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  • A Crack Emerges

    Transitions Online, Czech Republic
    Nov 29 2004

    A Crack Emerges


    by Emil Danielyan
    29 November 2004

    Armenia's government begins to crack in a dispute that highlights the
    role of wealth in making a political career. From Eurasianet.

    YEREVAN, Armenia--An increasingly bitter dispute over election rules
    for future parliamentary elections could cause a split within
    Armenia's governing coalition.

    The Republican Party (HHK) of Prime Minister Andranik Markarian is at
    loggerheads with its two subordinate coalition partners, the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation (ARF) and the Orinats Yerkir (Country of
    Law) party. The dispute centers on the composition of parliament, or,
    more specifically, how deputies are elected.

    According to the existing law, 75 of the 131 members of the National
    Assembly are elected under the proportional system, with voters
    choosing a list of candidates fielded by a party or bloc. The
    remaining 56 seats are distributed in single-mandate constituencies
    under the first-past-the-post, or "majoritarian" system prevalent in
    the United States and Britain.

    The vast majority of the Armenian lawmakers elected under the
    majoritarian system are wealthy government-connected individuals. In
    the overwhelming number of instances, these individuals wield immense
    economic influence within their respective constituencies, and are
    widely believed to have secured victory at the polls through bribery
    and manipulation. Many of them are affiliated with, or backed by the
    HHK--a key reason why Markarian's party has the largest parliament
    faction and controls most local governments. The HHK is certainly
    Kocharian's most influential supporter.

    The junior coalition members would prefer to do away with
    first-past-the-post constituencies, and base future elections
    entirely on the proportional system. At the very least, they want to
    reduce the number of majoritarian seats in the legislature. The ARF,
    also known as Dashnaktsutiun, has warned that it could quit the
    coalition if the HHK continues to oppose a move to increase the
    number of parliamentary seats determined under the proportional
    system.

    "Dashnaktsutiun reserves the right to reconsider its participation in
    the coalition government in the event of a breach of the goals
    spelled out in the [June 2003] memorandum on its [the coalition's]
    creation," warned Armen Rustamian, one of its leaders. He said
    expansion of the proportional system was one of the key terms of the
    coalition's power-sharing accord.

    The coalition cabinet has been beset by internal wrangling ever since
    its creation following the May 2003 parliamentary elections, which
    were marked by widespread accusations of fraud. The ARF has regularly
    expressed its dissatisfaction with the slow pace of economic
    improvement, persisting government corruption and what its leaders
    characterize as the "power of money" in the impoverished country. The
    influential nationalist party, which has branches in Armenia's
    worldwide diaspora, toughened its rhetoric in early November after
    the HHK torpedoed its efforts at electoral reform.

    The two sides have tried unsuccessfully in recent weeks to bridge
    their differences. Tigran Torosian, a deputy parliament speaker and
    an HHK leader, said on November 23 that the Republicans will make a
    final attempt to strike a compromise deal later this week. Their
    failure to reach agreement would set the stage for Kocharian's
    personal intervention in the row, which has already proven
    debilitating for the governing coalition. Keeping all of his major
    allies happy will be a difficult task, observers in Yerevan say.

    Despite the recent rise in heated rhetoric, HHK leaders have been
    quick to shrug off the threat of an ARF departure. "Let nobody think
    that we become very concerned and nervous every time they talk about
    leaving [the coalition]," Markarian said in a recent newspaper
    interview.

    Of all the other Armenian parties only Orinats Yerkir, which is led
    by parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian, did reasonably well in
    individual races in the 2003 parliament elections. Yet it too wants a
    greater share for the party-list seats. Proponents of the
    proportional system say that it would spur the development of
    political parties. Increased political competition, in turn, would
    make it more difficult for one party to get away with voting
    irregularities.

    In a bid to prevail in the dispute, the rival camps have turned to
    other political groups for support. The Republicans are strongly
    backed on the issue by the People's Deputy group of non-partisan
    lawmakers. Orinats Yerkir and the ARF, meanwhile, have enlisted the
    support of the United Labor Party (MAK), a small pro-Kocharian group
    also represented in the current legislature.

    MAK leader Gurgen Arsenian claimed on 18 November that "new
    realignments" could occur both inside the parliament and the
    government. He said opponents of the majoritarian system are prepared
    to take "drastic steps," which he declined to specify. "Time will
    tell whether or not there will be a change in the coalition format,"
    Arsenian told reporters. "I don't rule that out."

    The existing balance of forces in parliament favors the HHK, the most
    powerful government faction. Together with the People's Deputy group,
    they hold about 60 parliament seats compared to fewer than 40 seats
    controlled by their pro-presidential opponents. However, the junior
    coalition members could end up winning the electoral rules debate if
    they gain the support of the 23 lawmakers representing Armenia's two
    main opposition groups, the Artarutiun (Justice) alliance and the
    National Unity Party (AMK).

    Whether the opposition parties are willing to join forces with the
    junior coalition members on the electoral rules issue is uncertain at
    this point. Artarutiun and the AMK are both known to be strong
    advocates of proportional representation, but they have boycotted
    parliament sessions since February 2004. The boycott is linked to the
    pro-presidential parliament majority's refusal to consider a
    "referendum of confidence" in Kocharian.

    The opposition refuses to recognize the legitimacy of Kocharian's
    victory in the 2003 presidential vote. For more than a year after the
    election, the opposition pursued a popular protest strategy against
    Kocharian. That effort, however, failed to attract a sufficient
    following that could exert pressure on the president to either change
    political course, or step down.

    Since abandoning the protest strategy, opposition leaders have kept a
    low profile, waiting for an opportunity to capitalize on the renewed
    government infighting. They may now believe such an opportunity is at
    hand and try to stoke the intra-governmental tensions by openly
    backing the electoral reform championed by the ARF. All of which
    makes the fast resolution of the coalition dispute even more urgent
    for Kocharian.

    Emil Danielyan, a Yerevan-based journalist and political analyst,
    wrote this article for Eurasianet.
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