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Final Vote Results Uphold Sarkisian Landslide

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  • Final Vote Results Uphold Sarkisian Landslide

    FINAL VOTE RESULTS UPHOLD SARKISIAN LANDSLIDE
    By Hovannes Shoghikian

    Radio Liberty, Czech rep.
    May 21 2007

    Armenia's Central Election Commission (CEC) has released the final
    results of the May 12 parliamentary elections that formalized the
    landslide victory of the Republican Party (HHK) of Prime Minister
    Serzh Sarkisian.

    According to the official results made public at the weekend, the HHK
    won almost 33 percent of votes cast for parties and will directly
    hold 64 of the 131 seats in the National Assembly. Forty-one of
    those seats were won under the system of proportional representation,
    while the 23 others in single-member individual constituencies.

    The ruling party is also assured of the backing of nine other,
    nominally independent parliamentarians, giving it a de facto absolute
    majority in the newly elected Armenian parliament. Sarkisian will
    thus be in a position to form his new cabinet without the backing of
    other parties loyal to President Robert Kocharian.

    The biggest of them, the Prosperous Armenia Party (BHK), came in
    a distant second with 14.7 percent of the proportional vote and 18
    parliament seats, 7 of them won in single-member electoral districts.

    The BHK was followed by another pro-Kocharian party, the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun), which got 12.8 percent of
    the vote and will have 16 deputies in the assembly. All of them were
    elected on the party list basis, with none of the Dashnaktsutyun
    candidates prevailing in the individual constituencies. Virtually
    all of those constituencies were swept by wealthy individuals with
    close ties to the government.

    The final CEC tally also confirmed that only two opposition parties
    cleared the 5 percent threshold for entering the parliament under
    the proportional system. It showed the Orinats Yerkir Party of former
    parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian winning 6.8 percent of the vote
    and 9 parliament seats. The Zharangutyun party of Raffi Hovannisian
    will have 7 seats.

    Both opposition groups have rejected the official figures
    as fraudulent, with Orinats Yerkir planning to challenge them in
    Armenia's Constitutional Court later this week. The CEC chairman,
    Garegin Azarian, insisted, however, that Armenia held the most
    democratic elections in its history. Western monitors have similarly
    said that they largely met democratic standards.

    Eighteen other parties and one bloc that contested the elections
    will thus not be represented in the new parliament, even though they
    polled a combined 27 percent of the vote. The effectively lost votes,
    the bulk of them cast for opposition parties, were distributed among
    the more successful contenders, earning the HHK an extra 9 seats.
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