Certainly.
How do you think this will affect wider Iranian politics? The presidential elections? The next rahbar?
The first thing that comes to mind is how massive this impact is. But on further thought, its not as big as we may think. Revolutionary figures from that generation are only relevant psychologically, in the sense a lot of Iranians living today have been exposed to these figures for most of our lives. But Rafsanjani was 82. His impact on politics in the 80s and 90s might have been massive, but in 2016, not much more.
It would be politics in their 60s that would be more and more relevant. Rouhani is 68, Ahmadinejad is 60, Ali Larijani is 58, Sadegh Larijani is 55, Aref is 65, Zarif is 65, Ali Shamkhani is 61, and Mohammad Ali Jafari is 59.
These are the second generation of politicians. The first generation might be on our minds, but they are not as relevant anymore as we might think. The oldest in that group is 68, and the youngest is 55. If you compare it to revolution in 79, that means that the oldest (Rouhani) was 31 in 79, and the youngest was just 18.
So, I don't think there will be much impact on the political arena, but it is going to have a psychological effect on us. The Iranian people will soon get used to the idea that we have officially entered the second phase of post-revolution Iran.