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Voter Apathy Appears Widespread On Eve Of Parliamentary Poll

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  • Voter Apathy Appears Widespread On Eve Of Parliamentary Poll

    VOTER APATHY APPEARS WIDESPREAD ON EVE OF PARLIAMENTARY POLL
    By Marianna Grigoryan

    EurasiaNet, NY
    May 9 2007

    With just over a day left in Armenia's parliamentary campaign,
    many voters say that it will take more than promises of a strong
    army or increased pensions to get them to the polls on May 12. Some
    sociologists put the disinterest down to political parties' failure to
    use professional public relations techniques. Many parties, however,
    counter that they see no reason for experts to help them engage
    with voters.

    Frustration with past elections, which many voters believe were rigged,
    appears to drive much of the apathy.

    "No matter what happens, our life will not change. No matter who is
    elected or not elected, nothing can change," said 50-year-old Martin
    Hovhannisian, a former chemical engineer who now earns a living by
    driving a cab in one of Yerevan's suburbs. "As I see no prospects,
    I will not go to the polls. The elections are for officials and do
    not change anything in the lives of ordinary people."

    Pensioner Margarit Minasian also plans to stay at home. She points
    at buses that brought students and people working for state-run
    organizations -- reportedly involuntarily -- to a Yerevan rally for
    the ruling Republican Party of Armenia.

    "If everything is turned into theater and people try to show something
    using their strength, why should I believe in our tomorrow?" she
    sighed.

    International observers have already noted this mood. During an April
    27 press conference, Organization for Security and Cooperation in
    Europe (OSCE) Armenia Office Head Vladimir Pryakhin stated that OSCE
    surveys indicate that more than half of Armenian voters do not want
    to participate in the elections.

    "It is difficult for me to say why it is so, but the latest surveys
    show that 90 percent of eligible voters do not connect their and their
    families' future with the outcome of the upcoming elections," Pryakhin
    told reporters. "It is not that they mistrust politicians, they simply
    do not feel dependent on them," he noted about the elections. The fact
    that many Armenians rely on relatives abroad for financial support
    could explain the low interest in domestic politics, he added.

    Similarly, an April 3-10 opinion poll of 2,000 Armenians conducted
    by British pollster Populus reported that 50 percent of respondents
    believe that the elections' outcome will have no personal significance
    for them. Thirty percent noted that there will be no change in Armenia
    generally, and only 10 percent of respondents expressed optimism
    about the elections' consequences.

    Some sociologists argue that part of the problem is that Armenian
    political parties have not yet learned how to engage the public's
    attention and retain it for a month-long campaign. The knowledge of
    how "to conduct a competent and correct campaign . . . is absent in
    Armenia," commented Gevorg Poghosian, head of the Armenian Sociological
    Association.

    A campaign poster featuring a photograph of an official sitting at a
    table and captioned "Strength and Faith" typifies the favored approach
    for pro-government party posters. Such placards can be seen throughout
    Armenian towns - even on the walls of kindergartens - and with little
    variation in facial expressions or slogans. Opposition posters tend
    to be equally non-descript.

    "Time is moving on, but the campaign here is conducted on the level
    of the 1990's," said political campaign specialist Armen Badalian. "
    Everyone says that they will build a strong army, will raise pensions,
    will solve the Nagorno-Karabakh problem. The same thing constantly."

    Attention to details frequently seems lacking. Information about
    rallies and concerts is not always widely distributed even within the
    parties themselves, much less to the press or public. The April 18 to
    May 2 report of the OSCE/Office for Democratic Institutions and Human
    Rights Election Observation Mission notes that "most parties appear
    to favor an approach of holding unannounced or short-notice rallies."

    The result, continued Badalian, is a campaign "which cannot have any
    impact on the public."

    "For a good result, political parties must work with voters for at
    least one year, conduct surveys, decide on psychological aspects [of
    the campaign], how they can influence the voter," said Badalian, who
    would not disclose for which parties he himself is working. "But what
    is happening is that, if, say, they are bribing voters [with handouts],
    they think they have already achieved their result and never think
    of consulting a specialist. They think they can do everything."

    An informal poll of about a dozen political parties conducted by
    EurasiaNet found that none had turned to outside advisors for help
    with grabbing voters' interest.

    "What specialist can help us if we ourselves have a good knowledge of
    this business?" asked Prosperous Armenia Party spokesman Baghdasar
    Mherian. "I conducted PR for President Robert Kocharian in the 2003
    presidential election, and, as you see, we succeeded then, so we will
    be successful this time around as well."

    A similar view holds on the other side of the political divide as
    well. Nikol Pashinian, a newspaper editor and one of the leaders
    of the hardline opposition Impeachment alliance argues that such
    specialists serve no purpose.

    "If you have something to say to the people and thousands of people
    come to listen to you, and you do not follow any rule, but simply say
    what you want to say, then people will understand you," Pashinian said.

    To improve voter engagement with the campaign, one member of the
    Republican Party of Armenia parliamentary faction has proposed
    shortening future parliamentary campaigns from the current 33 days
    to one or two weeks.

    But for voters like 75-year-old Yerevan resident Varazdat Hakobian
    a larger problem still lingers on.

    "Everyone smiles, shows they think about us, while everyone has
    in their minds how to cheat us and get hold of our votes and then
    disappear for years until the next election," Hakobian said.

    "Everyone is lying, so I won't go to the polls. Let them lie without
    me."

    Editor's Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the independent
    online weekly ArmeniaNow in Yerevan.
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