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Armenia: Is A Genuinely Competitive Presidential Vote Coming In 2013

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  • Armenia: Is A Genuinely Competitive Presidential Vote Coming In 2013

    ARMENIA: IS A GENUINELY COMPETITIVE PRESIDENTIAL VOTE COMING IN 2013?

    EurasiaNet.org
    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/65498
    June 5 2012
    NY

    It's prudent always to expect the unexpected from a man who keeps
    lions in his back yard.

    Tycoon Gagik Tsarukian, the man with exotic pets, heads the Prosperous
    Armenia Party, which finished with just under one-third of the vote
    in Armenia's May 6 parliamentary elections. A few days later, he
    confounded Armenia's political establishment with an announcement
    that his party will not rejoin the governing coalition. Speculation
    is now mounting in Yerevan that Tsarukian may potentially challenge
    President Serzh Sargsyan in next year's presidential election.

    "Gagik Tsarukian now needs a rope-walker's skills in order to balance
    between both [government and opposition] spheres," commented pollster
    Aharon Adibekian, the director of Yerevan's Sociometer Center.

    Prosperous Armenia had been a junior member since 2007 in the governing
    coalition, which is led by Sargsyan's Republican Party. But on May 24,
    Tsarukian declared that such a subservient role "is inexpedient for
    the party." He added that he is ready to suffer "losses" to "maintain
    the people's trust."

    By rejecting a coalition with the Republican Party, Prosperous Armenia,
    which holds 37 of parliament's 131 seats, loses portfolios for four
    ministers, four deputy ministers, and a bevy of regional political
    posts. Those positions often come in handy at election time, due to
    the fact that they can deploy so-called administrative resources on
    behalf of their political parties and favored candidates.

    Tsarukian's surprise announcement sparked a flood of rumors that the
    party is trying to seize the initiative from Armenia's relatively weak
    opposition ahead of the February 2013 presidential vote. Prosperous
    Armenia has the reputation for a semi-messianic sense of mission
    and generous gift-giving -- everything from tractors to healthcare,
    on the campaign trail and off -- that suggest the party, and its
    colorful leader, will not want to rest in the shadows.

    At this stage, though, the party's future trajectory is less than
    clear. Citing "his extremely busy schedule," Tsarukian missed the
    new parliament's first session on May 31, and has remained a no-show.

    At the same time, Sargsyan's Republican Party has given no outward sign
    of concern that a political battle with Tsarukian, a former world and
    European arm-wrestling champion (in 1996 and 1998, respectively), may
    lie ahead. Senior Republican Party members have downplayed Tsarukian's
    announcement, stressing to reporters that everyone is free to make
    a choice, and that they do not rule out "possible cooperation" with
    Prosperous Armenia.

    Yet, as the Republican Party, which holds 69 seats in parliament,
    moves ahead with cabinet plans with its junior partner, the six-seat
    Rule of Law (Orinats Yerkir) Party, Prosperous Armenia appears nowhere
    in sight.

    Senior Prosperous Armenia MP Naira Zohrabian has declared that the
    party supports a "constructive approach" to politics, but did not
    elaborate.

    In theory, Armenia's opposition might appear ripe for a fresh face;
    none of the three main opposition parties gained more than 10 percent
    of the vote for parliament. But if Tsarukian is striving to become
    the face of Armenia's opposition, he will have to contend with the
    existing opposition leader - Levon Ter-Petrosian, a fiery orator and
    ex-president who heads of the Armenian National Congress (ANC).

    Since the fatal post-election clashes between Ter-Petrosian's
    supporters and police in 2008, attendance at ANC rallies has
    dwindled, but it holds seven seats in parliament and remains the
    country's largest opposition force. ANC leaders assert that they
    have no intention of ceding their leadership role among opposition
    political forces.

    ANC political coordinator Levon Zurabian commented that the party
    believes "that cooperation is possible with all political forces,
    with which we are able to unite on legislative initiatives aimed
    at weakening the positions of Serzh Sargsyan's regime," but
    underlined that the ANC "will undertake the role of an engine in
    these initiatives, and in forming an anti-RPA [Republican Party of
    Armenia] camp."

    Zurabian said he had no knowledge of a Prosperous Armenia plan to
    join the opposition.

    Other sizeable opposition parties - the Heritage Party and the Armenian
    Revolutionary Federation Dashnaktsutiun (with five parliamentary seats
    each) - similarly are not extending a welcoming hand to Tsarukian. "The
    opposition must not allow a scenario in which another candidate,
    a protege of the governmental candidate becomes the favorite," drily
    commented Stepan Safarian, the former Heritage parliamentary faction
    leader, in reference to Tsarukian and President Sargsyan's presumed
    run for reelection.

    Analyst Manvel Sargsian, director of research at Yerevan's Armenian
    Center for National and International Studies, a think-tank founded
    by Heritage Party leader Raffi Hovanissian, shares the scepticism
    that Prosperous Armenia can reinvent itself "on the opposite pole"
    of Armenian politics.

    "[T]hey are just fighting to offer 'more expensive' assistance to the
    Republican Party of Armenia," commented Sargsian. "Tsarukian's moves,
    his silence and wait-and-see policy are hinting at this."

    Adibekian, the pollster, believes that Tsarukian's refusal to join
    the government coalition may already have won him some opposition
    support, but cautions that many of Prosperous Armenia's votes may
    have come from people attracted by the party's formerly close ties
    with the Republicans. "He needs to be very cautious in his game,"
    the pollster said.

    Simply put, "nothing" can be ruled out ahead of next year's
    presidential elections, said independent political analyst
    Yervand Bozoian. "A current pro-government candidate may appear
    opposition-oriented tomorrow or vice versa; the situation may change
    unexpectedly."

    Editor's note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter in Yerevan
    and the editor of MediaLab.am.

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