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From Prices to Power: What Iran’s Protests Really Mean – Explainer

Published on: January 10, 2026 2:31 PM

January 10, 2026 by Sajjad Baloch

Iran is once again witnessing widespread public demonstrations. What began in late December 2025 as protests over rising prices and a rapidly weakening currency has evolved into one of the most serious political challenges the Islamic Republic has faced since the “Woman, Life, Freedom” movement of 2022–23. By early January, demonstrations had spread to more than 100 cities across all 31 provinces. The slogans heard on the streets suggest that the unrest is no longer focused solely on bread, fuel, or inflation, but increasingly on questions of authority and governance.

The nationwide protest movement was sparked in Tehran’s Grand Bazaar, a historic center of Iran’s economic life and political expression. When traders closed their shops in protest against rising costs, it reflected more than immediate economic hardship. Within days, some demonstrations took on a political character, with chants criticizing senior leadership and questioning the direction of the state.

The authorities responded quickly. Security forces moved to disperse crowds, arrests increased, internet access was restricted, and hospitals were reportedly monitored to prevent injured protesters from speaking to the media. Human rights organizations report dozens of deaths, including minors, though official figures remain contested.

At a basic level, Iran’s economic situation helps explain the scale of public frustration. Inflation above 40 percent, a sharply depreciating currency, slow economic growth, and persistent unemployment have made daily life increasingly difficult for many Iranians. International sanctions have played a significant role in deepening these pressures, though domestic economic management and structural challenges have also contributed. Many protesters appear unconvinced by official claims that sanctions alone are responsible for the crisis.

Still, economic hardship by itself does not fully explain the persistence or breadth of the protests. Iran has endured inflationary periods before. What appears different now is a growing sense of uncertainty about the future. Rather than calling only for policy adjustments, some protesters are questioning broader political arrangements, reflecting a deeper crisis of confidence.

Historical experience offers mixed lessons. Iran has seen repeated waves of unrest from the 1999 student protests and the 2009 Green Movement to the fuel price protests of 2019 and the women-led demonstrations of 2022. These episodes often followed a similar pattern: a triggering event, widespread mobilization, a strong security response, and eventual containment. Each time, the state has remained intact, though often at the cost of greater social polarization.

The timing of the current protests adds another layer of complexity. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, now 86, has not publicly designated a successor, and questions about leadership transition remain unresolved. President Masoud Pezeshkian, elected in 2024, holds limited authority within a system where key power centers lie elsewhere. As a result, policymaking appears constrained at a moment when public expectations are rising.

International reactions have followed familiar lines. Western governments and media generally describe the protests as expressions of popular discontent, while Iranian officials emphasize foreign interference and external pressure. While outside factors shape Iran’s environment, the scale and persistence of the demonstrations suggest that domestic concerns are central. The protests are rooted primarily in Iranian society and its internal challenges.

For the wider region, the situation carries broader implications. States can remain resilient for long periods even under pressure, but long-term stability depends on economic opportunity, political inclusion, and public trust. When these elements weaken, governance becomes more difficult and reliance on coercive measures increases.

Iran’s leadership may succeed in restoring order, as it has in previous instances. Yet each episode of unrest narrows the space for dialogue and deepens the divide between the state and segments of society. The central question is not whether Iran will change, but how that change will unfold through gradual adjustment or through sharper breaks driven by unresolved tensions.

Filed Under: Op-Ed Tagged With: Iran protests 2026, Iranian economy crisis, Khamenei leadership, Latest, Masoud Pezeshkian, Middle East unrest, Tehran demonstrations

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