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  • Armenia's Ruling Coalition Unravels

    CENTRAL ASIA - CAUCASUS ANALYST
    Wednesday / June 14, 2006

    ARMENIA'S RULING COALITION UNRAVELS

    Grigor Hakobyan Last month, beset by numerous defections of a number of
    deputies from the Orinats Yerkir (Law-Governed Country) faction and
    mounting differences between Orinats Yerkir and its coalition partners,
    the speaker of Armenian Parliament, Artur Baghdasaryan, resigned from
    his position. The change in Armenia's ruling coalition underscored the
    immaturity of many political forces in Armenia and created a new
    political reality in the country that may also have certain implications
    for the foreign policy of Armenia in the region. BACKGROUND: On May
    29th, Artur Baghdasaryan officially relinquished his position as the
    Chairman of National Assembly of Armenia. His resignation was caused by
    growing differences between his party and the presidential
    administration, as well as its partners in the coalition, the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) and the Republican Party of
    Armenia. To some external political observers, the history of
    disagreements between the outspoken Chair of National Assembly, often
    accused by his opponents for engaging in populism, began last year. At
    the time, Artur Baghdasaryan accused the ruling government of engaging
    in voting irregularities on the eve of the constitutional referendum in
    Armenia and forwarded a list of recorded cases of alleged voting
    misconduct to the Supreme Court for review.
    The tensions between him and the member coalition partners, as well as
    the presidential administration, continued to increase when he further
    ventured into the foreign policy field and began making statements on
    various issues pertaining to Armenian-Russian, Armenian-NATO and
    Armenian-Turkish relations. Specifically, he advocated the pursuit of
    NATO membership for Armenia, retaliatory actions toward Russia for their
    decision to raise gas prices for Armenia by charging the difference in
    gas prices for the hosting of Russian military base in the country. The
    last straw for Baghdasaryan's career in the ruling administration came
    after he made calls for reviewing the 2001-2003 privatization decisions,
    due to various fraudulent tenders that he alleged had occurred during
    the implementation of the controversial privatization program.

    IMPLICATIONS: Baghdasaryan's active advocacy with a view to scrutinizing
    the country's recent privatization program caused discontent among many
    of his party's business elite, who benefited from the above-mentioned
    privatization program and saw their positions endangered from their
    association with the ever more vocal Baghdasaryan, whose criticism of
    the ruling administration failed to subside. The defection of nearly a
    dozen of parliamentarians associated with Orinats Yerkir resulted in the
    decline of the party's faction in the Armenian National Assembly and
    undermined the party's role in the coalition government. That also
    showed the main weakness of the party, which was the lack of a unique
    political vision that would attract people regardless of whether the
    party is a part of the ruling government or the opposition.
    Artur Baghdasaryan was considered the most outspoken politician
    advocating NATO membership for Armenia, as well as rapid integration
    into European political structures. His pro-European views earned him
    the title of `The Best European of the Year'. Very often, he was
    perceived by various political observers as the most likely candidate to
    earn the largest number of votes in the next presidential elections.
    However, his subsequent demise and the party's positioning as an
    opposition force toward the current authorities, coupled with the
    desertion of many wealthy businessmen that provided financial backing
    for the party, may seriously undermine his chances to win the upcoming
    presidential elections in 2008. Very few wealthy businessmen would ever
    consider to back a political opposition force, thus undermining their
    own access to the ruling administration which provided them with the
    opportunity to prosper in the first place.
    The Orinats Yerkir party's past membership in the ruling coalition does
    not attract make it appealing to the current opposition forces in
    Armenia either, as many of the opposition forces view the transition of
    Orinats Yerkir from party of power into a party in opposition as another
    calculated political move by the presidential administration of Armenia
    to further split the less than cohesive opposition. Meanwhile, other
    opposition forces consider the sudden move of Orinats Yerkir party into
    the opposition camp as a calculated pre-election move on behalf of
    Baghdasaryan, designed to further his personal ambitions by first
    distancing himself from the ruling administration and secondly creating
    a momentum to recreate himself for the purpose of enlarging his
    electorate and creating an opportunity to pick up additional votes from
    a portion of Armenian voters who would otherwise have voted for a
    mainstream opposition candidate.
    Another factor to consider is the potential for the remaining parties in
    power, the Republican Party of Armenia and the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation (Dashnaktsutiun), if successful in the upcoming parliamentary
    elections, to eventually play a decisive role in speeding up the
    realignment of political forces in Armenia by consolidating them into a
    more cohesive and clear-cut political spectrum where a line between
    liberal and conservative ideologists would be easier to distinguish. The
    amorphous political situation in Armenia has created a situation where
    most political parties lack a clear political vision. They mostly feed
    off empty rhetoric, and their would-be members rally around specific
    personalities and not specific policies. Parties may pride themselves by
    the number of their party memberships, yet this only increases or
    decreases depending on whether the party in question is in power or in
    opposition and not by any tangible accomplishments for the benefit of
    the people. Clearly, this situation is not sustainable.

    CONCLUSIONS:The transition of the Orinats Yerkir from a party in power
    to a party in opposition was long anticipated, as the disagreements
    within the ruling coalition became more transparent after the passage of
    the Constitutional Referendum in Armenia. The controversies over voting
    irregularities during the Constitutional Referendum, differences over
    the country's foreign policies, and the common belief among the two
    junior partners of the government led by the Republican Party of Armenia
    ` that is Orinats Yerkir and the ARF ` that they were cheated out of
    votes during the parliamentary elections could not but undermine the
    effective work of the coalition government. Indeed, Orinats Yerkir is
    not the only disgruntled party: the continuous tension between the ARF
    and the Republican Party could further split the ruling coalition by
    resulting in the exodus of another party from the coalition government.
    As Armenia's parliamentary elections of 2007 are fast approaching, it is
    expected that further splits, consolidations and the introduction of new
    political parties in the nation's political life will continue to occur.
    As a number of well-known oligarchs and government officials rush to
    create new political parties to vie for the laurels of power,
    strengthening their own positions and advancing their personal agendas,
    the common electorate will continue to feel ostracized and further
    disfranchised from the entire political process. The situation will
    change only if and when people realize that their votes do really matter
    and that they do have a power to a make a difference in the life of
    their country.

    AUTHOR'S BIO: Grigor Hakobyan is a freelance writer based in the U.S.
    East Coast.

    http://www.cacianalyst.org/view_article.php?arti cleid=4284&SMSESSION=NO
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