IAC-WI

Main Menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Blog
  • Events
  • Gallery
    • Visuals
  • About
    • Contact

IAC-WI

  • Home
  • News
    • Iran more than doubled executions in 2025 as global use of the ...

      July 1, 2026
      0
    • 'Staggering' Iran Toll Drives Up Global Executions: Amnesty

      May 24, 2026
      0
    • Iran’s same-day death sentences show its brutality, again

      May 18, 2026
      0
    • Iran executes two opposition members as judiciary vows 'no leniency'

      April 28, 2026
      0
    • Iran: Seven protesters and dissidents at risk of imminent execution after four ...

      April 2, 2026
      0
    • Gingrich, Ex-Military Leaders Throw Support Behind Iran Opposition Group

      March 28, 2026
      0
    • NCRI Provisional Government Wins Backing Beyond 1,000 International Figures

      March 21, 2026
      0
    • EU designates Iran's Revolutionary Guard a terror group

      February 1, 2026
      0
    • A Nation Past the Point of Return: Iran’s January 2026 Uprising and ...

      January 21, 2026
      0
  • Blog
    • Iran: Lack of international justice six months after January protest massacres risks ...

      July 10, 2026
      0
    • Iran trying to evict Christians from oldest Protestant church in Tehran — ...

      July 5, 2026
      0
    • Time for West to Recognize Iran's Democratic Alternative

      July 3, 2026
      0
    • Months after the regime crackdown, Iranians search for missing protesters

      June 1, 2026
      0
    • A weakened Tehran faces its greatest threat: The Iranian people

      May 24, 2026
      0
    • Iran conducting near-daily prisoner executions in secrecy, say rights groups

      May 8, 2026
      0
    • America's Exit Strategy Is Already Inside Iran

      April 28, 2026
      0
    • Iran’s Execution Machine of Domestic Deterrence

      April 15, 2026
      0
    • The Most Dangerous Kind of War Is One Without Strategy

      April 2, 2026
      0
  • Events
  • Gallery
    • Visuals
  • About
    • Contact
News
Home›News›Hard-line former Tehran mayor named Iran parliament speaker

Hard-line former Tehran mayor named Iran parliament speaker

By IAC-WI
June 3, 2020
1667
0
Share:

The Washington Post     |    AP    |    By Jon Gambrell    |     May 28, 2020

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Iran’s parliament elected a former mayor of Tehran tied to the Revolutionary Guard as its next speaker Thursday, solidifying hard-line control of the body as tensions between the U.S. and the Islamic Republic remain high over its collapsed nuclear deal.

Mohammad Bagher Qalibaf’s assumption of power comes after a string of failed presidential bids and 12 years as the leader of Iran’s capital city, in which he built onto Tehran’s subway and supported the construction of modern high-rises.

Many, however, remember Qalibaf for his support as a Revolutionary Guard general for a violent crackdown on Iranian university students in 1999. He also reportedly ordered live gunfire be used against Iranian students in 2003 while serving as the country’s police chief.

“It is time to thank all representatives, all workers at the parliament complex, experts, managers, security forces and services,” Qalibaf said, promising to give a speech Sunday.

Qalibaf’s candidacy received 230 votes from the 264 lawmakers present in the parliament in the first round of voting, state television reported. Parliament has 290 seats.

Qalibaf, 58, replaces Ali Larijani, who served as the parliament’s speaker from 2008 until this May. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei appointed Larijani as an adviser and a member of the country’s Expediency Council on Thursday, state TV reported.

As speaker, Qalibaf leads a body that can debate Iran’s annual budget and push for the impeachment of government ministers. However, laws passed by the parliament must be approved by a 12-member Guardian Council and Khamenei holds final say on all matters of state.

The position also puts Qalibaf onto Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, the country’s highest level body that handles defense and nuclear issues. That takes on new importance as the U.S. withdrew waivers from Iran’s nuclear program late Wednesday and as tensions between the two nations remain high.

On Thursday, Guard navy chief Adm. Ali Reza Tangsiri issued a new warning to the U.S. while inaugurating 112 new vessels in the port city of Bandar Abbas.

“Today, we announce that wherever the Americans are, we are right there beside them and they will feel it more in the near future,” Tangsiri said, according to the semiofficial Tasnim news agency.

A trained pilot, Qalibaf served in the paramilitary Guard during the country’s bloody 1980s war with Iraq. After the conflict, he served as the head of the Guard’s construction arm, Khatam al-Anbia, for several years leading efforts to rebuild.

Qalibaf then served as the head of the Guard’s air force, when in 1999 he co-signed a letter to reformist President Mohammad Khatami amid student protests in Tehran over the government closing a reformist newspaper and a subsequent security force crackdown. The letter warned Khatami the Guard would take action unilaterally unless he agreed to putting down the demonstrations.

Violence around the protests saw several killed, hundreds wounded and thousands arrested.

Qalibaf then served as the head of Iran’s police, modernizing the force and implementing the country’s 110 emergency phone number. However, a leaked recording of a later meeting between Qalibaf and members of the Guard’s volunteer Basij force, included him claiming that he ordered gunfire be used against demonstrators in 2003, as well as praising the violence used in Iran’s 2009 Green Movement protests.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani hinted at the 2003 incident during a debate in the 2017 presidential election.

“There was an argument that you were saying that the students should come then we can pincer attack to them and finish the job,” Rouhani said at the time.

As mayor, Qalibaf faced corruption allegations, including over some $3.5 million being donated to a foundation run by his wife. However, he also used his prominence to travel to the World Economic Forum and even praised New York City in an interview with the Financial Times, undoubtedly raising eyebrows among hard-liners.

Qalibaf ran failed presidential campaigns in 2005, 2013 and 2017, the last of which saw him withdraw in support of the hard-liner Ebrahim Raisi, now the head of the country’s judiciary. Despite that, U.S. diplomats suggested Qalibaf enjoyed the support of Khamenei’s influential son Mojtaba, according to diplomatic cables published by WikiLeaks.

Despite winning the vote, Qalibaf may still face suspicion from other lawmakers, particularly over his ambitions, wrote Jason Brodsky, the policy director of the Washington-based group United Against Nuclear Iran.

“Some factions view his bid with suspicion given rumors Qalibaf wants to use the speakership as a means to run for the presidency in 2021,” Brodsky wrote. “Also, because of his previous election campaigns facing off against Rouhani, Qalibaf would preside over a more combative parliament.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle_east/hard-line-former-tehran-mayor-named-iran-parliament-speaker/2020/05/28/cc18911a-a0a1-11ea-be06-af5514ee0385_story.html

Previous Article

Trump Administration Says Iran Could Exit Syria ...

Next Article

More Blows to Iran Regime’s Strategic Depth ...

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Related articles More from author

  • News

    Sen. Bob Menendez weighs in on protests in Iran

    October 17, 2022
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    Iranian activist disappears after criticizing internet bill

    February 28, 2022
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    In Violation of Nuclear Deal, Iran Ships Soldiers to Syria on Commercial Flights

    August 30, 2017
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    STEIL INTRODUCES BILL TO PREVENT IRAN SANCTIONS EVASION

    July 4, 2020
    By IAC-WI
  • Human RightsNews

    Iran: A decade of deaths in custody unpunished

    September 27, 2021
    By IAC-WI
  • News

    US-ARAB DISAGREEMENT DEEPENS ON IRANIAN THREATS

    February 9, 2017
    By IAC-WI

You may interested

  • Blog

    Time for West to Recognize Iran’s Democratic Alternative

  • Blog

    Pompeo’s Visit with MEK Will Rattle Tehran

  • News

    More than 400 influential women urge Iran to halt execution of female activist

Latest Tweets

Tweets by @OrgIAC
  • LATEST REVIEWS

  • TOP REVIEWS

Timeline

  • July 10, 2026

    Iran: Lack of international justice six months after January protest massacres risks further atrocity crimes

  • July 5, 2026

    Iran trying to evict Christians from oldest Protestant church in Tehran — as Islamist regime cracks down

  • July 3, 2026

    Time for West to Recognize Iran’s Democratic Alternative

  • July 1, 2026

    Iran more than doubled executions in 2025 as global use of the death penalty hit 44-year high, report says

  • June 1, 2026

    Months after the regime crackdown, Iranians search for missing protesters

Latest Comments

Find us on Facebook

About us

logo

Iranian American Community of Wisconsin (IAC-WI) is an all-volunteer, non-profit, serving the Iranian Americans in Wisconsin. We are inspired by Iranian people's desire for a democratic, secular, non-nuclear republic Iran that embraces a peaceful and prosperous Middle East.

Speaker Paul Ryan “Nowruz”

REP. GROTHMAN (R-WI)

Follow us

  • Contact
  • About Us
  • Home