The 10th Islamic Consultative Assembly (Persian: دوره دهم مجلس شورای اسلامی) was the 34th Parliament of Iran that commenced on 28 May 2016 following the legislative elections on 26 February and 29 April 2016 and ended on 26 May 2020.
10th Islamic Consultative Assembly | |||||||||
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Overview | |||||||||
Jurisdiction | Islamic Republic of Iran | ||||||||
Meeting place | Baharestan | ||||||||
Term | 28 May 2016 | – 26 May 2020||||||||
Election | 26 February and 29 April 2016 | ||||||||
Government | Rouhani I (2016–2017) Rouhani II (2017–2020) | ||||||||
Islamic Consultative Assembly | |||||||||
Members | 290 | ||||||||
Speaker | Ali Larijani (2016–2020) | ||||||||
1st Deputy | Masoud Pezeshkian (2016–2020) | ||||||||
2nd Deputy | Ali Motahhari (2016–2019) Abdolreza Mesri (2019–2020) | ||||||||
Fractions | |||||||||
Hope | Mohammad Reza Aref | ||||||||
Wilayi | Hamid-Reza Haji Babaee | ||||||||
Independents | Kazem Jalali (2016–2019) Gholam Ali Jafarzadeh (2019–2020) | ||||||||
Sessions | |||||||||
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According to Anoushiravan Ehteshami, three things make this parliament noteworthy: return of the reformists to the parliamentary arena, a record of 17 seats held by female lawmakers and the fact that only 26% of the incumbent MPs were re-elected in the elections, making it a less experienced parliament.[1]
Parliamentary groups
editThe parliament has three main parliamentary groups:
Parliamentary group | Voting strength | President | ||
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Pro-Rouhani | Hope | ≈103[2] | ≈193[3] | Mohammad Reza Aref[3] |
Wilayi Independents | Unknown | Kazem Jalali[3] | ||
Opposition | Wilayi Deputies | <111[3] | Hamidreza Hajibabai[3] |
The reformist Hope fraction is the largest bloc by number, however it is unable to form a partnership with a great number of newcomers and independents who owe little allegiance to any particular faction. Instead, the conservative allies of Hassan Rouhani led by Ali Larijani have effectively mobilized them. It was clearly illustrated when Mohammad Reza Aref declined to stand for the speaker and Larijani was re-elected uncontested with 237 out of 276 votes.[1]
Members
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Ehteshami, Anoushiravan (2017). "Politics of the Islamic Republic". Iran: Stuck in Transition. The Contemporary Middle East. Taylor & Francis. p. 102. ISBN 9781351985451.
- ^ "Reformists Eye Control of Majlis Presiding Board", Financial Tribune, 25 May 2017, retrieved 25 May 2017
- ^ a b c d e Rohollah Faghihi (4 November 2016), "Iran's parliament shows its true colors", Al-Monitor, retrieved 25 May 2017