He began his political career in the 1960s, when he joined the Kurdistan Democratic Party. Apart from having technical qualifications and engagements, Rashid has actively participated in Kurdish and Iraqi politics. In 1986, he became the spokesman for the PUK in the United Kingdom. He served as a presidential adviser from 2010.
Presidency (2022–2026) Under the
Muhasasa power-sharing agreement among the major political parties representing the main ethnic and religious groupings in the country, a
Kurd is elected as president, a
Shia Arab as prime minister, and a
Sunni Arab as speaker of parliament. On 13 October 2022, Rashid
was elected as the 9th President of Iraq after the fall of the
Saddam Hussein regime. Rashid replaced
Barham Salih as head of state after the two-round vote in parliament, winning "more than 162 votes" against 99 for Salih. Rashid was backed by the
Kurdistan Democratic Party, while the rival
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan supported Salih. Rashid "immediately" appointed politician
Mohammed Shia' Al Sudani as prime minister-designate. This appointment ended the yearlong deadlock. In January 2025, President Rashid filed a lawsuit against Prime Minister
Mohammed Shia' Al Sudani and Finance Minister
Taif Sami requesting a court order mandating the uninterrupted and timely payment of salaries for Kurdistan Region’s civil servants.
Foreign policy i President
Ilham Aliyev in
Baku, 1 March 2023 Rashid opposes the normalization of diplomatic relations with Turkey as long as it violates Iraq's sovereignty. On 8 April 2023, Rashid condemned Turkey's alleged bombardment of an area near
Sulaimaniyah airport inside Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region. A source from the
Turkish Defense Ministry stated to
Agence France Press that Turkey's armed forces "undertook no such activity." Speaking on 27 February 2023, Rashid said that the
2003 invasion of Saddam-ruled Iraq by the United States and its allies was "necessary" because of the regime's "
brutality." He claimed that "after twenty years," now "peace and security [are] all over the country." However, long-awaited public projects, especially in the transport sector, have not materialized, a shortcoming he attributed to lingering
corruption. The Iraqi president expressed the belief that "improving relations with neighbors, including Iran, Syria, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and Jordan, is a source of strength for Iraq." ==Personal life==