Mr. Reformist
Perhaps he himself did not know that after Mohammad Khatami, he would become the second reformist president of Iran when he appeared in the registration hall at the central office of the Ministry of Interior of Iran. Masoud Pezeshkian, a heart surgeon with a humorous, outspoken and serious personality. He was the only member of parliament who spoke in the open court of parliament after the death of Mahsa Amini (a 22-year-old Iranian Kurdish woman) at the headquarters of the Morality Police. After the death of Ebrahim Raisi, the former conservative president of Iran in his helicopter crash, Masoud Pezeshkian and his conservative political rival, Saeed Jalili, entered the second round of the early presidential election. Like other reformist politicians, especially as a senior politician, Pezeshkian tried to connect with Iran's Generation Z, an emerging generation that emerged in Iran since 1990, simultaneously with the arrival of the Internet in Iran. Pezeshkian knew well that the most important political and social developments and movements in Iran began with this emerging generation and would play a greater role in Iran's future, then he focused on Generation Z. A friendly face as former reformist President Mohammad Khatami rather than a serious politician if he wants to win the election campaign. Sometimes very thoughtful, sometimes very funny, and sometimes very friendly. His election slogans were about fundamental changes in political, economic and social freedoms that targeted all segments of society, especially women. Perhaps paying attention to the election campaign where the participants were young and trying to approach them as a friend rather than a politician were the most important reasons that led Masoud Peshkian to a decisive victory in the election race.