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Arf Will Have Its Own Presidential Candidate

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  • Arf Will Have Its Own Presidential Candidate

    ARF WILL HAVE ITS OWN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE

    Yerkir
    August 4, 2007

    YEREVAN (Yerkir)--The ARF Supreme Council of Armenia chairman Armen
    Rustamian Friday reiterated that his party will nominate its own
    candidate for the 2008 presidential elections.

    "I am sure that that person will be a member of the party," Rustamian
    said of the presidential candidate.

    He said the ARF will convene a congress in the fall to decide on the
    candidate. "Our party will not defend a candidate nominated by other
    political groups and will not nominate a candidate that was already
    nominated by another party," he told journalists at a press conference.

    Commenting on National Assembly speaker Tigran Torosian's statement
    that a president would be stronger if he had a majority in parliament,
    Rustamian said that authoritarianism cannot be effective. "Strong
    authority should be based on rightful concepts. ... There should be
    mechanisms of balance and restriction in the government. It would
    be even better if the president represents another political force,"
    he explained.

    Asked where the incumbent president would be after the 2008
    presidential election, he said, "I don't think he would be where the
    first president is."

    "I don't think the president will back our candidate," he told
    reporters.

    "It will be good if he does but I'm sure he will back the prime
    minister," Rustamian said.

    Nonetheless, Rustamian said he believes that the presidential ballot
    will be tightly contested and will likely involve two rounds. "I find
    it very likely that the elections will not end in one round," he said.

    Rustamian, who heads the Armenian parliament's foreign relations
    committee, further announced that the ARF will hold consultations
    in September with other major political groups, including those
    opposed to Kocharian, on ways of ensuring the proper conduct of the
    vote. He confirmed that it is particularly keen to cooperate with
    Raffi Hovannisian's Heritage Party, one of the two opposition forces
    represented in the new National Assembly.

    "There is some ideological similarity between us," Rustamian said.

    "Hovannisian's approaches are totally acceptable to us. Our
    relationship has always been constructive and based on [shared support
    for] national ideology. ... This enables us to see possibilities of
    closer cooperation and even some future programs," he added without
    elaborating.

    At the end of the news conference, Rustamian blamed flaws in the
    elections on the majoritarian (single-mandate) election system,
    saying it must be eliminated to ensure clean and fair voting by party
    lists only.
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