Mohsen Mehralizadeh Explained

Mohsen Mehralizadeh
Office:Governor of Isfahan
Term Start:29 October 2017
Term End:17 November 2018
President:Hassan Rouhani
Predecessor:Rasoul Zargarpour
Office1:Vice President of Iran
Head of Physical Education Organization
Term Start1:10 November 2001
Term End1:26 September 2005
President1:Mohammad Khatami
Predecessor1:Mostafa Hashemitaba
Successor1:Mohammad Aliabadi
Term Start2:1997
Term End2:2001
President2:Mohammad Khatami
Predecessor2:Abdollah Kupaei
Successor2:Hassan Rasouli
Birth Date:30 September 1956
Birth Place:Maragheh, East Azerbaijan Province, Iran
Alma Mater:University of Tabriz
Spouse:Ozra Labaf (died 2024)
Children:3

Mohsen Mehralizadeh (Persian: محسن مهرعلیزاده; born September 30, 1956) is an Iranian reformist politician and former Governor of Isfahan Province.He was a Vice President of Iran and the head of the National Sports Organization of Iran under President Khatami. He is an ethnic Azerbaijani.

Mehralizadeh was the governor of the Khorasan in Khatami's first term of presidency. He is a candidate for the Iranian 2024 Presidential election. [1]

Presidential candidacy

2005 Iranian Presidential Election

During the campaign for 2005 presidential election, Mehralizadeh announced his ambition for presidency on December 29 and said he was the candidate for the younger generation. He received some support from Majlis representatives of Guilan, Azerbaijan and Khorasan. On May 22, 2005, the Guardian Council rejected Mehralizadeh and Mostafa Moeen's candidacy, but the next day they approved both reformist candidates after the controversial letter of Ayatollah Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran, who specifically asked for their approval.[2]

Mehralizadeh ranked last in the seven candidates running on June 17, 2005, securing about 1,300,000 votes (4.40%), a record number and percentage for a last finishing presidential candidate in Iran. He ranked first in the two provinces of the Iranian Azerbaijan.

2021 Iranian Presidential Election

Mohsen Mehralizadeh registered as a presidential candidate for 2021 presidential election in May 2021, and then subsequently was approved by Guardian Council. He was the only Reformist candidate among all other 6 candidates.[3] He did withdraw from the competition two days before final election date.[4]

Notes and References

  1. News: 2021-05-28 . Iran's presidential election: Who the candidates are . 2024-06-24 . BBC News . en-GB.
  2. Web site: Iran reverses ban on reformist candidates . 2005-05-24 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20230326042447/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2005/may/24/iran . 2023-03-26 . live .
  3. News: Iran's presidential election: Who the candidates are. BBC News. 28 May 2021.
  4. Web site: Reformist Mehralizadeh Quits Iranian Presidential Race - BNN Bloomberg. 16 June 2021.