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Baghdasarian In Talks On Opposition Presidential Candidate

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  • Baghdasarian In Talks On Opposition Presidential Candidate

    BAGHDASARIAN IN TALKS ON OPPOSITION PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE
    By Ruzanna Khachatrian

    Radio Liberty
    Aug 22 2007
    Czech Rep.

    Former parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian is negotiating with other
    opposition leader on the nomination of a single opposition candidate
    in next year's presidential election, a leading member of his Orinats
    Yerkir Party said on Wednesday.

    But Heghine Bisharian, secretary of the Orinats Yerkir caucus in
    Armenia's parliament, did not specify whether this means that he
    is ready to withdraw from the presidential race in favor of another
    opposition hopeful.

    "Negotiations are underway," Bisharian told a news conference. "There
    are leaders, [potential presidential] candidates who are discussing
    all possible options among themselves. I think that as long as the
    negotiations are not over, it will be wrong to speculate about who
    will yield to whom."

    Baghdasarian, 38, is believed to have long harbored presidential
    ambitions. He was viewed as one of President Robert Kocharian's
    potential handpicked successors before Orinats Yerkir's 2006 ouster
    from the ruling coalition that cost him the post of parliament speaker.

    Orinats Yerkir made a worse-than-expected showing in last May's
    parliamentary elections, polling only about 7 percent of the vote.

    Even so, according to official election results, it fared better than
    any other opposition party. The ambitious ex-speaker may thus feel
    that he would be the Armenian opposition's most popular opposition
    candidate.

    "In our political field there is politician who can be compared with
    Artur Baghdasarian," declared Bisharian.

    Accordingly, Bisharian was quite lukewarm towards the idea of the
    opposition rallying around former Levon Ter-Petrosian during the
    presidential election. "If he runs, let those who are happy with
    his track record vote for him," she said, indicating her belief that
    Ter-Petrosian is not popular enough to win the vote.

    The Orinats Yerkir leader also did not rule out the possibility of
    Baghdasarian cooperating with some pro-government forces ahead of the
    ballot. "If there are such changes in the run-up to the presidential
    elections that will lead to new political realignments, we won't
    exclude anything," she said without elaborating.
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