Senator Bill Hagerty said on Thursday that the Islami Republic continues subjugating and oppressing its people, adding that the protesters will decide their own future.
"I sadly say the Iranian regime is doing what it has always been doing, subjugating the people of Iran. I think the American people are for the people of Iran, we always have been. And the regime, the Ayatollahs, continue to again subjugate and oppress the people; it is very disappointing,” he told Iran International.
"I think the Iranian people need to make that decision, but these types of actions certainly do not speak well, don’t bode well for the current regime, and it is obvious to the rest of the world how the Iranian people are being treated,” the Republican senator from Tennessee said.

US-based Iranian activist Masih Alinejad said in an interview with Fox News on Thursday that Elon Musk should deploy his Starlink technology to restore internet in the country which had apparently been subject to a near-blackout by authorities.
"I think President Trump right now can talk to Elon Musk to provide Starlink for people," she said. "I want President Trump to actually take actions and show a signal to the regime that the United States of America is stop appeasing like previous presidents."
Nationwide protests gripped the country on Thursday despite a violent crackdown by security forces.
"The US government, Europeans, they must have a plan for post-Islamic Republic and be ready to help Iranians to have a smooth transition from this dictatorship to a secular democracy," she added.
"That is the demand of millions of people. This regime is no longer can be reformed."
Republican Congressman Carlos Gimenez has expressed support for protesters in Iran, sharing a video of a crowd of demonstrators in Tehran.
“God bless the brave people of Iran on the streets demanding freedom & an end to the brutal regime,” the Republican House member from Florida posted on X on Thursday.

It began with metal shutters dropping in Tehran. At two neighboring shopping centers, shopkeepers on Dec. 28 pulled down their doors as security forces moved in, and the first chants rose from the corridors into the street.
“Honorable merchants; support, support!” When security forces arrived, the most urgent refrain was not yet a political manifesto. It was a promise of mutual protection: “Don’t be afraid, don’t be afraid; we’re all in this together.”
From there, the videos show how quickly what many initially read as an economic protest widened into something explicitly political.
Iran International reviewed 463 clips from the uprising’s first 10 days – recorded in 91 cities, towns and villages – and coded every instance in which chants were clearly audible.
Across the footage, we identified 93 distinct chants heard across 641 recorded chant instances, or occurrences of chants in the videos, not a count of unique slogans or unique events.
The slogans heard across that footage trace a rapid shift: from strike calls and solidarity to direct rejection of the Islamic Republic and, increasingly, calls for the return of monarchy.
That first day, the footage was narrow. Beyond one clip from Shoush market – where merchants chanted, “Pezeshkian, have some shame; give up the presidency” – few other slogans from outside the merchants’ immediate world were clearly audible in the videos we reviewed.
On the second day, strike calls such as “Close up, close up” still echoed through the bazaars – but the protest vocabulary broke decisively into open confrontation with the Islamic Republic.
In Tehran, chants like “Until the cleric is buried, this homeland won’t become a homeland” and “Cannons, tanks, fireworks; mullahs must go” signaled a shift from trade grievance to political defiance.
That same day, a line surfaced that would come to define the first 10 days in our video analysis: “This is the final battle; Pahlavi will return.”
From this point forward, the uprising’s slogans were no longer simply about pressure or protest. They were about power – and what should replace it.
The pro-Pahlavi chant was heard in universities too, surprising some observers and even triggering accusations of video manipulations.
At Allameh Tabataba’i University, students chanted, “Neither Pahlavi nor the Supreme Leader, freedom and equality.” At Beheshti University, a line from the Woman Life Freedom movement of 2022 was heard: “You’re the lecher; you’re the whore; I am a free woman."
As the days went on, the geography widened.
The footage moved beyond Tehran into smaller cities and towns – Kouh-Chenar, Farsan, Asadabad, Juneghan – while protests continued in dormitories as well as streets.
What stood out across these scenes was not only the spread of the demonstrations, but the repetition of two dominant political poles in what people shouted: opposition to the Islamic Republic, and support for the Pahlavi family.
By the middle of the 10-day period, the uprising’s language also began to absorb the weight of mourning. Chants were not only rallying cries, but elegies.
In Kouhdasht, mourners chanted: “This flower has been torn apart; it has become a gift to the homeland.” They also repeated the slogans already familiar from the streets: “Pahlavi will return,” and “Death to the dictator.”
In Fooladshahr, mourners chanted “Death to Khamenei” at the burial of Dariush Ansari, one of the first protesters killed in this round of unrest. In Marvdasht, at the burial of Khodadad Shirvani Monfared, “Long live the Shah” was also chanted.
The uprising was not speaking in one register. It was speaking in many – anger, grief, defiance, and sometimes myth.
In Zahedan, footage recorded “Allahu Akbar” and “Death to Khamenei” after Friday prayers. In a village in Hamedan province, another line appeared: “Wail, Seyyed Ali (Khamenei); Pahlavi is coming.”
In Shiraz University’s dormitory courtyard, students chanted: “The Shah is coming home; Zahhak will be overthrown” – using the mythic tyrant Zahhak as a stand-in for Khamenei.
Toward the end of the 10 days, the volume of videos fell – fewer clips surfaced in our review – yet some of the most intense scenes were recorded in that period.
Funerals in Malekshahi, Ilam province, for Latif Karimi, Reza Azimi, and Mehdi Emami-Pour were marked by chants including “I will kill, I will kill, whoever killed my brother.”
One clip recorded citizens pleading “Police force; support, support” during an attack on a hospital in Malekshahi, even as officers stormed the facility.
Day 9 brought a quieter map but a sharper political profile. In the footage published from eight cities and villages, three chants rose most clearly: “Long live the Shah,” “Death to the dictator,” and “Neither Gaza nor Lebanon; my life for Iran.”
In Chenar-Sheikh (Chenar Sofla), the biggest village in Hamedan province, protests continued, and one line that drew attention – “Khamenei is a murderer; in your dreams” – echoed a Persian-language comment posted by Elon Musk under one of Ali Khamenei’s posts on X.
Then, on the tenth day, the footage suggested renewed momentum. Protests were recorded across 19 cities, with the signature chants against "the dictator" and for Pahlavi leading the chorus.
In some campuses, students continued – sometimes with the simplest insistence of all: “Freedom, freedom, freedom”; sometimes with a pledge of endurance: “Don’t think it’s just today, our appointment is every day.”
Across the footage, one thing is constant: people are not only protesting, but naming an alternative.
The future of this latest round of unrest is not written. But another chapter in Iranians' journey towards an Iran without the Islamic Republic is being drafted, line by line - and in the open.
Protesters on Thursday in the northern city of Gorgan poured into the streets in large numbers, chanting pro-Pahlavi slogans.
Same chants were heard in the holy city of Mashhad in northeastern Iran.
"This is the final battle, Pahlavi will return," protesters were heard chanting in Mashhad on Thursday night.
US President Donald Trump suggested it would not be appropriate to meet US-based exiled Iranian Prince Reza Pahlavi in an interview with podcaster Hugh Hewitt.
"Would you meet with Crown Prince Pahlavi, who is the heir to the constitutional monarchy. He doesn't want to rule. He would be a, you know, symbolic ruler like King Charles," Hewitt asked.
"Well, I've watched him, and he seems like a nice person, but I'm not sure that it would be appropriate at this point to do that as President," Trump responded. "I think that we should let everybody go out there and we see who emerges. I'm not sure necessarily that it would be an appropriate thing to do."