.[16]

The parliament can force the dismissal of cabinet ministers through no-confidence votes and can impeach the president for misconduct in office. Although the executive proposes most new laws, individual deputies of the parliament also may introduce legislation. Deputies also may propose amendments to bills being debated. The parliament also drafts legislation, ratifies international treaties, and approves the national budget.[citation needed]

All candidates running for election, and proposed legislation from the assembly must be approved by the Guardian Council. Candidates must pledge in writing that they are committed, in theory and in practice, to the Iranian constitution.[citation needed]

Constituencies

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The parliament currently has 207 constituencies, including the five reserved seats for religious minorities. The remaining 202 constituencies are territorial, each covering one or more of Iran's 368 counties.

Leadership

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Members of Parliament elect their speaker and deputy speakers during the first session of Parliament for a one-year term. Every year, almost always in May, elections for new speakers are held in which incumbents may be re-elected.

The current Speaker of Parliament is Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, with First Deputy Speaker Hamid-Reza Haji Babaee and Second Deputy Speaker Ali Nikzad.

Commissions/Fractions

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Hack

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Prior to the 1 March legislative election, on February 14, 2024, the Assembly servers were hacked, revealing monthly payments of 270 million tomans to members. The following day, the voting system was hacked, and journalists were barred from entering.[18][19][20]

Current composition

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The last election of Parliament of Iran were held on 1 March 2024 and a second round was held on 10 May 2024 in those 22 districts where no candidate received 20% or more of the votes cast. More than 48,000 candidates registered,[21] but leaving about 15,000 candidates to run for the 290 seats representing the 31 provinces.[22] The final results showed that principlists won 233 of 290 seats in the assembly.[23]

Term Composition
3rd
Left Right
4th
Left Right
5th
Hezbollah Assembly Ind. Hezbollah
6th
2nd of Khordad Ind. Minority
7th
Imam's Line Harmony Transform. Principlists
8th
Imam's Line Principlists Islamic Revolution
9th
Ind. Followers of Wilayat Principlists
10th
Hope Wilayi Ind. Wilayi
11th
Ind. Islamic Revolution
12th
Reformists Independent Principlists

Historical composition

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Building

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Exterior view of the parliament building

After 1979, the Parliament convened at the building that used to house the Senate of Iran. A new building for the Assembly was constructed at Baharestan Square in central Tehran, near the old Iranian Parliament building that had been used from 1906 to 1979. After several debates, the move was finally approved in 2004. The first session of the Parliament in the new building was held on 16 November 2004.

The old building is depicted on the reverse of the Iranian 100 rial banknote.[24]

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See also

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Islamic Consultative Assembly (Persian: Majles-e Shurā-ye Eslāmi), also known as the Majlis, is the unicameral national legislature of the Islamic Republic of Iran.[1] It comprises 290 representatives elected by direct popular vote from 207 multi-member electoral districts for four-year terms.[1][2] Under Articles 62–90 of the Iranian Constitution, the Assembly exercises legislative authority, including the power to enact laws, approve the national budget, summon government officials for questioning, and impeach ministers, though all legislation must conform to Islamic jurisprudence and constitutional principles as vetted by the Guardian Council.[3][4] While ostensibly representing popular sovereignty in Iran's hybrid theocratic-republican system, the Assembly's effectiveness is constrained by the unelected Guardian Council, which disqualifies candidates deemed insufficiently loyal to the regime's Islamist ideology, often resulting in dominance by conservative factions aligned with the Supreme Leader.[5] Recent elections, such as those in 2024, have seen historically low voter turnout—around 41%—reflecting widespread disillusionment amid economic hardships and restricted political pluralism.[6] The body traces its origins to the 1906 Persian Constitution establishing Iran's first Majlis, but the post-1979 revolutionary framework subordinated it to clerical oversight, transforming it into a consultative rather than sovereign parliament.[7] Notable for its role in vetting executive appointments and occasionally challenging government policies—such as through budget scrutiny or ministerial impeachments—the Assembly has nonetheless ratified key hardline measures, including nuclear deal scrutiny and sanctions responses, underscoring its alignment with the Islamic Republic's foreign policy priorities over domestic reform demands.[8] Controversies include allegations of corruption, factional infighting, and complicity in suppressing dissent, as evidenced by parliamentary support for security forces during nationwide protests.[4]

History

Origins in the Persian Constitutional Revolution

The Persian Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1911 arose from widespread discontent with the Qajar dynasty's autocratic rule, exacerbated by economic hardships, arbitrary taxation, and concessions granted to foreign powers for loans and trade privileges. Protests began in December 1905 when merchants and guild members sought refuge in the British legation and royal mosque in Tehran, demanding a house of justice to address grievances against corrupt officials. This bast movement expanded, involving intellectuals, bazaar traders, and segments of the Shia clergy who viewed the shah's absolutism as incompatible with Islamic principles of consultation and justice. By mid-1906, mass demonstrations forced Mozaffar ad-Din Shah to concede, issuing a royal decree on August 5, 1906, promising an elective assembly to represent the people and limit monarchical power.[9] Elections for the first Majlis, or National Consultative Assembly, proceeded under a September 9, 1906, electoral law that apportioned seats by class and region, favoring urban elites and landowners while excluding many rural and nomadic groups. The assembly convened on October 7, 1906, in Tehran, marking Iran's initial experiment with representative governance amid ongoing revolutionary fervor. Its primary task became drafting a constitution to codify separation of powers, elective representation, and royal accountability, drawing partial inspiration from Belgian and French models but rooted in demands for fiscal transparency and reduced foreign influence. The Fundamental Laws were ratified by the Majlis and signed by the ailing shah on December 30, 1906, just before his death, establishing the Majlis as the lower house with authority over budgets and legislation, though upper house provisions for clerics remained unrealized initially.[10][11] Early sessions emphasized oversight of state finances, scrutinizing the shah's debts and foreign concessions like the 1872 Reuter loan and tobacco monopoly, which had drained national resources without commensurate benefits. The Majlis sought to nationalize revenues from customs and oil prospects, reflecting causal tensions between modernization imperatives and traditional authority structures vulnerable to external predation. Implementation proved inconsistent, as the assembly's powers clashed with entrenched court interests, foreshadowing conflicts under successor Mohammad Ali Shah, yet the 1906 Majlis laid foundational precedents for legislative checks on executive absolutism.[9][11]

Operations Under the Pahlavi Dynasty

Under Reza Shah Pahlavi, who ascended as Shah on December 12, 1925, following a Majlis declaration deposing the Qajar dynasty, the assembly functioned largely as a mechanism to endorse the monarch's authoritarian modernization agenda rather than as an independent legislative body.[12] The Majlis approved key reforms, including the 1931 legislation redefining Shari'a courts' jurisdiction to prioritize secular Western-inspired codes, facilitating Reza Shah's secularization drives such as compulsory unveiling of women in 1936 and the expansion of a centralized military.[13] Infrastructure projects, like the Trans-Iranian Railway completed in 1938, were similarly rubber-stamped, with the assembly's role confined to formal ratification amid manipulated elections and the 1928 ban on political parties, which eliminated opposition and ensured loyalist dominance.[14] This subordination reflected Reza Shah's consolidation of power, where the Majlis served regime stability over genuine representation, as bureaucratic extensions of the Pahlavi court operated beyond parliamentary oversight.[15] Following Reza Shah's forced abdication on September 16, 1941, amid Allied occupation during World War II, the Majlis briefly revived with greater pluralism under his son, Mohammad Reza Shah, who assumed the throne on September 28, 1941; however, post-1953 coup dynamics reimposed monarchical control, with the assembly approving initiatives like the 1963 White Revolution land reforms and women's suffrage while sidelined from substantive debate.[16] Elections grew increasingly engineered, culminating in the March 2, 1975, establishment of the Rastakhiz Party as Iran's sole legal entity, absorbing all prior factions and requiring compulsory membership for citizens, which formalized single-party rule and Majlis composition under regime-vetted candidates.[17] This eroded public legitimacy, as evidenced by opposition boycotts and perceptions of the assembly as a facade, prioritizing elite patronage over electoral integrity.[18] The Majlis's diminished independence stemmed causally from intertwined factors of surging oil revenues and the SAVAK security apparatus, established in 1957 to suppress dissent. Oil income, which quadrupled after the 1973 OPEC embargo to over $20 billion annually by 1977, enabled direct executive funding of lavish projects and military spending—bypassing legislative budget scrutiny and reducing incentives for parliamentary negotiation or taxation reforms.[19] Concurrently, SAVAK's pervasive surveillance and arrests of over 3,000 political opponents yearly by the mid-1970s ensured Majlis deputies' compliance, as infiltration and coercion deterred independent voices, subordinating the body to regime preservation amid widening socioeconomic disparities from uneven oil distribution.[20] This dynamic prioritized monarchical centralization, rendering the assembly a nominal institution despite its constitutional facade.[21]

Reestablishment Following the 1979 Islamic Revolution

Following the 1979 Iranian Revolution, the National Consultative Assembly (Majlis) established under the Pahlavi monarchy was dissolved as part of the transitional government's restructuring toward an Islamic republic.[22] Elections for the newly designated Islamic Consultative Assembly were held on March 14 and May 9, 1980, under the oversight of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the revolution's leader and de facto supreme authority, with voter turnout reaching 52.14% among 20.8 million eligible voters.[23][24] The assembly initially comprised 270 members, representing a unicameral legislature tasked with lawmaking subject to Islamic jurisprudence.[22] The 1979 Constitution, approved by referendum on December 2-3, 1979, and later amended in 1989, enshrined the Islamic Consultative Assembly as the primary legislative body, empowered to enact laws on all matters within the framework of Islamic principles and constitutional limits (Article 62).[25] However, this republican structure was subordinated to the doctrine of velayat-e faqih (guardianship of the Islamic jurist), with the assembly's output requiring approval from the Guardian Council—half clerical appointees—to ensure conformity with Sharia and the constitution (Articles 91-99).[25] The first post-revolution session convened in late May 1980, shortly before the Iran-Iraq War erupted on September 22, 1980, prompting the assembly to prioritize emergency war powers, including mobilization decrees and budget reallocations for defense.[23] This reconfiguration contrasted the constitution's emphasis on elected representation with entrenched theocratic mechanisms, as the Guardian Council's veto authority over legislation—intended to safeguard Islamic orthodoxy—quickly manifested in the 1980s through rejections of bills deemed insufficiently aligned with religious rulings, foreshadowing ongoing tensions between popular sovereignty and clerical dominance.[25] By the early 1980s, such clerical oversight bodies, including preliminary reviews by bodies like the Revolutionary Council, had already nullified several Majlis initiatives, establishing a pattern where legislative proposals required multiple revisions to pass muster.[22] The assembly's seat count was later expanded to 290 members effective from the 2000 elections, reflecting adjustments to population and representation needs.

Major Legislative Milestones and Crises Since 1979

Following the 1979 Revolution, the Islamic Consultative Assembly prioritized legislation consolidating revolutionary economic policies, including the nationalization of banks and insurance companies in June 1979, which merged 36 private banks into nine state-controlled entities to align the financial sector with Islamic principles and state oversight.[26] In 1981 and 1984, the Assembly passed bills attempting to nationalize foreign trade, though both were vetoed by the Guardian Council, reflecting tensions between economic centralization efforts and clerical oversight amid wartime constraints during the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988).[27] These measures, enacted under severe external pressures including U.S. sanctions and Iraqi invasions, emphasized resource mobilization for defense, with the Assembly approving annual budgets that funneled oil revenues toward military expenditures, sustaining Iran's war effort but exacerbating inflation and shortages without fostering structural reforms.[28] The 2009 Green Movement protests, triggered by disputed presidential election results on June 12, tested the Assembly's responsiveness, as mass demonstrations challenged regime legitimacy and demanded electoral transparency. While a minority of deputies voiced sympathy for protesters' grievances, the Assembly as a body aligned with hardline factions, endorsing the Supreme Leader's validation of the results and supporting security crackdowns rather than initiating oversight legislation or investigations into fraud allegations, thereby prioritizing institutional stability over accountability.[29] This alignment, amid over 100 show trials and arrests of opposition figures, underscored the Assembly's limited autonomy in crises perceived as existential threats to the theocratic order.[30] In the nuclear domain, the Assembly played a contentious oversight role in the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), forming a special committee on June 21, 2015, to scrutinize the accord after its interim framework announcement, delaying votes for at least 80 days to incorporate domestic implementation conditions.[31] Ultimately approving the deal in October 2015 with appended legislation mandating government adherence to parliamentary stipulations on sanctions relief and centrifuge limits, the Assembly's debates revealed factional divides, with conservatives criticizing concessions while reformers highlighted economic relief potential; however, post-U.S. withdrawal in 2018, subsequent sessions focused on retaliatory nuclear advancements rather than renegotiation, illustrating how external sanctions constrained legislative efficacy.[32][33] A major security crisis struck on June 7, 2017, when Islamic State-affiliated gunmen and suicide bombers assaulted the Parliament building and Ayatollah Khomeini's mausoleum simultaneously, killing 17 inside the Assembly premises and wounding over 40, in the deadliest attack on state institutions since 1979.[34][35] The breach, involving assailants scaling walls and exchanging fire with guards for hours, exposed vulnerabilities in perimeter security and intelligence coordination, prompting temporary session suspensions and heightened IRGC oversight, yet no comprehensive legislative reforms on institutional protections ensued, as responses emphasized retaliatory rhetoric over systemic audits.[36] Cyber vulnerabilities emerged as recurring crises in the 2020s, with dissident hacktivists from the "Uprising till Overthrow" group claiming a February 13, 2024, breach of the Parliament's Khaneh Mellat News Agency, leaking internal data to undermine regime narratives.[37] Such incidents, amid broader Iranian cyber defenses strained by state-sponsored offensive operations elsewhere, highlighted dependencies on outdated infrastructure and potential insider threats, though Assembly responses involved sporadic connectivity restrictions rather than proactive modernization laws.[38] The 2022 Mahsa Amini protests, erupting after her death in custody on September 16, further strained the Assembly, which on September 21 advanced the "Hijab and Chastity Bill" imposing harsher penalties—including up to 10-year prison terms—for violations of mandatory veiling, effectively doubling down on enforcement amid widespread unrest against morality police practices. This legislative push, signed into partial effect by President Raisi in August 2022 but accelerated during demonstrations, reflected alignment with conservative factions enforcing cultural mandates, contributing to over 500 protest-related deaths per human rights monitors, while sidelining reform proposals for police accountability or hijab law revisions, thus reinforcing regime resilience through coercive measures over conciliatory ones.[39][40]

Constitutional Framework and Powers

Legislative Authority and Lawmaking Process

The Islamic Consultative Assembly possesses the authority to enact laws on all subjects, encompassing economic policies, taxation, budgets, civil codes, and other domestic affairs, as established in Article 71 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran.[41] This legislative power is exercised through a structured process designed to facilitate deliberation among elected representatives while aligning outputs with national priorities. Bills addressing these areas originate from the executive branch, a minimum of fifteen assembly members, or one of the specialized commissions, and must pertain to matters within the assembly's purview.[42] Upon introduction, proposed legislation is assigned to the relevant commission—such as those on economic affairs, security, or cultural matters—for detailed scrutiny, including hearings, expert consultations, and proposed amendments.[43] The commission's report then advances the bill to the plenary session, where it undergoes general debate, further modifications via motions, and final voting. Ordinary laws require approval by a simple majority of members present, ensuring that fiscal measures like annual budget approvals (submitted by the government under Article 52) and tax impositions proceed efficiently once debated.[41] [42] The assembly's role extends to ratifying international treaties and agreements under Article 77, which follow a similar procedural path but integrate executive proposals on foreign policy instruments.[41] In practice, this framework has supported the passage of comprehensive national strategies, including the Five-Year Development Plans; for example, the Fifth Plan was reviewed and approved by the assembly in early 2011 after commission deliberations, setting targets for economic growth, infrastructure, and social welfare through 2015.[44] Similarly, the Seventh Plan, emphasizing transformation in key sectors, received assembly endorsement in 2023 as a blueprint for the subsequent five years.[45] When legislative disagreements arise, particularly on bills stalled in review, the Expediency Discernment Council convenes to arbitrate and propose resolutions, providing a mechanism analogous to bicameral reconciliation to expedite enactment.[46] This process underscores the assembly's central function in translating policy debates into binding statutes, with over 200 bills typically introduced per session across commissions, though final passage depends on plenary consensus.[43]

Oversight Functions Including Impeachment and Budget Approval

The Islamic Consultative Assembly holds authority to oversee the executive branch through mechanisms such as interpellation, where at least 10 deputies can summon ministers or the president to respond to questions regarding their duties, with responses required within 10 days as stipulated in Articles 88 and 89 of the Iranian Constitution.[47] Failure to satisfy the assembly during interpellation can escalate to a vote of no confidence, potentially leading to dismissal. This process has been invoked variably, with success rates fluctuating based on parliamentary factional majorities; for instance, conservative-dominated assemblies have frequently used it against reformist executives, resulting in targeted accountability rather than systemic reform.[8] Budget approval constitutes a core oversight function, as the assembly reviews, amends, and ratifies the annual national budget submitted by the president, enabling scrutiny of executive fiscal priorities and expenditures.[48] In practice, this involves detailed examination by specialized commissions, such as the Plan and Budget Committee, which can reject or modify allocations, as seen in the assembly's approval of the 1404 solar year budget outlines on October 29, 2024, amid debates over revenue projections and subsidy distributions.[49] Such reviews enforce fiscal discipline but often reflect intra-elite bargaining, with empirical data showing frequent amendments that prioritize short-term political gains over long-term economic efficiency.[50] Impeachment powers extend to cabinet ministers and, under Article 89, the president for constitutional violations, requiring a one-third initiation threshold and a two-thirds majority for removal after a formal warning.[51] Ministers face routine vulnerability, as demonstrated by the 2018 impeachment of Economy Minister Masoud Karbasian under President Hassan Rouhani, ousted amid economic pressures from sanctions, and more recently, the March 2, 2025, dismissal of Finance Minister Abdolnasser Hemmati with 182 of 273 votes due to currency devaluation and inflation exceeding 40 percent.[52][53] These actions highlight the assembly's capacity for executive checks, though outcomes are causally tied to parliamentary composition—conservative majorities have impeached over a dozen ministers since 2016, often rendering oversight factionally selective and constrained by overarching institutional vetoes, yielding more performative than transformative accountability.[54][8]

Constraints from the Guardian Council and Supreme Leader

All legislation passed by the Islamic Consultative Assembly is subject to mandatory review by the Guardian Council, which verifies compliance with Islamic tenets—assessed by its six cleric members—and constitutional provisions, as required under Article 94 of the Constitution.[55] The Council has ten days to approve bills or return them to the Assembly with objections; unaddressed returns prevent enactment. This process has historically constrained legislative output, with approval rates varying across Majlis terms: 87% for the first Majlis (1980–1984), 75.9% for the sixth (2000–2004), and 81% for the ninth (2012–2015), meaning 13–24% of bills faced rejection or mandated revisions.[56] Earlier periods saw higher rejection proportions of 27–40%, often involving bills on foreign trade, banking, property rights, press freedoms, and women's issues.[55] The Council's composition reinforces these limits, comprising twelve members: six faqih (Islamic jurists) directly appointed by the Supreme Leader and six mojtahed (legal scholars) selected by the Assembly from candidates nominated by the head of the judiciary, who is appointed by the Leader.[55] This structure ensures theocratic dominance, as the Leader controls a majority and influences the judiciary's nominees, embedding oversight that prioritizes guardianship over parliamentary majorities. In cases of impasse, where the Assembly insists on its version by a two-thirds majority, disputed bills are referred to the Expediency Discernment Council, established in 1988 by Ayatollah Khomeini and formalized in the 1989 constitutional revisions.[57] Appointed entirely by the Supreme Leader—who also serves as its effective head—this body advises on policy and can approve vetoed legislation if deemed expedient for the Islamic system, overriding the Guardian Council's objections.[57] It has mediated numerous disputes, enabling passage of otherwise blocked measures while aligning outcomes with the Leader's directives under Article 110 of the Constitution, which vests him with defining general policies of the regime.[55] These mechanisms collectively diminish the Assembly's sovereignty, subordinating elected representatives' outputs to clerical and leadership vetting; for instance, the Guardian Council's candidate disqualifications—exceeding thousands in the 2024 parliamentary elections, where eligibility was curtailed for ideological alignment—preemptively constrain the body's composition and capacity for independent lawmaking.[58] Empirical patterns of returns and overrides underscore a systemic prioritization of theocratic conformity over electoral mandates, rendering the Assembly's legislative authority conditional and revocable.[56]

Electoral System

Candidate Eligibility and Guardian Council Vetting

Candidates for the Islamic Consultative Assembly must be Iranian citizens at least 30 years of age, possess basic literacy, and demonstrate belief in Islam or one of Iran's recognized religious minorities, as stipulated in the Elections Act of the Islamic Consultative Assembly.[59] Additional formal requirements include no disqualifying criminal convictions and sufficient educational qualifications, though these are secondary to assessments of political reliability.[59] The Guardian Council, comprising six clerics appointed by the Supreme Leader and six jurists nominated by the head of the judiciary and approved by the Assembly, conducts mandatory pre-election vetting of all candidates under Article 99 of the Constitution, which entrusts it with supervising parliamentary elections.[60] Vetting emphasizes candidates' loyalty to the Islamic Republic's principles, including practical commitment to Islamic governance and the doctrine of velayat-e faqih (guardianship of the jurist), often drawing on intelligence dossiers to assess ideological alignment rather than solely legal criteria.[59] This process, opaque and non-appealable in practice, functions as a ideological filter, disqualifying those deemed insufficiently committed to the regime's theocratic framework, thereby limiting electoral competition to factions within the established power structure.[59] [61] Disqualification rates underscore the exclusionary nature of vetting; in the 2024 elections, approximately 37,000 candidates registered, but only 15,200—about 41%—received approval, with reformist and moderate figures disproportionately rejected, including many incumbent parliamentarians.[61] Similar patterns occurred in prior cycles, such as 2016, where roughly 30% of applicants were approved amid widespread rejection of reformists.[59] These outcomes have reinforced conservative dominance in the Assembly, as the vetting mechanism systematically excludes voices challenging core regime tenets, contrasting sharply with principles of open suffrage by prioritizing systemic preservation over diverse representation.[62] [63]

Electoral Constituencies and Representation

The Islamic Consultative Assembly consists of 290 seats, with 285 allocated through general constituencies and 5 reserved for recognized religious minorities as stipulated in Article 64 of the Constitution.[64] These general seats are distributed across approximately 207 constituencies, predominantly single-member districts in rural and less populous areas, while larger urban centers employ multi-member districts to reflect higher population densities.[65] The reserved minority seats include two for Armenian Christians, one for Assyrian and Chaldean Christians combined, one for Jews, and one for Zoroastrians, elected separately from dedicated minority constituencies rather than competing in the general pool.[66] Seat apportionment follows population-based criteria derived from national censuses conducted every decade, aiming for proportional representation while incorporating minimum guarantees for each of Iran's 31 provinces to ensure geographic coverage.[67] For instance, Tehran Province, home to over 13 million residents, holds the largest allocation of 30 seats in a single multi-member constituency, reflecting its demographic weight.[68] This system has undergone adjustments post-census; following the 2016 census, minor reallocations occurred to align with updated population figures, though sparsely populated provinces like Ilam or South Khorasan retain at least one seat despite representing under 1% of the national population each.[69] Critics, including Iranian political geographers, have highlighted potential imbalances in this districting, arguing that provincial minimums result in overrepresentation for rural and remote areas relative to urban centers, exacerbating urban-rural representational disparities.[70] Such structures can amplify conservative voices from less densely populated regions, as multi-member urban districts dilute influence through larger voter pools.[71] No provisions exist for extraterritorial representation of the Iranian diaspora, estimated at over 4 million abroad, leaving expatriates without direct input into the Assembly.[59] Allegations of gerrymandering, such as irregular boundary adjustments favoring incumbent-aligned factions, have surfaced in academic analyses of districting pathologies, though empirical verification remains limited by opaque redistricting processes controlled by the Interior Ministry.[70]

Election Procedures, Turnout, and Recent Results

Elections to the Islamic Consultative Assembly occur every four years, with members serving four-year terms. The 290 seats are allocated across 217 constituencies, including 18 single-member districts and multi-member districts for larger provinces, using a parallel voting system where voters select as many candidates as seats available.[72] To secure a seat in the first round, a candidate must obtain at least 20% of the votes cast in the constituency; constituencies where no candidate meets this threshold hold runoff elections between the top contenders.[5] Voting is conducted via secret ballot at polling stations, typically on a Friday, with provisions for expatriates and military personnel.[73] The most recent election for the 12th Majlis took place on March 1, 2024, with runoffs on May 10, 2024. Voter turnout reached approximately 41%, including spoiled ballots, marking the lowest participation rate since the 1979 Islamic Revolution and reflecting a broader trend of declining engagement from previous highs above 60% in earlier cycles.[62] [74] Conservative and principlist factions dominated the results, securing around 233 seats in the 290-member body, bolstered by the Guardian Council's disqualification of over 7,000 potential candidates, which limited competition and contributed to perceptions of electoral futility among the public.[75] [76] Following the election, Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf was re-elected as Speaker on May 28, 2024, receiving 198 votes out of 287 cast.[77] The progressive drop in turnout—from 64% in 2000 to 41% in 2024—signals deepening public disillusionment, as the pre-election vetting process by the Guardian Council ensures only regime-aligned candidates advance, rendering the ballot a choice among vetted options rather than a mechanism for substantive policy shifts or opposition representation.[62] [63] This dynamic, where disqualifications exceed approvals by wide margins, underscores the elections' role in legitimizing the theocratic structure while highlighting causal links between restricted pluralism and voter apathy.[76]

Internal Organization

Leadership Structure Including Speaker and Deputies

The speaker of the Islamic Consultative Assembly is elected annually by a majority vote of its members via secret ballot, typically at the inaugural session of a new term and in subsequent annual meetings. This process ensures alignment with the prevailing factional balance within the 290-seat body. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, a conservative principlist with a background in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, has occupied the speakership since May 28, 2020, securing re-election on June 11, 2025, for his sixth consecutive one-year term amid the 12th Majlis.[43][78] The speaker holds authority over the assembly's executive operations, including organizational, financial, and administrative matters, while presiding over plenary sessions and determining the order of business to shape the legislative agenda. This role extends to representing the Majlis in diplomatic engagements and official correspondence, amplifying the speaker's influence in foreign policy signaling. Ghalibaf's tenure has coincided with principlist majorities, enabling consistent prioritization of hardline economic and security policies.[43][79] Two deputy speakers are selected through a parallel secret ballot process immediately following the speaker's election, providing continuity by assuming presiding duties during absences and supporting session management. As of June 2025, Ali Nikzad holds the first deputy position, and Hamidreza Haji-Babaei the second, both aligned with conservative factions.[78][80] Leadership positions function less as neutral arbiters and more as coordinators among dominant principlist blocs, whose electoral vetting by the Guardian Council reinforces ideological conformity to Supreme Leader directives. This dynamic has sustained Ghalibaf's stability through the 12th Majlis, elected March 1, 2024, where conservative cohesion limits internal challenges.[81][82]

Specialized Commissions and Political Factions

The Islamic Consultative Assembly conducts much of its legislative scrutiny through specialized commissions, standing committees dedicated to particular policy areas, with their number ranging from a minimum of 19 to a maximum of 23 under the Majlis rules of procedure.[43] These bodies, reformed after each parliamentary election, examine government bills, hold expert consultations, and draft reports that guide full assembly deliberations, thereby exerting significant influence over legislative outcomes in domains such as security, economy, and social policy. In the 12th Majlis, commission memberships and leadership were finalized on June 30, 2024, following the May 27 opening session and credential verifications completed by May 30.[83] Key examples include the National Security and Foreign Policy Commission, chaired by Ebrahim Azizi, which reviews defense strategies and diplomatic initiatives; the Economic Commission, led by Seyyed Shams al-Din Hosseini, tasked with analyzing fiscal reforms and trade measures; and the Education, Research and Technology Commission, headed by Alireza Monadi Sefidan, focused on academic and innovation policies.[83] These commissions foster specialized policy development but often result in silos that prioritize regime stability, as their compositions reflect the vetting process favoring alignment with Supreme Leader priorities, evidenced by consistent endorsement of hardline positions on issues like nuclear negotiations and subsidy reallocations in recent reports. Informal political factions, unbound by formal parties due to post-1987 prohibitions, shape internal debates and coalition-building despite Guardian Council exclusions of ideological outliers. Principlists, emphasizing orthodox Islamic governance and fealty to the Supreme Leader, dominate the 12th Majlis with over 200 seats, enabling control of commission agendas and blocking divergent amendments.[84] Reformists, advocating cautious systemic adjustments, hold a minority around 40 seats, their influence curtailed by the 2024 elections' 41% first-round turnout, which empirically favored loyalist candidates amid widespread disillusionment.[85] This hardline preponderance causally reinforces factional outputs mirroring the Leader's veto-enforced red lines, as seen in commissions' rejection of liberalization proposals in economic and cultural spheres since June 2024.[83]

Legislative Procedures and Voting Mechanisms

The Islamic Consultative Assembly holds ordinary sessions that commence after parliamentary elections and continue annually, aligned with the Persian calendar year beginning around March 21, with legal validity established upon the attendance of two-thirds of its 290 members, equivalent to at least 194 deputies. [25] This quorum requirement also applies to decision-making, unless the Assembly's internal code of procedure specifies otherwise for particular actions. [25] Extraordinary sessions may be convened outside the ordinary schedule by the Speaker of the Assembly, the President of Iran, or a petition signed by one-quarter of the members (74 deputies), often to address urgent legislative matters such as budget approvals or responses to national crises. [86] Deliberations on bills occur primarily in open sessions, where proceedings are broadcast via radio and published in official reports and the government gazette to ensure public access, though closed sessions can be approved by a three-fourths majority of members present in cases deemed necessary for national security or sensitivity. [25] Debate protocols allow deputies to discuss proposed legislation, with government-initiated bills requiring prior endorsement by the Council of Ministers and member-initiated bills needing sponsorship from at least 15 deputies before referral to relevant commissions for review. [25] Amendments to bills may be proposed by individual members during floor debates, subject to the presiding officer's management to maintain order and relevance, though contentious issues have occasionally led to extended discussions delaying passage, as observed in debates over economic reforms amid sanctions pressures in the 2010s. Voting mechanisms in the Assembly rely on recorded votes among members present, typically requiring a simple majority for the approval of ordinary legislation, while higher thresholds—such as two-thirds—apply to specific decisions like constitutional amendments or overrides of Guardian Council vetoes. [7] Votes are conducted through roll-call or nominal methods during sessions, without widespread adoption of electronic systems for internal parliamentary balloting as of 2024, distinguishing them from electronic voting machines trialed in some public elections since 2021. [87] Session efficiency varies, with ordinary terms spanning approximately nine months of active deliberation, punctuated by recesses, but extraordinary convocations have compressed timelines during events like the 2022-2023 protests, where key bills faced accelerated scrutiny under heightened security.

Composition

Current Membership as of 2025

The 12th Islamic Consultative Assembly, elected on March 1, 2024 (first round) and May 10, 2024 (runoffs for 45 seats), totals 290 members serving four-year terms from constituencies apportioned by population, with Tehran province holding the largest bloc of 30 seats. Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, a principlist and former Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps commander, was re-elected Speaker on May 28, 2024, with 198 votes from 287 participating members, consolidating conservative leadership amid challenges from ultraconservative rivals.[81][88] Principlists (conservatives aligned with Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's principles) dominate with approximately 75% of seats (around 218), bolstered by independents tacitly supporting their agenda, while reformists hold negligible representation due to widespread disqualifications by the Guardian Council, which vetted and approved only candidates deemed loyal to the Islamic Republic's theocratic framework.[89][75] This vetting process, disqualifying thousands of applicants (over 12,000 registered, with reformist-leaning figures disproportionately rejected), enforces ideological conformity, resulting in a body empirically homogeneous in outlook—favoring hard-line policies on foreign relations, domestic security, and economic self-reliance—rather than reflecting broader societal pluralism.[62] Female representation remains minimal at about 6% (roughly 17 members), consistent with patterns in prior terms where cultural and vetting barriers limit women's candidacy and election in a male-dominated political structure.[90] Five seats are constitutionally reserved for recognized religious minorities: one Zoroastrian (Behshid Barkhordar, elected 2024), one Jew, one Assyrian/Chaldean Christian, and two Armenian Christians, elected separately from their communities without competing against Muslim candidates.[91][66] These allocations, while providing token inclusion, do not mitigate the overall principlist uniformity, as minority MPs historically align with regime priorities to retain influence. The first post-revolutionary Majlis, elected on March 14, 1980, featured strong clerical dominance, with clerics occupying approximately 61% of seats in the 270-member assembly, alongside majorities held by the Islamic Republican Party (IRP) and its allies, who controlled 170 to 180 seats.[92][22] This composition reflected the consolidation of revolutionary forces prioritizing Islamic governance and opposition to monarchist remnants, with turnout exceeding 70% amid post-revolution mobilization.[23] Conservative factions, including clerical networks, retained control through the 1980s and early 1990s, as seen in the 1984 and 1988 assemblies, where IRP successors and traditionalists blocked liberalizing measures amid the Iran-Iraq War and internal purges.[92] Reformist gains emerged in the mid-1990s under President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani's pragmatic conservatism, culminating in the 1996 elections where reformists secured a slim majority with 71% turnout, challenging hardline vetoes on social and economic policies.[92] The 2000 elections marked a reformist peak, with the 2nd of Khordad Front allies winning a landslide, capturing over 170 of 290 seats in the initial round and solidifying control after runoffs, driven by public demand for President Mohammad Khatami's liberalization agenda.[93][94] Guardian Council disqualifications reversed these gains; prior to the 2004 vote, thousands of reformist incumbents were barred, enabling conservatives to claim majorities and stall reforms, a pattern repeated in 2008 amid low 51% turnout and further vetting that sidelined moderates.[95][92] Post-2009 Green Movement protests, which exposed reformists' limited leverage against supreme leadership authority, accelerated principalist (hardline conservative) entrenchment, with factions like the Combatant Clergy Association dominating subsequent assemblies through sustained candidate exclusions and alignment with security apparatuses.[96] Long-term, clerical representation declined from 61% in 1980 to under 10% by the 2010s, yielding to lay principalists, while reformist seats eroded below 20% post-2016, correlating with economic sanctions, inflation spikes, and unrest cycles (e.g., 2017-2019 protests) that undermined reformist credibility as regime enablers incapable of structural change.[92] This shift underscores causal regime mechanisms—vetting, suppression, and ideological loyalty tests—prioritizing hardliner consolidation over electoral pluralism, amid declining turnout from 70%+ in the 1990s to below 50% by the 2010s, signaling voter disillusionment with factional constraints.[5]

Infrastructure and Operations

The Majlis Building and Facilities

The Islamic Consultative Assembly convenes in the Baharestan complex at Baharestan Square in central Tehran, which has functioned as the parliament's primary seat since 1906.[97][43] Originally developed as a Qajar-era palace and garden in the late 19th century, the site was repurposed for legislative use following the Constitutional Revolution, symbolizing Iran's early experiments in representative governance.[98] The architecture of the original Baharestan building reflects Qajar influences, incorporating traditional Persian elements such as courtyards and domes alongside European-inspired features like neoclassical facades, a result of architectural exchanges during the period.[99] A major fire in 1994 severely damaged the structure, prompting the construction of a modern replacement within the complex, inaugurated on March 13, 2001, to house ongoing sessions.[99][100] Facilities encompass a central assembly hall capable of seating the body's 290 members, adjacent office spaces for deputies, dedicated rooms for parliamentary commissions, and administrative areas supporting legislative activities.[43] The newer extensions cover about 25,500 square meters, including structures for member offices and commission meetings.[101] Following the 1979 Revolution, the complex saw functional adaptations to prioritize institutional continuity, preserving its role as the physical embodiment of legislative authority amid political transformations.[98]

Notable Security Incidents and Cyber Attacks

On June 7, 2017, five ISIS-affiliated gunmen launched a coordinated assault on the Islamic Consultative Assembly building in Tehran, using automatic weapons and attempting to detonate suicide vests, resulting in the deaths of one parliament guard and several attackers during a prolonged siege that lasted several hours.[102] The attack, claimed by ISIS via its Amaq news agency, disrupted ongoing parliamentary sessions, forcing lawmakers to shelter in place or evacuate while security forces neutralized the assailants, with Iranian officials reporting four terrorists killed and one suicide bomber detonating prematurely.[103][104] This incident, the most significant breach of the Majlis premises since the 1979 revolution, highlighted vulnerabilities in physical security amid ISIS's sectarian targeting of Shiite institutions, with Iranian authorities subsequently convening security reviews to enhance perimeter defenses and access controls.[105] In the cyber domain, the Majlis has faced intrusions exposing internal data, notably a February 2024 breach of parliamentary servers by unidentified hackers that leaked confidential documents related to election processes and regime strategies, prompting a temporary suspension of operations to mitigate further damage.[106][107] This incident, attributed to opposition-aligned actors, revealed sensitive administrative details and underscored systemic weaknesses in digital infrastructure, leading to heightened cybersecurity protocols but also internal distrust, as evidenced by the regime's closure of affected systems.[108] Such leaks have empirically delayed legislative deliberations, with sessions postponed amid investigations into compromised networks, exploiting the assembly's reliance on isolated, state-controlled IT environments vulnerable to external actors seeking to undermine governance legitimacy.[109] These events reflect how adversaries, including Sunni extremist groups and dissident hackers, capitalize on the Majlis's centralized yet under-resourced security posture to amplify regime fractures without direct confrontation.

Controversies and Criticisms

Democratic Legitimacy and Veto Power Abuses

The Guardian Council's constitutional mandate to vet candidates for compatibility with Islamic principles and loyalty to the regime has systematically excluded reformists and moderates, undermining the Islamic Consultative Assembly's democratic legitimacy. In the 2021 presidential election, out of 592 registered candidates, the Council approved only seven, disqualifying prominent reformists and pragmatists to ensure hardline dominance. Similarly, ahead of the 2024 parliamentary elections, the Council rejected over 20 percent of incumbent lawmakers and a substantial number of aspirants, including conservatives like former speaker Ali Larijani, narrowing the field to regime-aligned figures and perpetuating one-party rule by osulgarayan (principled or hardline conservatives). This vetting, with six of the Council's twelve members directly appointed by the Supreme Leader, prioritizes theocratic conformity over electoral pluralism, as evidenced by the consistent barring of opposition voices that could challenge entrenched power structures.[110][58][58] Such exclusions have manifested in historically low voter turnout, serving as an empirical indicator of perceived illegitimacy among the populace. The 2024 parliamentary elections recorded a mere 41 percent participation rate, including spoiled ballots—the lowest in the Islamic Republic's history—compared to higher engagement in pre-vetting universal suffrage systems elsewhere, where competition fosters genuine choice without clerical oversight. This boycott reflects causal links between restricted candidacy and public disaffection, as Iranians increasingly view elections as ritualistic affirmations of the status quo rather than mechanisms for representation, with turnout dipping amid post-2022 protests signaling broader rejection of the system's facade.[62][62][111] The Council's veto authority extends beyond candidates to legislation, frequently overriding Majlis majorities in ways that expose the theocratic eclipse of popular will. Bills advancing economic reforms or social moderation have been struck down or forced into revisions for non-compliance with rigid interpretations of Sharia, as in repeated rejections of measures challenging state monopolies or clerical privileges, thereby nullifying assembly outputs despite electoral mandates. Claims of an "Islamic democracy" falter under this structure, where unelected guardians—half selected by the Leader—can annul laws and candidacies, subordinating empirical voter preferences to doctrinal fiat and rendering the assembly a subordinate body rather than a sovereign legislature. This dynamic, rooted in the 1979 Constitution's dual oversight, prioritizes regime preservation over representative governance, as corroborated by analyses of the system's exclusionary mechanics.[112][112][113]

Allegations of Corruption, Inefficiency, and Regime Alignment

The Islamic Consultative Assembly has faced persistent allegations of corruption, with multiple scandals implicating members in embezzlement and financial misconduct. In November 2011, Iranian authorities arrested suspects in a $2.8 billion fraud case, described as the largest embezzlement scandal in the country's history, involving at least ten members of parliament who were linked to the scheme through connections to the primary suspect.[114] Further probes in the 2010s revealed systemic graft, including a 2018 parliamentary debate where ministers and MPs exchanged accusations of bribery, blackmail, and embezzlement in public funds.[115] In 2023, a lawmaker who disclosed a major financial corruption case within the Assembly reported being barred from speaking in sessions, highlighting efforts to suppress internal whistleblowing.[116] These incidents underscore a pattern where parliamentary oversight fails to prevent or prosecute elite-level corruption effectively. Critics have pointed to the Assembly's inefficiency, particularly in legislative delays that exacerbate economic challenges. During periods of acute crisis, such as the 2010s sanctions-induced downturn, the body struggled with protracted debates and stalled bills on critical reforms, contributing to policy paralysis amid rising inflation and unemployment.[117] For instance, subsidy restructuring efforts, vital for fiscal stability, faced repeated obstructions, reflecting a reluctance to enact measures that could alienate key constituencies despite public hardship.[118] This inefficiency is compounded by the Assembly's alignment with the Supreme Leader's directives, often prioritizing regime loyalty over constituent needs; the body has functioned more as a rubber-stamp for velayat-e faqih authority than an independent check, as evidenced by its limited success in challenging executive or clerical vetoes on reform proposals.[119] Disparities in compensation further fuel perceptions of self-interest. Leaked documents from 2024 revealed average monthly salaries for MPs exceeding 200 million Iranian tomans (approximately $4,000 at black-market rates), including allowances, while the national poverty line hovered around 10 million tomans per month for many households amid hyperinflation.[120] Proposals for salary hikes, such as rumored 70% increases in 2017, provoked public outrage, contrasting sharply with stagnant wages for ordinary citizens.[121] While the Assembly has occasionally pursued anti-corruption measures, such as a 2018 motion to establish a dedicated organization for oversight, these efforts appear selectively enforced, targeting political rivals rather than systemic issues, as corruption scandals continue to proliferate among regime insiders.[122] In June 2025, a senior MP publicly criticized elite privileges following a cleric family scandal, yet such rebukes rarely lead to structural accountability.[123] This selective approach reinforces views that the institution serves regime preservation over genuine reform.

Role in Human Rights Issues and Suppression of Dissent

The Islamic Consultative Assembly has enacted legislation reinforcing strict Islamic morality codes, including provisions in the penal code that criminalize behaviors deemed contrary to Sharia, such as apostasy, blasphemy, and public moral offenses, which enable severe punishments including flogging and execution.[124] These laws, upheld and amended through parliamentary processes, contribute to a legal framework where dissent—often labeled as "enmity against God" or moharebeh—is prosecutable by death, with the Majlis rarely proposing reforms to limit such applications despite international scrutiny.[125] Supporters within the Assembly argue these codes are indispensable for preserving Iran's Islamic identity and social order, framing them as direct implementations of constitutional mandates to align legislation with Islamic jurisprudence.[126] In response to the 2022 protests triggered by Mahsa Amini's death in custody, the Majlis accelerated passage of the Chastity and Hijab Law in September 2024, which imposes fines, vehicle confiscations, business closures, and up to 15-year prison terms for hijab non-compliance or related activism, escalating enforcement mechanisms beyond prior regulations.[127][128] The law's 74 articles expand surveillance and penalties, including for promoting "unveiling," and was defended by parliamentary conservatives as a security imperative to counter perceived cultural threats, echoing Supreme Leader Khamenei's portrayal of hijab observance as foundational to regime stability.[129] Critics, including human rights organizations, contend this entrenches gender-based repression, violating rights to bodily autonomy and expression, with enforcement disproportionately targeting women and fueling cycles of protest and crackdown.[130] The Assembly's ratification of penal provisions has facilitated Iran's high execution rates, with Amnesty International documenting over 1,000 executions in 2025 alone—predominantly for drug offenses, dissent-related charges, and moral crimes—marking the highest annual toll in decades and comprising 64% of global known executions in 2024.[131][132] Post-2022 uprising, executions surged as a tool to deter opposition, with laws passed or sustained by the Majlis enabling rapid judicial processes that UN experts describe as weaponized against protesters, often bypassing fair trial standards.[133] The Human Rights Council has repeatedly condemned these practices in resolutions, urging Iran to restrict capital punishment to intentional homicide and halt its use for suppressing dissent, though Majlis members seldom oppose Leader-endorsed security bills that broaden such powers.[134] Iranian defenders counter that executions uphold divine justice and deter societal corruption, rejecting Western human rights frameworks as incompatible with Islamic sovereignty.[135] This legislative alignment has causally reinforced institutional impunity, as evidenced by minimal internal pushback against bills expanding dissent-suppression tools, such as those targeting independent media and assembly.[136]

Influence and Impact

Domestic Policy Achievements and Failures

The Islamic Consultative Assembly has enacted legislation aimed at economic rationalization, most notably the Targeted Subsidies Law approved in January 2010, which phased out broad subsidies on energy, bread, and other essentials, redirecting savings toward cash transfers to households and productive investments.[137] This reform, implemented from December 2010, sought to curb fiscal waste—estimated at 20-25% of GDP prior to reform—and promote energy efficiency amid Iran's heavy reliance on subsidized fossil fuels.[138] Initial outcomes included a shift in resource allocation, with partial gains in industrial productivity and reduced smuggling of cheap fuels, though these were undermined by subsequent inflationary pressures and external shocks.[139] In infrastructure and development, the Majlis has periodically approved multi-year plans, such as elements of the Sixth Five-Year Development Plan (2016-2021), allocating funds for transport and urban projects, contributing to expansions in road networks and housing under programs like the Mehr Housing Plan, which delivered over 2 million units by 2018 despite quality criticisms.[140] Wartime efforts during the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988) saw parliamentary backing for mobilization laws that facilitated domestic production ramps in defense and basic goods, sustaining supply lines through ideological incentives rather than market mechanisms.[141] These measures reflect instances of legislative alignment with regime priorities, yielding short-term resilience but limited long-term scalability due to veto constraints and non-market distortions. Failures predominate in macroeconomic stability, with the Majlis's budgetary oversight failing to arrest chronic hyperinflation, which averaged over 30% annually from 2018-2025 and peaked at 45.3% in September 2025, eroding purchasing power and exacerbating inequality despite repeated fiscal laws.[142] Youth unemployment, hovering at 22.8% in 2024 per World Bank data, reflects inadequate legislative responses to structural mismatches, including rigid labor laws and overemphasis on ideological sectors over private enterprise, leaving graduates underemployed amid a demographic bulge.[143] Subsidy reform's cash handouts, while politically expedient, fueled demand-pull inflation without corresponding supply-side reforms, compounding post-2018 sanctions gridlock and revealing the Majlis's constrained autonomy under theocratic oversight, where ideological vetoes prioritize conformity over empirical efficacy.[139] Overall, these outcomes underscore inconsistent results, with legislative initiatives often yielding partial efficiencies overshadowed by systemic inefficiencies and policy reversals.

Foreign Policy Involvement and Limitations

The Islamic Consultative Assembly possesses constitutional authority to ratify international treaties, protocols, contracts, and agreements, provided they receive subsequent approval from the Guardian Council to ensure compatibility with Islamic principles and the constitution.[144] This role extends to reviewing and debating foreign policy matters through committees, such as those on national security and foreign affairs, where lawmakers conduct hearings on issues like nuclear negotiations and regional relations.[145] For instance, on October 13, 2015, the Majlis approved a bill enabling implementation of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with 161 votes in favor, 59 against, and 13 abstentions, following months of review after the deal's signing in July 2015.[146] More recently, on May 21, 2025, the assembly ratified a strategic partnership treaty with Russia, emphasizing deepened military and economic ties amid ongoing Western sanctions.[147] Despite these powers, the assembly's influence on foreign policy remains peripheral and subordinate to the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who directs overall strategy through the Supreme National Security Council and holds veto authority over major decisions, including nuclear policy and proxy engagements.[148][149] The Guardian Council's veto power further constrains parliamentary initiatives, frequently rejecting or amending bills perceived as overly conciliatory toward adversaries, as seen in historical overrides of legislation challenging isolationist doctrines. Dominant hardline factions within the Majlis, often aligned with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps' worldview, prioritize confrontational measures—such as the 2017 anti-U.S. bill countering sanctions and the June 2025 legislation imposing harsher penalties for collaboration with "hostile" foreign entities—over diplomatic outreach, thereby reinforcing cycles of international isolation and sanctions.[150][151] This alignment sustains regime support for regional proxies like Hezbollah and the Houthis, whose activities provoke retaliatory measures from the U.S. and allies, though direct Majlis funding or command of such groups falls under executive and Leader oversight.[145] In practice, reformist-leaning parliaments have occasionally advanced limited diplomatic efforts, as during the JCPOA era under President Hassan Rouhani, but these face reversal amid factional shifts; post-2018 U.S. withdrawal, hardliner-dominated sessions scrutinized compliance and curtailed IAEA access, exemplifying how internal veto dynamics and Leader prioritization limit sustained engagement.[146] Empirical patterns show the assembly's outputs rarely diverge from the Leader's hawkish baseline, contributing to persistent economic pressures from sanctions imposed since 1979, with over 1,500 U.S. designations by 2024 targeting proxy-linked entities and nuclear proliferation.[152] Such constraints underscore the Majlis as a ratifier rather than initiator, with its debates serving more to legitimize executive actions than to independently shape global positioning.

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