Trader consensus prices an 88.9% probability against Reza Pahlavi leading Iran in 2026, reflecting the Islamic Republic's resilience despite major shocks. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's assassination on February 28 amid US-Israel strikes triggered nationwide protests into March, fueled by economic crisis and war escalations, but security forces reasserted control via massacres and internet blackouts. Successor Mojtaba Khamenei faces reports of severe health issues, including a coma, yet no leadership vacuum has enabled regime change. Pahlavi's March 14 declaration of readiness for a transitional government and calls for uprisings garnered diaspora support but failed to spark internal defections or power shifts, underscoring barriers like loyal Revolutionary Guards and absence of viable opposition infrastructure.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · UpdatedWill Reza Pahlavi lead Iran in 2026?
Will Reza Pahlavi lead Iran in 2026?
$1,040,783 Vol.
$1,040,783 Vol.
$1,040,783 Vol.
$1,040,783 Vol.
Reza Pahlavi will be considered to hold power if he exercises primary governing authority over the Iranian state during the specified timeframe, including effective control over the armed forces, national institutions, and core executive decision-making, regardless of formal title, constitutional designation, or international recognition.
Formal appointment, recognition by the United Nations, or recognition by foreign governments is not required.
Indicators of de facto authority may include control over the armed forces and security services; control over executive ministries and state administrative institutions; enforcement of national laws; issuance of binding national directives; and effective control over the capital and core state infrastructure.
Symbolic status, foreign recognition without domestic control, exile leadership without effective authority inside Iran, nomination without effective authority, or ceremonial or transitional status without governing control will not qualify.
If Iran experiences a period in which no individual exercises effective governing control, this will not alone qualify for a “Yes” resolution unless Reza Pahlavi subsequently meets the criteria above within the specified timeframe.
The primary resolution source for this market will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Feb 28, 2026, 10:36 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Reza Pahlavi will be considered to hold power if he exercises primary governing authority over the Iranian state during the specified timeframe, including effective control over the armed forces, national institutions, and core executive decision-making, regardless of formal title, constitutional designation, or international recognition.
Formal appointment, recognition by the United Nations, or recognition by foreign governments is not required.
Indicators of de facto authority may include control over the armed forces and security services; control over executive ministries and state administrative institutions; enforcement of national laws; issuance of binding national directives; and effective control over the capital and core state infrastructure.
Symbolic status, foreign recognition without domestic control, exile leadership without effective authority inside Iran, nomination without effective authority, or ceremonial or transitional status without governing control will not qualify.
If Iran experiences a period in which no individual exercises effective governing control, this will not alone qualify for a “Yes” resolution unless Reza Pahlavi subsequently meets the criteria above within the specified timeframe.
The primary resolution source for this market will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus prices an 88.9% probability against Reza Pahlavi leading Iran in 2026, reflecting the Islamic Republic's resilience despite major shocks. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei's assassination on February 28 amid US-Israel strikes triggered nationwide protests into March, fueled by economic crisis and war escalations, but security forces reasserted control via massacres and internet blackouts. Successor Mojtaba Khamenei faces reports of severe health issues, including a coma, yet no leadership vacuum has enabled regime change. Pahlavi's March 14 declaration of readiness for a transitional government and calls for uprisings garnered diaspora support but failed to spark internal defections or power shifts, underscoring barriers like loyal Revolutionary Guards and absence of viable opposition infrastructure.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data. This is not trading advice and plays no role in how this market resolves. · Updated



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