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The Majority Has A Clear-Cut Opinion

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  • The Majority Has A Clear-Cut Opinion

    THE MAJORITY HAS A CLEAR-CUT OPINION
    Armen Tsatouryan

    Hayots Ashkhar
    Wednesday 27 February 2008

    The minority has to admit its defeat

    The radical opposition representatives who have been organizing
    demonstrations and marches since February 20 were, during the
    recent days, persistently advancing the absurd hypothesis as though
    L. Ter-Petrosyan, with his 21 percent votes, is the "winning candidate"
    of the RA presidential elections. As "evidence", they referred to
    the crowded demonstrations and protest marches organized in the
    capital city during the past week. Such "logic" helped overlook the
    fact that the 21 percent received by L. Ter-Petrosyan made up around
    351 thousand votes in numerical expression, whereas incumbent Prime
    Minister Serge Sargsyan has received 862 thousand votes, i.e. 2.5
    times more than the ex-President.

    It turns out that persistently refusing to admit its defeat, the
    minority is trying to change the ratio of forces, and this, as we
    know, is in contravention of the Constitution and the laws of any
    democratic state.

    In civilized countries it doesn't even occur to anyone to dispute
    the election results, given such a big difference among the contenders.

    Moreover, the defeated candidates do not absolutely start conversations
    on such topics in order not to cut a foolish figure in public. It is
    possible to find a lot of faults with the electoral system, but to
    insist that it is capable of distorting the results 2.5 times means
    to sign below a conclusion on one's own inability to realize his guilt.

    The fact that despite the difference recorded as a result of the
    elections, they unconditionally become subject to dispute and that the
    post-electoral become a tool vs. a goal, is unfortunately obtaining
    the "force of tradition" in our reality. For a moment, it seemed to L.

    Ter-Petrosyan that it was possible to gather several thousands of
    people in the square and to overturn the situation throughout the
    country. As to Arthur Baghdasaryan, he may gather around the same
    number of proponents; however, this doesn't imply the emergence of
    another self-styled "winning candidate". Moreover, the activists of
    the Armenian pan-National Movement and "Yerkrapah", as well as those
    who work in Khachatour Soukysayan's fair are enough for organizing
    medium-scale demonstrations.

    In fact, the aggressive minority, which has received 2.5 times
    less votes, is trying to impose its will on the overwhelming
    majority. Instead of being guided by the task of solving some problems
    troubling us, such majority guides itself by the slogan "We'll Win",
    aiming to impose its will on the people. And if the goal is to win the
    majority of the people, and the tool is the slogan "Levon-President",
    the fact that their candidate was defeated in the elections is really
    of trivial importance for people guided by such mentality.

    This is probably the reason that the proponents of the Prime Minister
    who ran for election with the slogan "Ahead, Armenia!" began to
    realize that it was too early for them to return to routine work. And
    realizing that, they also began organizing rallies throughout the
    Republic, with the most recent one held yesterday in the Republican
    Square. The February 26 rally showed the real place of the majority
    in whose name statements are being made on the Theatrical Square.

    The aggressiveness of the minority may also become "contagious"
    for the majority and lead to serious confrontations. And the task
    of the state is to prevent such incidents and rule out the endless
    repetition of the nonsensical attempts aimed at inciting "revolutions",
    something which L. Ter-Petrosyan's proponents initiated and in which
    they ultimately failed.
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