Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Vote 2012: Analysts Expect Centrist Opposition To Emerge In Armenia

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

  • Vote 2012: Analysts Expect Centrist Opposition To Emerge In Armenia

    VOTE 2012: ANALYSTS EXPECT CENTRIST OPPOSITION TO EMERGE IN ARMENIA AFTER OSKANIAN COMEBACK
    By Naira Hayrumyan

    ArmeniaNow
    15.02.12 | 13:06

    Photo: www.bhk.am

    Former foreign minister Vartan Oskanian's joining Armenia's second
    most important governing party may be an indication that a centrist
    opposition is emerging in the country.

    The Prosperous Armenia Party (PAP) recently issued a statement jointly
    with its two coalition partners - the ruling Republican Party of
    Armenia (RPA) and Orinats Yerkir - that the coalition will not be
    contesting the May parliamentary elections with a single list. The
    three political parties only announced their agreement around
    "civilized competition".

    Enlarge Photo

    Analysts are divided in their assessments of this latest coalition
    agreement: some say that the governing parties simply decided to
    divide their functions and get as many protest votes as they could.

    Others argue that current President Serzh Sargsyan and former President
    Robert Kocharyan, who is believed to patronize the PAP, were unable
    to agree, and Kocharyan intends to return to active politics in a
    stance of an opponent.

    However, one can hardly expect the PAP's assuming a radical
    opposition stance, rather it is likely to occupy the vacant niche of
    a centrist opposition party, without forming an alliance with the
    radical opposition Armenian National Congress (ANC). First, there
    is the factor of irreconcilable hostility between Kocharyan and his
    predecessor Levon Ter-Petrosyan (who now leads the ANC). Secondly,
    the PAP will avoid direct confrontation with the current president,
    preferring to "prove" that the situation in the country during
    Kocharyan's presidency was better.

    The fact that the PAP does not intend to become an active opposition
    was also testified during last Sunday's competitive election in
    the town of Hrazdan where RPA and ANC representatives were battling
    it out for the mayoral post. The PAP displayed a neutral position,
    refusing to support the opposition candidate who was supported by
    the parliamentary opposition parties, Dashnaktsutyun and Heritage.

    PAP lawmaker Naira Zohrabyan only said the party would "hail if all
    candidates participating in the mayoral election in Hrazdan aspired
    to hold free and fair elections and respected the voter's will."

    Some also expect the PAP to form an electoral bloc with Dashnaktsutyun,
    which is also loyal to the second president. Chances of both parties
    in such a bloc will grow, especially after Oskanian joins the PAP
    to provide it with more substantial ideology. The thing is that the
    PAP has routinely been accused of lacking ideology and a program and
    that its leader, tycoon Gagik Tsarukyan, earns political dividends
    exclusively through charity. But with the financial resource underlying
    Oskanian's moderately critical ideology, the PAP may just as well
    emerge as a reliable centrist force.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X