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Opposition Or Protesting Electorate?

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  • Opposition Or Protesting Electorate?

    OPPOSITION OR PROTESTING ELECTORATE?
    Naira Hayrumyan

    KarabakhOpen
    13-03-2007 14:55:46

    In Karabakh the election campaign set out strangely with accusations
    against the opposition. Тhe opposition is constantly accused
    of venality, scandals, and even anti-democracy. However, nobody
    has stated yet who is opposition in Karabakh. The opposition is
    an organized political force which disagrees with the policy of
    the government and wants to come to power to conduct a different
    policy. It follows from this classic definition that there is no
    opposition in Karabakh. There is not an organized force (party) or
    separate people who do not trust the government and desire to come
    to power. There are political parties which are dissatisfied with
    something. For instance, the ARF Dashnaktsutyun is dissatisfied
    with the internal policies, namely the manpower policy and the
    policy of re-settlement. However, this organized force apparently
    does not desire power. This is the only item on the list of the
    dissatisfied politicians. There is a considerable mass of people
    in the country, however, who are not organized politically and
    do not aspire to power but are dissatisfied with the government's
    policies. They are the protesting electorate. These people do not
    have political ambitions, they are interested in politics to the
    degree it affects their lives. Businessmen who are stifled with
    taxes and bureaucracy, pensioners whose retirement benefit is not
    enough to buy food, people who suffered from legal arbitrariness,
    in short the protesting electorate. In most cases the government has
    levers to pressure on them, therefore they do not become an actively
    protesting electorate. On the other hand, they are a major force and
    every candidate will be fighting for the votes of these people in
    the upcoming election.

    For a number of reasons the protesting electorate in Karabakh is not
    organized. First, this electorate does not have a leader. Second,
    the government has isolated the society for such a long time from
    governance playing politics with itself that the society has already
    forgotten the rules. Third, the electorate does not have access to
    the mass media, especially television. Fourth, the electorate has
    not had an opportunity to voice protest: the elections did not have
    an alternative so that it is hard to call them election.

    This time everything may be different. And the protesting electorate
    may have a deciding role.

    --Boundary_(ID_VIHosj4mbuTMOr1XlT+gFQ)--
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