Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Will Tigran Sargsyan Leave?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Will Tigran Sargsyan Leave?

    WILL TIGRAN SARGSYAN LEAVE?

    HAKOB BADALYAN

    Lragir.am
    http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/comments22790.html
    29/07/2011

    The People Newspaper informed that people working with Tigran Sargsyan
    noticed that recently he has changed. He is indifferent, and he tells
    the ministers who come up to him to discuss something, he says he is
    tired and wants to get through the discussion quickly.

    Perhaps, there will be an official reaction on Tigran Sargsyan's mood
    and state of soul but there is nothing strange that a prime minister
    may get depressed or tired. A prime minister is a person and, as any
    other person, he may get tired or feel depressed.

    Besides, in evaluating Tigran Sargsyan's economic policy, one
    must admit that in the past three years he has been in a difficult
    situation and has had to resolve complicated problems. Evaluations of
    effectiveness, rightness, adequacy of these solutions may be different
    but it is beyond doubt that in the past three years Sargsyan has been
    operating in a complex situation.

    Besides, Tigran Sargsyan's factor acquires an interesting shade in the
    context of negotiations between the Congress and the authorities. The
    government agreed to discuss the issue of snap elections because it
    didn't want to refuse to discuss anything. Besides, the government
    announces that there is no reason for snap elections, so they will
    not agree to hold snap elections.

    The Armenian National Congress demands that the government should hold
    elections in October, otherwise it threatens to enter confrontation.

    To say that it's a great threat to the government would be wrong. But
    it would also be wrong to say that the government does not have a
    serious reason for serious worry. Maybe a lot depends on the external
    reaction, whether this time the government will be allowed to deal
    with the opposition violently.

    However, politics is based on arguments rather than math formulas,
    so the parties may succeed in persuading each other and their external
    partners with the help of different arguments. So it is not ruled out
    that in order to avoid snap elections the authorities will have the
    cabinet resign and appoint a new government, inviting the Armenian
    National Congress, as well as making a deal with the parliamentary
    majority that it will be not sabotage the Congress's prime minister.

    The Congress is ready to discuss the option. The coordinator of the
    Congress Levon Zurabyan told Radio Liberty that if the government
    refuses snap elections, it must offer serious systemic steps instead,
    which they will be able to present to the society to justify the
    tactics of avoiding confrontation. The resignation of the government
    and offering the post of prime minister to the opposition is a serious
    systemic step, at least at first sight.

    It is not ruled out that Tigran Sargsyan is going to leave office, or
    at least a proper information atmosphere is created in case he has to
    leave, not to have it sound as thunder in the clear sky. It seems that
    there is no need for such a precaution because the economic situation
    and Tigran Sargsyan's weak economic policy make his resignation an
    expected step. On the other hand, part of the society understands that
    the problem is not the prime minister but the president who nominated
    him. Perhaps the only prime ministers who conducted an independent
    policy rather than were administrators were Vazgen Manukyan and
    Vazgen Sargsyan.

    On the other hand, Tigran Sargsyan's possible dismissal may be
    evidence to two things. Either Serzh Sargsyan failed to reshuffle
    the government and push Hovik Abrahamyan to the background so he
    removes Tigran Sargsyan to prevent dual government on the eve of the
    elections, or Serzh Sargsyan is ceding government little by little,
    and the first move, E2 E4, will be Tigran Sargsyan's dismissal.

    Although, in both cases Serzh Sargsyan is ceding power, and the problem
    is whether he will hand power to the Congress or to the traditional
    wing of the pro-government criminal-oligarchic system.

    It seems that Serzh Sargsyan belongs to this wing and he doesn't need
    to cede anything. In reality, this is the first impression. Of course,
    Serzh Sargsyan belongs to this system, and it may be highly relative
    that Tigran Sargsyan does not belong to this wing, but in this case
    the problem is other. It is one thing to belong to this system, to
    be one of its architects, and it is another thing to manage the system.

    Do you manage the system or does the system manage you? This is the
    question for Serzh Sargsyan. And Tigran Sargsyan's dismissal will
    indicate to who Serzh Sargsyan will hand over government.

    Yet there is another option too. Tigran Sargsyan did his job, his role
    of veil for the home political crisis, under social tension, mitigating
    fundamental disposition of the society toward the government. Now this
    veil is not effective, and may already irritate the society with words
    which are not translated into action, and Serzh Sargsyan might need
    to change the prime minister, especially that he sat at the table to
    negotiate with the opposition, and there is no confrontation which
    will require full consolidation inside the government.

Working...
X