GoodIdxThe Goodness Index
Masoud Pezeshkian

Masoud Pezeshkian

President of Iran; politician; heart surgeon

IranBorn 1954politicianGovernment of IranIslamic Consultative AssemblyMinistry of Health and Medical EducationTabriz University of Medical Sciences
73
GOOD

of 100 · unstable trend · Visibly decent and improving

Standing

73/100

Raw Score

64/85

Confidence

72%

Evidence

Medium

About

Pezeshkian's strongest observable positives are his long medical-service background, his public criticism of abusive treatment in cases like Mahsa Amini's death, and his repeated preference for negotiation over escalation.

The evidence shows a personally religious and pressure-tested public figure with some real social-care and reform signals, but also a leader operating inside and legitimizing a state apparatus that continued executions, dissent crackdowns, and coercive hijab enforcement under his presidency.

Five Pillars

Pillar scores (0–100%)

Core Worldview100%(25/25)
Contribution to Others50%(15/30)
Personal Discipline100%(10/10)
Reliability40%(2/5)
Stability Under Pressure80%(12/15)

On the Goodness Alignment model, Pezeshkian scores very strongly on publicly evident Muslim belief and baseline worship assumptions, and strongly on resilience. The score is pulled down by only moderate public proof of broad social care and by a serious integrity gap between reform-minded language and the coercive state outcomes that continued under his presidency.

Goodness over time

Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.

17 Criteria Scores

Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes

Core Worldview

Belief in god5/5

Public Muslim identity and God-centered language.

Belief in accountability last day5/5

Scored by Muslim assumption-of-best rule absent contrary evidence.

Belief in unseen order5/5

Scored by Muslim assumption-of-best rule absent contrary evidence.

Belief in revealed guidance5/5

Public Islamic framing and oath language support this baseline.

Belief in prophets as examples5/5

Publicly religious framing with no contrary evidence.

Contribution to Others

Helps relatives3/5

Raised remaining children alone after family tragedy.

Helps orphans or unsupported young people2/5

Limited direct public evidence.

Helps the poor or stuck3/5

Medical and public-health background supports moderate credit.

Helps travelers strangers or cut off people2/5

Some inclusion rhetoric toward minorities, but evidence is limited.

Helps people who ask directly2/5

Public record here is thin.

Helps free people from constraint3/5

Criticized abuse after Mahsa Amini and helped pause harsher hijab implementation.

Personal Discipline

Prays consistently5/5

Scored by Muslim assumption-of-best rule absent contrary evidence.

Gives obligatory charity5/5

Scored by Muslim assumption-of-best rule absent contrary evidence.

Reliability

Keeps promises agreements contracts commitments and clear communication2/5

Reform language is real, but state outcomes remained sharply at odds with it.

Stability Under Pressure

Patient during financial difficulty3/5

Moderate evidence through sanctions-era public leadership.

Patient during personal hardship5/5

Strong evidence from family loss and continued service.

Patient during conflict pressure fear or battlefield moments4/5

Battlefield medical service and persistent negotiation stance under pressure.

Timeline

Key events and documented turning points

1980

Served as physician and medical organizer during the Iran-Iraq War

Public biographies consistently describe Pezeshkian as serving on the front during the Iran-Iraq War, sending medical teams and working as both a doctor and combatant.

Provides durable evidence of service under danger and of care reaching vulnerable people in crisis.

high
1994

Lost his wife and youngest son in a car crash and raised his remaining children alone

Biographical accounts report that Pezeshkian's wife and youngest son died in 1994 and that he never remarried, raising his remaining children himself.

Strong evidence of personal hardship that shapes later readings of steadiness and family responsibility.

high
2009

Condemned violent repression after the 2009 election unrest

Britannica records that during the 2009 crackdown Pezeshkian delivered a parliamentary speech condemning the treatment of protesters and warning against treating people brutally.

Meaningful evidence that he sometimes speaks against abusive state conduct, even while staying inside the system.

medium
2022

Publicly criticized the handling of Mahsa Amini's death

After Mahsa Amini died in custody, Pezeshkian said it was unacceptable to arrest a girl over hijab and return her dead body to her family, pairing criticism with a prayer for the country.

One of the clearest public markers of his reformist and humane rhetoric on domestic social coercion.

high
2024

Won the 2024 presidential runoff as the main reform-oriented candidate

Pezeshkian won Iran's July 5, 2024 runoff election after campaigning on modest reform, broader engagement with the world, and a less coercive domestic tone.

Massively increased his influence and created direct responsibility for state outcomes under his presidency.

high
2024

His government helped pause implementation of a harsher hijab law

AP reported that Iran halted the process of implementing a stricter mandatory-headscarf law after opposition from Pezeshkian's side of government, though the law itself was not repealed.

Concrete but limited evidence of using office to soften coercive enforcement rather than simply endorsing escalation.

medium
2025

Moderate rhetoric collided with continued repression under his presidency

UN investigators said hopes of moderation were fading as repression, hijab enforcement, and intimidation continued under the state he headed, even as Pezeshkian kept presenting negotiation and de-escalation language abroad.

This is the central contradiction in his profile: reformist language is real, but abusive system outcomes have continued.

high
2026

Ordered pursuit of 'fair and equitable' talks with the United States

Pezeshkian publicly instructed the foreign ministry to pursue negotiations based on dignity, wisdom, and expediency, and his official account echoed the same line on X.

Fresh evidence that he continues to prioritize diplomacy over public maximalism, even while refusing surrender language.

high

Pressure Tests

Behavior under crisis or scrutiny

Iran-Iraq War medical service

1980

He worked around front-line conditions during a major war as both physician and organizer of medical teams.

Response: Stayed in service roles under danger rather than only administrative distance.

positive

Family tragedy in 1994

1994

His wife and youngest son died in a car crash.

Response: Raised his remaining children alone and remained in public and professional life.

positive

Presidency under domestic and external pressure

2024

He entered office with sanctions pressure, conservative institutional constraints, and expectations for domestic reform.

Response: Kept presenting negotiation and partial social easing as his preferred path, but results remained mixed and constrained.

mixed

Progression

crisis years

Publicly criticized some abuses, especially after Mahsa Amini's death, but stayed within the regime's accepted boundaries.

mixed

current stage

Now carries global influence and visible reformist rhetoric, but the presidency exposes the gap between humane language and state behavior more sharply than before.

mixed

early years

Built identity through medicine, military-era service, and provincial public work.

up

growth years

Moved from technical public service into national reformist politics without becoming an outright system challenger.

up

Strongest positives

  • Long record of medical service and crisis exposure
  • Repeated public preference for negotiation over escalation
  • Documented criticism of abusive treatment in protest and hijab-related cases

Key concerns

  • Executions and coercive repression continued under the state he leads
  • Domestic reform promises have produced only partial and reversible results
  • His office operates inside a system where accountability is structurally limited

Behavioral Patterns

Positive

  • Keeps returning to medical-service and care-based identity markers
  • Frames disputes in moral and religious language rather than pure power language
  • Shows recurring preference for negotiation, de-escalation, and less coercive social enforcement

Concerns

  • Works within and legitimizes a system that continues harsh repression
  • Public moderation often stops short of direct structural confrontation
  • Observable service to vulnerable groups is real but less extensive than his global political power

Evidence Quality

7

Strong

4

Medium

1

Weak

Overall: medium

Evidence warnings

  • Public evidence is much stronger for his rhetoric and biography than for private charitable practice.
  • Some humanitarian inferences come from long medical and public-service roles rather than direct modern philanthropy records.
  • Iran's political structure limits how cleanly presidential intent can be separated from state outcomes.

This profile evaluates observable public behavior and evidence, not the state of a person's soul.