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Political End Or New Beginning?: Ter-Petrosyan Plans For Reformattin

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  • Political End Or New Beginning?: Ter-Petrosyan Plans For Reformattin

    POLITICAL END OR NEW BEGINNING?: TER-PETROSYAN PLANS FOR REFORMATTING OPPOSITION BLOC DRAW MIXED REACTIONS

    POLITICS | 08.02.13 | 12:30

    Photolure

    By NAIRA HAYRUMYAN
    ArmeniaNow correspondent

    The announcement by the leader of the opposition Armenian National
    Congress (ANC) Levon Ter-Petrosyan of plans to set up a new
    social-liberal party on the platform of the current opposition bloc has
    elicited mixed reactions, with some representatives of the government
    calling it the sign of the former president's political fiasco.

    In an interview with the pro-opposition Chorrord Inknishkhanutyun daily
    on Thursday, Ter-Petrosyan said: "The Congress has fulfilled its role
    of a movement relentlessly struggling against the gangster state,
    but this movement needs serious institutional changes to continue
    its mission and struggle till the victorious end... Considering the
    tendencies of political developments in the coming years, I think it
    is now time for various political forces and non-partisan individuals
    of the Congress to merge into one single political party."

    The ANC has been accused of dispersing its powerful revolutionary
    sentiments that Ter-Petrosyan managed to mobilize at one point in
    2008. Back then his rallies - in the run-up to the presidential
    election - were attended by tens of thousands of people and were
    accompanied with calls for the overthrow of the regime. The ANC formed
    several months after the dispersal of post-election demonstrations
    on March 1, 2008 continued its rallies for some time, before the
    movement eventually died out as fewer and fewer people would turn
    out for the events.

    However, the number of Ter-Petrosyan supporters has sharply decreased
    especially after the opposition leader engaged in what essentially
    amounted to political bargaining with representatives of the regime he
    had harshly criticized and labeled as a bunch of criminals for years.

    First, his representatives conducted fruitless "consultations"
    with President Serzh Sargsyan's political coalition, then with
    representatives of tycoon Gagik Tsarukyan, the leader of the Prosperous
    Armenia Party. Some experts believe it was due to this bargaining that
    the ANC got seven mandates in the National Assembly in the May 2012
    elections. However, dissent within the ANC ranks grew even stronger
    after that.

    Several major political parties and individuals making up the alliance
    decided to quit it formally, others left the alliance by the de
    facto absence. And it is this situation that eventually must have
    led to Ter-Petrosyan's decision last December not to make another
    presidential bid.

    Experts estimate that it was then that Ter-Petrosyan completely
    disoriented and 'dispersed' the pro-opposition part of the society
    that pinned their hopes on that bigger segment of the opposition.

    Ter-Petrosyan, however, stopped short of urging members and supporters
    of his alliance to boycott the elections.

    The announced plans for the establishment of a new party of a
    social-liberal orientation immediately sparked speculation about the
    imminent dissolution of a number of political parties that currently
    make up the ANC. These are the Armenian National Movement (ANM) and
    the People's Party of Armenia (PPA) and several other major parties.

    Justice Minister Hrayr Tovmasyan was quick to point out in this regard
    that if the members of these political parties join the new party of
    Ter-Petrosyan, these parties will have to be formally dissolved.

    ANM leader Aram Makukyan and PPA leader Stepan Dmirchyan indicated,
    however, that they wanted their parties to continue to exist. However,
    it is possible that at some point they will change their minds and
    join the nascent party.

    The Armenian opposition certainly needs reformatting if it wants to
    continue to fight for influence over government decision-making.

    Perhaps this reformatting will change the paradoxical situation
    that now exists in Armenia when a considerable number of people
    are critical of the ruling force, but this majority has no powerful
    political force to expresses its interests.

    Despite the existing frustration about the social and economic policies
    of the ruling party among a considerable part of the population,
    people apparently see no other equally powerful opposition party
    to vote for. In fact, Ter-Petrosyan has failed to live up to the
    expectations of many pro-opposition members of the public.

    Deputy Speaker of the Armenian Parliament, ruling Republican Party of
    Armenia spokesman Eduard Sharmazanov insisted on Thursday that by his
    move Ter-Petrosyan is only trying to save the ANC from a collapse. He
    added that only time will show how effective this format will be for
    the opposition political force. For the time being, Sharmazanov said,
    the ANC has turned into a mere group of supporters of Ter-Petrosyan
    and bloc coordinator Levon Zurabyan.

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