In Tehran, residents express feelings of envy and frustration as their own government struggles while regional rivals advance economically through ties with President Trump.

On his commute home this week in Tehran, Majid, a computer programmer aged 34, found himself caught in traffic chaos caused by a power outage that rendered streetlights inoperable. Earlier that day, he and his co-workers had raw experiences, trapped on the 16th floor of their office building without electricity or air conditioning. The government has announced multiple daily power cuts and warned residents of impending water shortages, leading to adjustments such as early school hours starting at 6 a.m.

Meanwhile, Iranians’ screens filled with broadcasts of President Trump's visit to Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the UAE—countries that stand as political and economic rivals to Iran. "I’m seeing Trump announcing tech deals with Saudi Arabia, our main rival, and it makes me think, ‘Where are we, and where are they?’" Majid said during a phone call, emphasizing the stark differences between the two nations’ situations.

Following the president's high-profile Middle Eastern tour, which served as his first international engagement of his second term, many Iranians expressed sentiments of envy and anger toward their own leadership. Reports of multibillion-dollar deals being celebrated in the Arab nations only heightened frustration among ordinary citizens grappling with immediate concerns of energy shortages and bureaucratic inefficiencies.

Majid's sentiments reflect a broader discontent across Tehran and beyond, as Iranians increasingly perceive governmental failures against the backdrop of a rapidly developing world outside their borders.